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Reform Cohn
Celebrants at a Reform Jewish wedding. David H. Wells/Corbis via Getty Images.
Observation

July 5, 2024

Podcast: Mark Cohn on the Reform Movement and Intermarriage

By Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

The author of “The Anguished Dilemma of a Reform Rabbi” explains his opposition to a recent blockbuster change in Reform policy.

Podcast: Mark Cohn

For years, the Reform movement in America has allowed marriage between a Jewish and non-Jewish spouse, as long as the couple commits to raising their children as Jews. But a cultural taboo against intermarriage remained for Reform clergy, a taboo reinforced by admissions and ordination standards at the Hebrew Union College, the movement’s main seminary. Applicants who were in a long-term relationship with a non-Jewish partner were denied, on the grounds that modeling a Jewish home was expected of rabbis.

That changed this year. “Moving forward,” a recent letter from the president, provost, and board chair of the seminary announced, “the religious identity of a student’s or applicant’s partner will no longer disqualify students for admission or ordination.” The letter goes on to explain that this decision is the result of a process of internal deliberation, and that it brings what’s expected of the clergy in line with the reality of the broader Reform community.

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