Leah Novick (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Leah Novick (born 1932) is a Renewal rabbi and the second oldest woman rabbi in the United States. She lives in Carmel, California. She graduated from Brooklyn College and also earned a master's degree in public policy. She worked as a social science researcher when her three children were young. In the late 1950s, she was part of in sit-ins and lie-ins to integrate Westchester, Pennsylvania's swimming pools. Later she moved to Westchester County, New York, where she helped organize Jewish groups to attend the 1963 March on Washington. She ran unsuccessfully for the New York state Legislature in 1970 and moved to Washington to work as chief aide for Bella Abzug. In 1977, she helped to coordinate the National Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year. In 1978, she worked as

Property Value
dbo:abstract Leah Novick (born 1932) is a Renewal rabbi and the second oldest woman rabbi in the United States. She lives in Carmel, California. She graduated from Brooklyn College and also earned a master's degree in public policy. She worked as a social science researcher when her three children were young. In the late 1950s, she was part of in sit-ins and lie-ins to integrate Westchester, Pennsylvania's swimming pools. Later she moved to Westchester County, New York, where she helped organize Jewish groups to attend the 1963 March on Washington. She ran unsuccessfully for the New York state Legislature in 1970 and moved to Washington to work as chief aide for Bella Abzug. In 1977, she helped to coordinate the National Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year. In 1978, she worked as a guest professor at Stanford. During much of the 1980s she taught at U C Berkeley's graduate school of public policy. Novick was a founding member of OHALAH: Association of Rabbis for Jewish Renewal. She was ordained as a Jewish Renewal rabbi in 1987. Novick was a founder of the Ruach Ha Aretz retreat group and two renewal congregations, Beit Shekhinah in Berkeley, California (1980s) and Shabbos in Carmel, California (1990s.) In 2012 she was the chief organizer of a retreat focusing on American women's 40 years as rabbis, called "Forty Years on the Bimah" and held October 28–30 at the Mount Madonna Center in Watsonville, California. According to Novick, this was the first interdenominational gathering of female rabbis. She is the author of the book "On the Wings of Shekhinah" Rediscovering Judaism's Divine Feminine (Quest Books 2008), as well as a book on the history of women at Democratic political conventions. She has also recorded a CD of guided meditations with Desert Wind, and created the performance piece The Peaceful Macabee which is about groundbreaking Jewish women involved in spirituality. As of 2013 she serves as president of the educational non-profit Spirit of the Earth. A collection of materials that document Rabbi Novick's work since her ordination in 1987 and her contributions to the Jewish Renewal movement are held at the Post-Holocaust American Judaism Archive in the University of Colorado Boulder. (en)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink http://telshemesh.org/air/appeal_to_the_matriarchs_leah_novick.html http://www.womenonthebimah.org/talks/rabbi-leah-novicks-opening-address/ https://web.archive.org/web/20150214010410/http:/www.womenonthebimah.org/talks/rabbi-leah-novicks-opening-address/
dbo:wikiPageID 41769579 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 6415 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1049993632 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Bema dbr:Bella_Abzug dbr:University_of_Colorado_Boulder dbc:Living_people dbc:Women_rabbis dbc:1932_births dbc:Brooklyn_College_alumni dbr:Brooklyn_College dbr:Jewish_Renewal dbc:21st-century_American_Jews dbr:Rabbi dbc:American_rabbis dbc:American_Jewish_Renewal_rabbis dbr:Shekhinah dbr:March_on_Washington dbr:Guided_meditation dbr:National_Women's_Conference
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Authority_control dbt:Cite_web dbt:Orphan dbt:Reflist
dct:subject dbc:Living_people dbc:Women_rabbis dbc:1932_births dbc:Brooklyn_College_alumni dbc:21st-century_American_Jews dbc:American_rabbis dbc:American_Jewish_Renewal_rabbis
gold:hypernym dbr:Rabbi
rdf:type owl:Thing dbo:Person
rdfs:comment Leah Novick (born 1932) is a Renewal rabbi and the second oldest woman rabbi in the United States. She lives in Carmel, California. She graduated from Brooklyn College and also earned a master's degree in public policy. She worked as a social science researcher when her three children were young. In the late 1950s, she was part of in sit-ins and lie-ins to integrate Westchester, Pennsylvania's swimming pools. Later she moved to Westchester County, New York, where she helped organize Jewish groups to attend the 1963 March on Washington. She ran unsuccessfully for the New York state Legislature in 1970 and moved to Washington to work as chief aide for Bella Abzug. In 1977, she helped to coordinate the National Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year. In 1978, she worked as (en)
rdfs:label Leah Novick (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Leah Novick yago-res:Leah Novick wikidata:Leah Novick https://global.dbpedia.org/id/eP7y
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Leah_Novick?oldid=1049993632&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Leah_Novick
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Leah_Novick