NEW YORK (Press Release)–As a scientist, educator, and one of seven children raised in a close African American Jewish family in upstate New York, Rabbi Deborah McKenzie fulfills her childhood dream to become a spiritual leader, and shepherds summer Ma’ariv Monday services for Sim Shalom, the online synagogue, to refresh spirituality each week. (Sim Shalom may be accessed by clicking on this link: http://simshalom.com/)
Rabbi McKenzie is one of six Sim Shalom Rabbis that offer Ma ‘ariv week night services Monday – Thursday at 7:00pm EST throughout the summer. Shabbat services are offered every Friday at 7:00pm EST and some Saturday morning at 11:30 am EST. The services are free and interactive.
With early memories of growing up having daily Shacharit and Ma ‘ariv services at their home in upstate New York, McKenzie credits her strong Jewish foundation including love of Torah, family, and Tikkun Olam to the dedication of her parents. “They didn’t have it easy, raising us in a time when being African American and Jewish was unique in the Christian, African American and Jewish communities” she said. Living at the intersection of different perspectives allowed her family to begin building multicultural and interfaith bridges that continues to strengthen the rabbi’s faith and her Jewish tradition.
Nearly forty years since her earliest memories of the family in the living room listening to her father’s deep baritone voice chanting and teaching from the Torah, McKenzie fulfilled her Rabbinic calling. She graduated from the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute (JSLI) in 2015, honoring her father’s memory. As she conducts the Ma’ariv Sim Shalom service, the living room conversation is now exchanged in rooms around the world with a global congregation. The online service includes a live chat feature.
With the scrutiny of a scientist, McKenzie holds a Master degree in Chemistry, and the passion of a trained educator she assembles her skills to be first a student of Torah and the Sages. She draws on her deep faith and spirituality to bridge being a Rabbi and a scientist in a multicultural interfaith world. She hopes to bridge the studies of yesterday to the present, to bring relevance of the Torah to life today. McKenzie makes the Monday Ma ‘ariv service a way to transition from day to night. “Allow a moment to be in the moment, making the Monday service a spiritual turning point to renew, re-energize, and reinvigorate for the week.”
Sim Shalom is an interactive online Jewish Universalist synagogue which is liberal in thought and traditional in liturgy. Created in 2009 by Rabbi Steven Blane on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, Sim Shalom offers a means of connecting the unconnected. Rabbi Blane leads accessible and short Kabbalat Shabbat services every Friday night using a virtual interface and additionally Sim Shalom provides online education programs, Jazz concerts, conversion and life-cycle ceremonies along with weeknight services at 7:00PM EST led by Rabbis and students of this online community.
Rabbi Blane is also the Founder and Dean of the Jewish Spiritual Leader’s Institute, a rabbinical school for professionals.
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Editor’s Note: To read a background story about the controversy surrounding JSLI that appeared in the Jewish Standard of New Jersey click on this link: http://jewishstandard.timesofisrael.com/a-new-way-to-become-a-rabbi/