Skip to main page content

Laura Geller

Rabbi Emerita
Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills
Participates in 2 items
Rabbi Laura Geller, Rabbi Emerita of Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills, twice named one of Newsweek’s 50 Most Influential Rabbis in America, was named by PBS Next Avenue as one of the fifty 2017 Influencers in Aging. Prior to becoming one of the first women to be selected through a national search to lead a major metropolitan synagogue, Rabbi Geller served as the Director of Hillel of University of Southern California for 14 years and as the Pacific Southwest Region's Executive Director of the American Jewish Congress for 4 years. She was featured in the PBS documentary “Jewish Americans.” Author of numerous articles in books and journals, she was on the editorial board of The Torah: A Women’s Commentary. She serves as a Fellow of the Corporation of Brown University from where she graduated in 1971. In addition she serves on the boards of Encore.org and the Jewish Women's Archives. Ordained by Hebrew Union College in 1976, she is the third woman in the Reform Movement to become a rabbi.

Sessions in which Laura Geller participates

Monday 19 March, 2018

Time Zone: (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
1:45 PM
1:45 PM
Gender Justice: Then, Now, Next
1 hour 15 minutes, 1:45 PM - 3:00 PM

Hotel Irvine - Grand Ballroom - Salon E

Workshop

Laura Geller, Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills (Participant)

Shira Brown, California State University, Northridge (Participant)

Sophie Sartain, Katahdin Productions (Participant)

Maya Paley, National Council of Jewish Women/Los Angeles (Participant)

Laura Geller will moderate a conversation reflecting on the evolution of second-wave feminism to today's current work around gender justice. Our p...

Tuesday 20 March, 2018

Time Zone: (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
3:15 PM
3:15 PM

Hotel Irvine - Theater

Workshop

Laura Geller, Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills (Participant)

Helen Dennis, Helen Dennis & Associates (Participant)

"Boomers" (people born between 1946 and 1964) are the first generation in human history …  to reasonably anticipate living … into their 80’s a...