Rabbi Allen Bennett
Biography
Rabbi Allen Bennett was born Allen Blumenstein in 1946 in Akron, Ohio. Shortly thereafter his father legally changed the family name to Bennett. From a young age, Allen was identified by his peers as a prospective rabbi. A critical part of his early formation was his participation in summer camp every year at Camp Nebagamon in Wisconsin beginning at age 11. He continues to relate to the camp to this day.
Allen attended Western Reserve University (later Case Western Reserve University) in Cleveland, Ohio, where he earned a B.A. with honors in Psychology in 1968. He attended the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (Reform Jewish seminary) in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he earned a Bachelor of Hebrew Letters in 1972 and a Master of Arts in Hebrew Letters as well as rabbinical ordination in 1974.
Allen's first inklings that he might be homosexual emerged in his late teen years and grew to fruition during his years in seminary. However, because of strong antigay polices at the seminary in those days, he remained closeted.
Allen is second from right in middle row
Camp Nebagamon, Summer 1961
(printed in Fall 2006 issue of The Keylog,
the Camp Nebagamon Alumni Association Newsletter) Upon ordination Rabbi Bennett moved to Rochester, Minnesota, where he began a one-year residency program in Clinical Pastoral Education, leading to his certification as a hospital chaplain. He served two more years there as Jewish chaplain for the two hospitals affiliated with the Mayo Clinic, while serving as rabbi of Congregation B'nai Israel, the multi-denominational synagogue in Rochester. He married there in 1976 and separated less than a year later and divorced.
In 1977 Rabbi Bennett began a doctoral program at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, where he began work towards a Ph.D. in Theology, Psychology, Sociology and Anthropology. During this time he also taught courses in various Jewish-related subjects, first at Emeritus College at the College of Marin, and later at other colleges and universities in the Bay Area. During this time he also connected with gay synagogue in San Francisco, Congregation Sha'ar Zahav, that was founded in 1977.
In 1978 Bennett was invited by an activist friend to come out as a gay rabbi in the media as part of the campaign against the Briggs Initiative in California. Even though that strategy was nixed, Bennett was interviewed by a The San Francisco Examiner reporter who wrote about Bennett following the election. He subsequently was identified in other media, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Advocate, as the first openly gay rabbi in the U.S. In 1979 he was elected Rabbi at Congregation Sha'ar Zahav. Early in his time at the synagogue he officiated at the funeral of Harvey Milk. There he met Steven who was the sign language interpreter with whom he developed a partnership for the next several years.
1979 (photo by Fred Sweets, printed in The Washington Post, Dec. 29, 1979.) Following his service at Sha'ar Zahav he was appointed Assistant Director of the Northern Pacific Regional office of the American Jewish Congress, a position he held for five years, until becoming Regional Executive Director in 1989. From July 1993 until August 1996 he served as the Executive Director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of the Greater East Bay, headquartered in Oakland, California. At the end of September 1996, Rabbi Bennett became the Rabbi at Temple Israel in Alameda.
Active in interfaith and other civic activities, Rabbi Bennett has served on the Executive Board of the Joint Religious Legislative Coalition of Minnesota, the Task Force on Self-Esteem of the City and County of San Francisco, the San Francisco Human Rights Commission, the Intergroup Clearinghouse, the Mayor's Committee for a Living Holocaust Memorial, the Mayor's Committee on Continuing Education against Nazism, the Conference of Black and Jewish Clergy, the San Francisco Interfaith Coalition on AIDS, the Coalition for Civil Rights, the San Francisco Conference on Religion, Race and Social Concerns, the Northern California Martin Luther King, Jr., Birthday Observance Committee, the San Francisco Interfaith Council, as Chair of the Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights, the Interfaith Voice for Religious Liberty, the East Bay Interfaith Coalition on HIV/AIDS, and "Yet Another Jew for Affirmative Action". He was the Jewish representative taking testimony at the U.N.- sponsored Oakland Hearings on Racism as a Violation of Human Rights and served on the Religious Service Providers Task Force of the San Francisco Human Rights Commission and the Board of Most Holy Redeemer AIDS Support Group in San Francisco. Bennett currently serves on the Alta Bates Hospital Chaplaincy Advisory Board, the East Bay Council of Rabbis, the Editorial Council of Sequoia Magazine, and the Leadership Team and the Race and Community Relations Planning Team of the FAITHS Initiative of the San Francisco Foundation
Rabbi Bennett retired from the active rabbinate at Temple Israel in 2012 and has continued his interfaith and other social justice activities since that time. He lives in San Francisco and his hobbies include sailing, socio-linguistics, playing keyboard instruments, computers, music and the other fine arts.
(This biographical statement written by Mark Bowman and edited by Allen Bennett.)
Biography Date: August 2009; rev. July 2024
Additional Resources
Rabbi Allen Bennett provided reflections on the 50th anniversary of his ordination:
https://ravblog.ccarnet.org/2024/02/rabbi-allen-bennett-50-year-reform-rabbi-chaplain/
Oral Histories:
Tags
Jewish (Reform) | Activist (religious institutions) | Clergy Activist | Ordination/clergy | Bennett, Allen
Citation
“Rabbi Allen Bennett | Profile”, LGBTQ Religious Archives Network, accessed December 02, 2024, https://lgbtqreligiousarchives.org/profiles/allen-bennett.
Remembrances
“Well, I am honored to say, not a memory but a "present". Rabbi Bennett will retire from our temple in June 2012, about 6 months from now. We will carry, in our hearts, a piece of our Rabbi, forever. What will I remember most? So many things but, mostly, "justice, justice, justice, shall you pursue." His imprint on our 12 year old daughter, who will bat mitzvah in 11/2012 is undeniable. Theatrical and petite, she is a Lion in the defense of her fellow Human.I just wish he were at her bat, but I think he will be in Israel...... An Honor to have met and shared a few years with Rabbi Bennett. Oh, and since we're on this site, his preference, I don't even think about, honestly. It's private and none of my business. I honestly think, G-d is both masculine and feminine and, we are all also. Shalom.”
– as remembered by Rosa Montes Goldberg on December 21, 2011
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