Arizonaโs oldest Jewish synagogue has lost its senior rabbi.
Rabbi Samuel Cohon, former senior rabbi at Temple Emanu-El, 225 N. Country Club Road, was forced to step down in mid-September after roughly 18 years at the congregation.
Cohon said he resigned after a suspension by the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR) and a request from the templeโs board. He said he is appealing the suspension, which prohibits him from doing rabbinic work.
โThe backstory is that there were some personal issues involved, and I was going through a divorce that started in April,โ Cohon said. โAll divorces are difficult. It led the board to determine that they felt that I should no longer be the senior rabbi.โ
Mona Gibson, the board president, said the requested resignation was a โpersonnel issue.โ
In an email to the congregation after Cohonโs resignation, Gibson provided a โfact sheetโ โdrafted in conjunction with the CCAR ethics committee, Union for Reform Judaism and attorneys representing Templeโs employment and liability interests.โ
The letter cited the national CCARโs code of ethics that Cohon, a member of the organization, was held to and the requirement that rabbis โadhere โto an exemplary moral code.โโ
For now, Rabbi Batsheva Appel, the rabbi educator, has stepped into the primary leadership position, Gibson said, adding that there are no hiring plans at this time.
The resignation has caused division within the congregation, with some members supporting the boardโs move and others protesting it, according to emails provided to the Star.
Anjelina Belakovskaia, a finance lecturer at the University of Arizona, said she and about 60 families signed a petition protesting the forced resignation. She and her family stopped attending the temple after three years of consistent participation, following Cohonโs resignation. They want to see the rabbi reinstated.
While some families have already left, others want to move forward to preserve the templeโs future, she said.
Robert Jacobson, who started attending the temple about a year ago, attended a congregational meeting earlier this month and said tensions ran high.
โAll of us wish that things could be fixed,โ he said. โNo one is anti-Temple Emmanu-El.โ




