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Rabbi Tina Grimberg grew up in the Ukrainian city of Kiev, and moved to North America with her family when she was sixteen. She soon took up the cause of the rights of “refuseniks” in the USSR, which led her to develop a passionate interest in Jewish heritage that was so hard to access during her childhood behind the Iron Curtain. This led her to immediately become involved in the Jewish community of Indianapolis.

Rabbi Grimberg was initially trained as a family therapist, specializing in women’s issues and domestic violence. Her love of Jewish tradition and family life led her to the doors of the Hebrew Union College’s Jewish Institute of Religion, and in 2001, she was ordained as a Rabbi. During her studies, she worked as an intern at Congregation Beth Elohim in Brooklyn, New York, and facilitated workshops for interfaith couples at the 92nd Street Y and the Jewish Community Centre of the Upper West Side. Before arriving at Darchei Noam in 2002, she served as Assistant Rabbi at Congregation Beth Elohim.

At Congregation Darchei Noam, Rabbi Grimberg has dedicated herself to serving her community and to advancing its profile in Toronto. She has worked with the Centre for Jewish Studies at the University of Toronto and the prestigious Blavatnik Archive to host an exhibit in the synagogue. She has also been committed to interfaith dialogue with Toronto’s Muslim community, including working with Imam Shaykh Yusuf Badat at the Islamic Foundation of Toronto in a “twinning” project, and teaching at Jum’ah prayer services at the Noor Cultural Centre. Additionally, she has been a vocal advocate of organ donation, including presiding over the first “bar mitzvah” celebrating the 13th anniversary of a life-saving liver transplant. Her articles on Judaic topics have been published in the Canadian Jewish News, and she teaches frequently in the Toronto Jewish Community.

Rabbi Grimberg’s care for Darchei Noam’s members is most evident in the spiritual and emotional support she provides through her pastoral counselling, and by presiding over life cycle events. She is also particularly committed to working with the community’s young women to better their self esteem and sense of Jewish belonging.

Rabbi Grimberg’s love of the ancient craft of storytelling creates an environment of teaching and prayer that never fails to engage and captivate students and worshippers alike. Her passion for all kinds of ancient and contemporary literature provides her with an endless well of stories with which she illuminates and clarifies Jewish lessons, traditions and ethics from our multifaceted heritage. Her first book, Out of Line: Growing Up Soviet, was published in 2007 by Tundra Press, and received numerous awards, including the Stein Memorial Award in Youth Literature and the Bronze Award for Book of the Year from ForeWord Magazine. This autobiographical work offers a unique window into the life of a young Jewish girl growing up with her family in Kiev in the 1960s and 70s. Her short stories have also been published in various anthologies.

Rabbi Grimberg is a member of the Toronto Board of Rabbis, the Canadian Council for Reform Judaism, and is an associate of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association and the Central Conference of American Rabbis.

Mon, 18 March 2024 8 Adar II 5784