About Rabbi Stephen Lewis Fuchs
Rabbi Stephen Lewis Fuchs was born in East Orange, New Jersey on March 16, 1946. Upon graduating from East Orange High School, he matriculated at and graduated from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York. After five more years and four summers of full-time study, he was ordained as a Rabbi at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio where he earned his MA in Hebrew Letters and a graduate certificate in Jewish Communal Service from the Hebrew Union College branch in Los Angeles, CA.
Rabbi Stephen Fuchs and Victoria Steinberg Fuchs, a now-retired elementary school teacher, married on June 9, 1974 in San Francisco, CA. They currently reside in Sanibel Island, FL where Rabbi Fuchs is the spiritual leader at Bat Yam Temple of the Islands. They have three children and five grandchildren.
While studying at Hamilton and at HUC, Rabbi Fuchs worked as a teaching tennis pro at Spring Garden CC in Florham Park, NJ and at the famed Concord Hotel in the Catskills Mountains.
“I’ve learned more about people through teaching and dealing with them during those five summers than I did in all the years
I’d studied in college and graduate school.”
In 1992, Rabbi Fuchs earned a Doctor of Ministry (D.Min.) degree in biblical interpretation from Vanderbilt University Divinity School in Nashville, Tennessee. He received a Doctor of Divinity Degree, Honoris Causa, from the Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion in New York in March of 1999.
Rabbi Fuchs' pulpit career spans over forty years. He served as the first full-time rabbi of Temple Isaiah in Columbia, MD for thirteen years. He then served for eleven years as Sr. Rabbi of The Temple, Congregation Ohabai Sholom in Nashville, TN before arriving in West Hartford, CT in 1997 to serve as Senior Rabbi at Congregation Beth Israel, until 2011. In the fall of 2017, he assumed the pulpit of rabbi at Bat Yam Temple of the Islands in Sanibel, Florida.
On July 1, 2011, Rabbi Stephen Fuchs began his appointment as President of the World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ). There, he traveled to over 65 communities on five continents as a proponent of Reform Jewish values and legitimacy. Following the 2012 Days of Awe, Fuchs stepped down as president of the WUPJ at a time he was facing open heart surgery to repair an ascending aortic aneurysm and replace the mechanical aortic valve he received in 1996 with a tissue valve.
The Holocaust is a driving force in Rabbi Fuchs' life. His late father, Leo Fuchs, was arrested in Leipzig, Germany on Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938, abused, and sent to the Dachau Prison Camp. Fortunately, there were relatives in the United States who secured his release, and, after a short time, he came to the USA. There, he met and married Florence Goldstein. They had two children, a daughter Rochelle and a son, (Rabbi) Stephen Lewis Fuchs.
Career Highlights and Life Achievements
On October 26, 2014, Rabbi Fuchs accepted the gracious invitation of Pastorin Martina Dittkrist and became the first rabbi ever to give a sermon in The Michaelis-Kirche in Kaltenkirchen a charming and picturesque village that was also, ironically, the site of a former concentration camp. The church's former pastor left clerical life to become a Nazi oberkommando who was tried and convicted of atrocities at the Nuremberg tribunal. Rabbi Fuchs’ sermon was received as a gesture of forgiveness to the church and acknowledgement of its atonement.
On November 6, 2015, Rabbi Fuchs conducted the first Jewish service in the city of Friedrichstadt, Germany, since Kristallnacht. Special thanks to Rita and Horst Blunk and Dr. Keren-Miriam Hoenicke, whose extraordinary efforts made these historic events possible.
As a Rabbi Emeritus, Fuchs continued to play an active role at CBI by filling-in for vacationing rabbis and leading Saturday morning Torah study and occasional Shabbat services. When he is not busy with book signings, speaking engagements, or other scholarly duties, Rabbi Fuchs is an avid blogger. He also enjoys crossword puzzles, playing tennis, doo-wop music, and spending time with family and friends.
Rabbi Stephen Fuchs and Victoria Steinberg Fuchs, a now-retired elementary school teacher, married on June 9, 1974 in San Francisco, CA. They currently reside in Sanibel Island, FL where Rabbi Fuchs is the spiritual leader at Bat Yam Temple of the Islands. They have three children and five grandchildren.
While studying at Hamilton and at HUC, Rabbi Fuchs worked as a teaching tennis pro at Spring Garden CC in Florham Park, NJ and at the famed Concord Hotel in the Catskills Mountains.
“I’ve learned more about people through teaching and dealing with them during those five summers than I did in all the years
I’d studied in college and graduate school.”
In 1992, Rabbi Fuchs earned a Doctor of Ministry (D.Min.) degree in biblical interpretation from Vanderbilt University Divinity School in Nashville, Tennessee. He received a Doctor of Divinity Degree, Honoris Causa, from the Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion in New York in March of 1999.
Rabbi Fuchs' pulpit career spans over forty years. He served as the first full-time rabbi of Temple Isaiah in Columbia, MD for thirteen years. He then served for eleven years as Sr. Rabbi of The Temple, Congregation Ohabai Sholom in Nashville, TN before arriving in West Hartford, CT in 1997 to serve as Senior Rabbi at Congregation Beth Israel, until 2011. In the fall of 2017, he assumed the pulpit of rabbi at Bat Yam Temple of the Islands in Sanibel, Florida.
On July 1, 2011, Rabbi Stephen Fuchs began his appointment as President of the World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ). There, he traveled to over 65 communities on five continents as a proponent of Reform Jewish values and legitimacy. Following the 2012 Days of Awe, Fuchs stepped down as president of the WUPJ at a time he was facing open heart surgery to repair an ascending aortic aneurysm and replace the mechanical aortic valve he received in 1996 with a tissue valve.
The Holocaust is a driving force in Rabbi Fuchs' life. His late father, Leo Fuchs, was arrested in Leipzig, Germany on Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938, abused, and sent to the Dachau Prison Camp. Fortunately, there were relatives in the United States who secured his release, and, after a short time, he came to the USA. There, he met and married Florence Goldstein. They had two children, a daughter Rochelle and a son, (Rabbi) Stephen Lewis Fuchs.
Career Highlights and Life Achievements
- In 2003, Rabbi Fuchs was the first recipient of the first annual Judaic Heritage Award from Charter Oak Cultural Center. In 2011, he was the only Caucasian of the eleven recipients who received the Unlimited Love Humanitarian Award from Bethel AME Church.
- Rabbi Fuchs held the position of Clergy Co-Chair of the Interfaith Fellowship for Universal Health Care. The IFUHC played a pivotal role in the passage of SustiNeT, Connecticut’s Universal Health Care Initiative, which passed the Public Health Committee on March 26, 2009.
- In 2006 Rabbi Fuchs received the Four Chaplains award—in honor of the four heroic military Chaplains who perished with the Dorchester in WWII after giving up their life vests to save the lives of sailors. After delivering a particularly moving Memorial Day sermon at the West Hartford Center, the Rabbi was approached by a high-ranking veteran who wished to nominate him for this prestigious citation. A few months later, the mayor presented Rabbi Fuchs with The Four Chaplains Award.
On October 26, 2014, Rabbi Fuchs accepted the gracious invitation of Pastorin Martina Dittkrist and became the first rabbi ever to give a sermon in The Michaelis-Kirche in Kaltenkirchen a charming and picturesque village that was also, ironically, the site of a former concentration camp. The church's former pastor left clerical life to become a Nazi oberkommando who was tried and convicted of atrocities at the Nuremberg tribunal. Rabbi Fuchs’ sermon was received as a gesture of forgiveness to the church and acknowledgement of its atonement.
On November 6, 2015, Rabbi Fuchs conducted the first Jewish service in the city of Friedrichstadt, Germany, since Kristallnacht. Special thanks to Rita and Horst Blunk and Dr. Keren-Miriam Hoenicke, whose extraordinary efforts made these historic events possible.
- Rabbi Fuchs accepted an invitation from the bishop of Aachen, Germany, Heinrich Mussinghoff, to deliver a lecture about his book at the Bishop’s Academy in that city on October 27, 2015. It was the fiftieth anniversary of the Nostra Aetate at which the Catholic Church officially absolved Jews of responsibility for Jesus’ death — a milestone for Catholic-Jewish relations.
- During his tenure at Congregation Beth Israel, Rabbi Fuchs was particularly pleased with the launch and overwhelming success of the temple’s Yom Kippur Food Drive, one of the largest of its kind in the United States.
- Upon his retirement from the pulpit at Congregation Beth Israel in West Hartford, FOODSHARE instituted and designated a food-transportation fund in Rabbi Fuchs’ name in honor and recognition of his tireless efforts to end hunger in the state of Connecticut.
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kindness that make a difference in the lives of others.”
As a Rabbi Emeritus, Fuchs continued to play an active role at CBI by filling-in for vacationing rabbis and leading Saturday morning Torah study and occasional Shabbat services. When he is not busy with book signings, speaking engagements, or other scholarly duties, Rabbi Fuchs is an avid blogger. He also enjoys crossword puzzles, playing tennis, doo-wop music, and spending time with family and friends.
- On October 17, 2017, Rabbi Fuchs was selected as the recipient of the Vanderbilt Divinity School's Distinguished Alumnus Award. To be considered for the school’s Distinguished Alumni/ae Award, one must demonstrate excellence and distinction in justice-making through their efforts in congregational ministry, religious institutions, non-denominational/all-inclusive organizations, community–based organizations, government, or other social institutions.
- In the fall of 2017, Rabbi Fuchs assumed the position of rabbi at Bat Yam Temple of the Islands in Sanibel, Florida. The official installation took place on January 5, 2018, at the Sanibel UCC, located at 2050 Periwinkle Way in Sanibel Island, FL.
- In the summer of 2024 Rabbi Fuchs assumed the position of rabbi at Temple Beth Shalom located at 365 43rd Ave. in Vero Beach, FL.
Repeatedly in the Bible, it is the woman who 'gets it' and the man who is clueless. Eve has been maligned for generations for the supposed fall of man, when in fact; she is the heroine of the elevation of humanity. ~
"Women (Em)Power" from "Why the Kof? Getting the Best of Rabbi Fuchs."
"Women (Em)Power" from "Why the Kof? Getting the Best of Rabbi Fuchs."
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