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Betty Robbins, the world's first female cantor,
led Rosh Hashanah evening services at Temple Avodah of Oceanside, New York, on September 15, 1955.
Her appointment as cantor marked the first time that a woman performed the traditional role of cantor
in a synagogue anywhere in the world. It generated a tremendous amount of publicity, even making the
front page of the New York Times. Robbins had been unanimously approved as the Reform congregation's
cantor by its board of trustees the previous July, after the congregation found itself without a cantor for the High Holidays. Although Robbins did not have formal training as a cantor, she had spent her childhood in
Poland singing with her synagogue's boys' choir, eventually becoming its soloist (once she adopted a boy's haircut
to please the choir's director, who was reluctant to allow a girl to join). Robbins spent much of the rest of
her career teaching religious school, and formed and directed several adult and children's choirs. In her retirement,
Robbins conducted religious services on many worldwide Jewish holiday cruises. Source: Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia pp. 1158-1159 |
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