David Saperstein
Rabbi David Saperstein is the
Director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. Described
in a Washington Post profile as the "quintessential religious
lobbyist on Capitol Hill," he represents the national Reform
Jewish Movement to Congress and the administration. During his
30 year tenure as Director of the Center, Rabbi Saperstein has
headed several national religious coalitions. He currently co-chairs
the Coalition to Preserve Religious Liberty, comprised of over
50 national religious denominations and educational organizations,
and serves on the boards of numerous national organizations including
the NAACP and People For the American Way. In 1999, Rabbi Saperstein
was elected as the first Chair of the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom created by a unanimous vote of Congress.
Under Rabbi Saperstein's tutelage,
writes J.J. Goldberg in his book, Jewish Power, the Religious
Action Center "has become one of the most powerful Jewish
bodies in Washington, second only to AIPAC." The Center
not only advocates on a broad range of social justice issues
but provides extensive legislative and programmatic materials
used by synagogues, federations and Jewish community relations
councils nationwide, and coordinates social action education
programs that train nearly 3,000 Jewish adults, youth, rabbinic
and lay leaders each year.
Also an attorney, Rabbi Saperstein
teaches seminars in both First Amendment Church-State Law and
in Jewish Law at Georgetown University Law School.
A prolific writer and speaker,
Rabbi Saperstein has appeared on a number of television news
and talk shows including Nightline, Oprah, Lehrer News Hour and
ABC's Sunday Morning. His articles have appeared in the Washington
Post, the New York Times and the "Harvard Law Review."
His latest book is Jewish Dimensions of Social Justice: Tough
Moral Choices of Our Time.
Rabbi Saperstein is part of a
large rabbinic family. Great uncles on both sides of his family
were Reform rabbis, two great-grandfathers were Orthodox rabbis,
his father Harold and uncle Sanford were well-known Reform rabbis,
and his brother Marc is one of this generation's leading Jewish
scholars.
Rabbi Saperstein is married to
Ellen Weiss, senior editor of the national news desk at National
Public Radio. They have two sons, Daniel and Ari.
In his book Thunder in America,
network news correspondent Bob Faw wrote of Rabbi Saperstein:
"Saperstein learned from political masters...[His] energy
was almost legendary -- no one around him worked longer hours,
no one darted in and out of more meetings... Once he'd taken
on an assignment, he'd always guide it safely home to completion."
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