New Jersey Rabbi Aims for Pulpit on Capitol Hill

By Jennifer Siegel

Published September 19, 2007, issue of September 21, 2007.
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American rabbis are routinely sent to weddings and funerals and fundraisers galore, but in 2008, one of them is asking to be sent where none has gone before: Congress.

Dennis Shulman, Clinical psychologist turned rabbi, is mounting a long-shot campaign against incumbent Republican Rep. Scott Garret
Dennis Shulman, Clinical psychologist turned rabbi, is mounting a long-shot campaign against incumbent Republican Rep. Scott Garret

In a long-shot bid to oust one of New Jersey’s most conservative Republicans, Rabbi Dennis Shulman announced last Tuesday the formation of a congressional exploratory campaign in the state’s 5th district.

Never having served in elective office, Shulman, 57, is short on political experience. But as he mounts a run in one of the country’s most expensive media markets — the suburbs of New York City — the longtime resident of Demarest, N.J., hopes to draw notice with his fascinating biography: Ordained as a rabbi in 2003, Shulman, a nationally known clinical psychologist, has been blind since adolescence.

“As a boy, I learned that ultimately I would be totally blind, pretty much, by the time I went to college,” Shulman told the Forward earlier this week. “I know something about what it’s like to struggle, and I know something about how important it is for the community to step up when somebody struggles, no matter what that struggle is.”

Shulman is facing a largely uphill battle in taking on Rep. Scott Garrett, a pro-life, anti-tax Republican who replaced longtime GOP moderate Marge Roukema in 2003. In recent elections Garrett has trounced his Democratic challengers, including Paul Aronsohn with an 11-point victory in 2006.

“It’s one of those tantalizing seats,” said Ross Baker, a professor of political science at Rutgers University. “[Garrett] is a very tough adversary. He’s been very adroit at downplaying the social issues, and his signature issue is big government, which has a lot of appeal to people in the suburbs who don’t like to be taxed.”

In addition to Shulman, civil rights attorney Camille Abate, who lost a 2006 primary against Aronsohn, has entered the race. As of yet, neither candidate has earned the support of party officials, while, in-state politicos are speculating about the possible entrance of more connected contenders — including popular Bergen County Executive Dennis McNerney.

After growing up in a close-knit Reform community in Worcester, Mass., Shulman said, he arrived at Brandeis University as an undergraduate interested in a career in the rabbinate but switched gears after a crisis of faith prompted by the loss of a girlfriend to leukemia during his freshman year. More than 30 years later, after completing coursework at New York’s Academy for Jewish Religion, Shulman was privately ordained by a panel of rabbis led by Rabbi Jack Bemporad, spiritual leader of Chavurah Beth Shalom in Alpine, N.J. Shulman long attended the synagogue with his wife and his two grown daughters and now serves as its rabbinical associate.

In 2003, Shulman published “The Genius of Genesis: A Psychoanalyst and Rabbi Examines the First Book of the Bible.”

“What motivates me in all [I do] is that we are here to do a job,” Shulman said, musing over the idealistic drive that has taken him into the worlds of therapy, the rabbinate and now politics. His political heroes, he said, include Robert Kennedy (“I was very moved by the fact that he went through a transformation; that’s hard to do”) and famed civil rights leader Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (“In 1972, he said that to speak about God and not Vietnam is blasphemy”).

His goals for Congress, Shulman said, include ending the Iraq War, providing health insurance to all Americans and funding stem-cell research. Regarding foreign policy, Shulman said, the United States should maintain a strong alliance with Israel and reinvigorate diplomatic efforts to engage such adversaries as Hamas and the Iranian regime.

“I guess I’m all for thinking and communications and talking and trying to work these things out,” Shulman said. “I really do believe that we can do better.”


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Comments
David S. Levine Fri. Sep 21, 2007

Look at that--a Reform Rabbi is a Democrat--shocking news. This photo-op is probably the first time he wore a talit. At any rate, based on the behavior of this Congress, there will be a great Republican comeback in 2008--and the media, after poo pooing the foregoing, will claim to have seen it all along.

Ben Fri. Sep 21, 2007

A man in a tallit and no kipa - is it a rabbi or a clown?

ha ha ha Thu. Sep 20, 2007

I just wonder that he might be perceived as "too Jewish" to get the vote in suburban NJ....

Rebecca Moldover Wed. Sep 19, 2007

Anyone who knows Rabbi Shulman realizes that he is not a "long shot" for anything he puts his remarkable mind to. I think people are longing for someone to speak to the issues they care about and Rabbi Shulman has a deeply empathetic and wise voice. His voice is just what is needed in our current "wilderness" and very welcome indeed!

Jeff Fri. Sep 21, 2007

Given that the state of New Jersey is represented by Senator Frank Lautenberg, the adjacent district by Steve Rothman, and that Gary Trauner came within less than a 1000 votes in heavily Republican Wyoming last year... I think we can be confident that Shulman is not going to be "too Jewish." [and, of course, in the tri-state area, there is another prominent Jewish politician who is fairly open about his faith -- Joe Lieberman.] That he is a person of sincere faith, despite the Republican Levine's fairly horrifying comment, should not be seen as a problem. Increasingly, spiritual Democratic politicians have felt comfortable discussing how faith informs their views -- e.g., Tim Kaine in Virginia. Of course, his faith cannot be the entire story, and I think this article goes a long toward suggesting it will not be the sum and substance of the campaign, or even the only dramatic aspect of his biography.

Jon Morgenstern Mon. Sep 24, 2007

I say if there is a U.S. Senator Father Drinan, there can be a s U.S. Representative Rabbi Shulman.

Mike Glicksman Tue. Dec 18, 2007

We don't need a novelty for the 5th congressional district. We need someone who is working full-time to be elected--Camille Abate. As a civil rights attorney she has been fighting for people her whole life. Everyone in the 5th district should unite to defeat the extremist polices of Scott Garrett.

tom Wed. Dec 12, 2007

Shulman for Congress, a better vision for America

Angela Burstyn Thu. Jul 24, 2008

I voted for(Doctor/Rabbi?)Shulman in the Democratic primary for Congress in New Jersey. I just finished reading an article about him in the latest New Yorker Magazine. I thought the comments about the electorate in NJ knowing more about what Mayor Blumberg had for breakfast than Scott Garrett's voting record as being profoundly true. Garrett is almost more conservative than Bush and how he won that seat is still a mystery to me. We had a good and decent representative before he was elected (Marge Roukema). She was a conservative fiscally but almost a liberal in other matters. We have to get rid of Garrett. His voting record is so very conservative. I would like him to give up his perk of lifetime medical coverage and then I might at least halfway respect his opinions!!! We have to get rid of him!!!!






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