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Siblings lay down the law

Rabbi Yehiel Kalish and Dafna Michaelson Jenet pictured in the Colorado State Capitol in 2017.

Rabbi Yehiel Kalish and Dafna Michaelson Jenet pictured in the Colorado State Capitol in 2017.

NEW YORK — Colorado Rep. Dafna Michaelson Jenet and newly appointed Illinois legislator Rabbi Yehiel Kalish are the first Jewish siblings to serve concurrently in different state legislatures, according to Jeffrey Wice, executive director of the National Assn. of Jewish Legislators — at least since the organization’s founding in 1977.

Rabbi Kalish is also believed to be the first rabbi to serve in a state legislature.

The siblings, who grew up in Cincinnati, are Democrats.

Kalish is deeply involved in the Orthodox world and Michaelson Jenet attends two Conservative synagogues. They are united by their commitment to serving their communities and the inspiration they draw from Judaism.

Michaelson Jenet is Kalish’s older sister, and he says they have been talking every day since he took office.

“She can be helpful because she’s two years ahead of me, that’s one thing,” Kalish said. “The other thing is that I have someone that I can talk to about stuff. That’s awesome.”

Like her brother, Michaelson Jenet, 46, took an unconventional path to politics.

She was president of the Denver chapter of Hadassah, but in 2008, she quit her job at a hospital to embark on a yearlong journey in which she visited each of the 50 states to meet with people making a difference in their communities.

She kept a blog documenting her experience, which caught the attention of writer Maya Angelou, who interviewed her about the initiative on Oprah Radio.

In 2015, while working on a book about her trip, Michaelson Jenet ran into a local politician who suggested she run for office.

A year later she defeated the Republican incumbent, JoAnn Windholz, by an 8% margin. She was re-elected last year, both times earning the endorsement of President Barack Obama.

The 43-year-old rabbi was appointed to serve in the position after Rep. Lou Lang announced his resignation last month.

Only days after being sworn into the Illinois House of Representatives on Jan. 20, Rabbi Yehiel Kalish paid a visit to Israel. The father of six said he needed guidance from rabbis in the Jewish state to serve in his new role.

“The immediate reaction of the Chicago political world was ‘Orthodox rabbi chosen for seat in state legislature,’” he told JTA on Jan. 23 in a phone interview from Jerusalem.

“So that immediately put a microscope on me, and I felt pressure taking the position to begin with, and with that added to it, I felt I needed a little bit of help, so I jumped on a plane [to] give a little bit of strength to my prayer by being in Israel.”

Kalish wakes up at 4 a.m. each day and spends two hours studying Jewish texts before the morning prayers.

“It keeps you focused on what’s important,” he said.

“To try to keep values important, try to remember that you’re not alone in this world and you have to care for others.”

After receiving his rabbinic ordination from the Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Ill. in 1999, Kalish spent three years studying Jewish texts at the Cincinnati Community Kollel and then took a job at Agudath Israel of America, an organization that lobbies on behalf of the Orthodox community.

He worked there for 12 years, serving as Midwest Regional director and vice president for development and state relations.

In 2014, he left the organization to co-found a consulting firm, but he remains a member of its board of trustees.

Kalish also is involved in Achiezer, a group that provides aid to struggling members of the Orthodox community, and coordinated its hurricane relief efforts after Hurricane Sandy.

He also is the cantor of Congregation Shaarei Tzedek Mishkan Yair in Chicago.

His district is about 30% Orthodox Jewish, he told JTA, and includes Skokie and Rogers Park.

As a lawmaker, he is passionate about issues that matter to the Orthodox community, including support for private religious schools and community nonprofits.

He’s also eager to learn more about other communities in his district — it has large Asian, Assyrian Christian and Muslim populations — and said he is “starting a listening tour” to hear about their concerns.

Kalish says he met recently with representatives from the Chicago Teachers Union and Planned Parenthood.

Michaelson Jenet draws her own inspiration from Judaism. She recalls that as a 14-year-old, her parents and their friends would have passionate discussions around the Shabbat table about the challenges in Cincinnati. She was troubled, however, that they didn’t take action when the day of rest had come to an end.

“I truly believed that they had the answer to the problems that I cared strongly about, that were plaguing our community, and they didn’t fix them,” Michaelson Jenet told JTA in a phone interview last year.

She pledged to never complain about problems unless she was willing to solve them. It’s a promise she called “a driving factor” in her life.

Her legislative focus — helping struggling children — stems from the difficulties of her now teenage son, Eytan. He has a severe learning disability, and Michaelson Jenet believes the fact that he could not get an individualized education plan in school contributed to his attempted suicide at age nine.

She has introduced bills to help children obtain mental health services, expand free school lunches and provide sexual abuse prevention training to early childhood providers.

Though her family was Orthodox, Michaelson Jenet remembers struggling with her faith since she was young.

Another challenge came when she met her now-husband, who is not Jewish.

“Why do you put this man in my life who isn’t Jewish and is the best thing that ever happened to me?” she remembers asking G-d on a visit to the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

Their marriage led to several family members cutting ties with her.

Michaelson Jenet said her younger brother’s entry into office came as no surprise.

“My run for public office surprised my family, but my brother’s selection was a long time coming,” she told JTA in an email.

“I always knew he’d enter public service when the time was right and Illinois is so lucky to have him.

“I look forward to mentoring him and learning from him as he grows in his legislative work.” n




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