Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Katalin Kelemen is the first female rabbi in Hungary, where she was born. She studied for the rabbinate at Leo Baeck College in England, and was ordained in 1998. On March 7th, 1999, she was inducted as the rabbi of the Sim Shalom Progressive Jewish Congregation in Budapest, Hungary. In 1999 she also attended a conference on women’s issues sponsored by Bet Debora, a Jewish women's initiative founded in 1998."@en }
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- Katalin_Kelemen abstract "Katalin Kelemen is the first female rabbi in Hungary, where she was born. She studied for the rabbinate at Leo Baeck College in England, and was ordained in 1998. On March 7th, 1999, she was inducted as the rabbi of the Sim Shalom Progressive Jewish Congregation in Budapest, Hungary. In 1999 she also attended a conference on women’s issues sponsored by Bet Debora, a Jewish women's initiative founded in 1998.".
- Q16966326 abstract "Katalin Kelemen is the first female rabbi in Hungary, where she was born. She studied for the rabbinate at Leo Baeck College in England, and was ordained in 1998. On March 7th, 1999, she was inducted as the rabbi of the Sim Shalom Progressive Jewish Congregation in Budapest, Hungary. In 1999 she also attended a conference on women’s issues sponsored by Bet Debora, a Jewish women's initiative founded in 1998.".
- Katalin_Kelemen comment "Katalin Kelemen is the first female rabbi in Hungary, where she was born. She studied for the rabbinate at Leo Baeck College in England, and was ordained in 1998. On March 7th, 1999, she was inducted as the rabbi of the Sim Shalom Progressive Jewish Congregation in Budapest, Hungary. In 1999 she also attended a conference on women’s issues sponsored by Bet Debora, a Jewish women's initiative founded in 1998.".
- Q16966326 comment "Katalin Kelemen is the first female rabbi in Hungary, where she was born. She studied for the rabbinate at Leo Baeck College in England, and was ordained in 1998. On March 7th, 1999, she was inducted as the rabbi of the Sim Shalom Progressive Jewish Congregation in Budapest, Hungary. In 1999 she also attended a conference on women’s issues sponsored by Bet Debora, a Jewish women's initiative founded in 1998.".