In celebration of Nowruz, the Persian New Year, Rabbi Yoshi Zweiback welcomes the first female native Farsi speaker to become a rabbi, Rabbi Tarlan Rabizadeh.

A leader, a brilliant educator, and a trailblazer as a Persian female rabbi,  Rabbi Rabizadeh began both her educational and professional journey at Wise. The daughter of Iranian immigrants, she grew up at what was then Stephen S. Wise Temple Elementary School. When she matriculated across the freeway to Milken Community High School, she was unsure of what she wanted to do with her life. She was good at art, but didn’t want to be an artist. Her parents wanted her to go to law school, but she didn’t want to be a lawyer.

At the age of 15, though, she took a class with Rabbi Sharon Brous. Inspired by Rabbi Brous’s patient, thoughtful approach to Jewish studies and Jewish education, she decided then and there that she wanted to join the rabbinate.

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“I wanted to do something with my life that made my brain grow,” Rabbi Rabizadeh said. “In that moment … she made me realize there was so much more than I ever knew about Judaism. That’s when I knew I wanted to become a rabbi. When I told my parents, they nearly fainted. It was just not an option.”

She began by teaching religious school at Stephen Wise Temple on Sundays under Rabbi Melissa Buyer.

“She was the one who said, ‘Tarlan, I see potential in you. You should do this full force, and apply to Hebrew Union College,'” Rabbi Rabizadeh said. “I told her, ‘There’s no way. My parents aren’t on board.'”

There was, however, a full-tuition scholarship for students who wanted to become Jewish educators, Rabbi Buyer told her. It was at HUC, in 2010, that a young Tarlan Rabizadeh met Rabbi Yoshi Zweiback, and the two have remained friends ever since.

Rabbi Rabizadeh was ordained at HUC-JIR, worked as a Jewish Emergent Network Fellow at The Kitchen in San Francisco, taught at Milken, and now, serves as the Director of Student Life at UCLA Hillel.