Religion News Service - February 28, 2022
Colleyville Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker to take new pulpit in North Carolina
Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, who drew international acclaim for his handling of a hostage-takeover at his Colleyville, Texas, synagogue last month, has accepted an offer to lead a Reform synagogue in North Carolina.
Cytron-Walker will become rabbi of Temple Emanuel, a Reform congregation in Winston-Salem, a city with a population of about 250,000 in the Piedmont region of North Carolina, best known for its former tobacco industry.
“Congregation Beth Israel and the Colleyville community will always be remembered with love,” Cytron-Walker was quoted as saying in a press release issued by the synagogue. “And I am honored, grateful, and excited to join the Temple Emanuel family as their next rabbi.”
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Cytron-Walker will replace Rabbi Mark Cohn, who has served the congregation since 2001 and is retiring. The synagogue’s board voted unanimously to offer him the position on Thurday (Feb. 24).
The Winston-Salem congregation with about 280 member families is more than double the size of the Colleyville congregation. Both are part of the Union for Reform Judaism.
Cytron-Walker resigned as rabbi of Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville last fall — before the hostage-taking — when the congregation’s board voted not to renew his contract.
He had been job searching and interviewed at Temple Emanuel last year. Earlier this month, he and his family visited North Carolina.
“When we first interviewed Rabbi Charlie last year, we were immediately struck by his warmth and humor, his intellect and his ability to speak about Jewish values and education,” William Reingold, the temple’s incoming president, said in a statement. “He exceeded our expectations in every way. The events of January 15, while tragic, only solidified our belief that he was the right choice to be our next rabbi.”
On the morning of Jan. 15, Cytron-Walker welcomed a 44-year-old British national into the sanctuary where Shabbat services were about to be livestreamed and offered him a cup of tea. Midway through the service, the man, identified as Malik Faisal Akram, pulled out a gun and took Cytron-Walker and three others hostage.
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