Gunda Trepp

[2][3] After embarking on her professional career as a lawyer and law lecturer, she began working as a freelance journalist for various media such as Der Spiegel, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, and the NDR.

In 2000, she started a relationship with the religious philosopher and rabbi Leo Trepp and converted to Judaism in 2001.

In 2007, Trepp's book So viele Tage ohne dich (So many days without you) was published by Verlag Herder.

According to Simon Berninger (Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper), the biography is "the key to understanding this very unusual rabbi".

[7] In Jüdische Rundschau, Nikoline Hansen writes that the book is "not only a gripping read but also manages to bring back to life the voice of Leo Trepp"[8] In an interview with Christiane Florin (Deutschlandfunk radio), Gunda Trepp says that only through knowledge and education can non-Jewish Germans help fight antisemitism.

Gunda Trepp at a reading of The Last Rabbi in October 2018