[5] Shortly after her ordination as a rabbi, she founded Ohel Ayalah, an outreach project to disaffected young Jews, named in memory of her mother.
Ohel Ayalah runs free, walk-in High Holy Days services and Passover seders for people of all ages on the first night and for twenties and thirties on the second.
She was an early member of Ezrat Nashim, a group of women who lobbied in the 1970s for egalitarianism in Jewish life.
In it, she argued that Jewish women have always had an obligation to pray and for that reason can count in the minyan and even lead it in prayer.
In 2014, she became the first guest lecturer from abroad to address the Israeli Knesset’s weekly religious study session.