Susan Talve is the founding rabbi of Central Reform Congregation, the only Jewish congregation in the City of St. Louis. She performs life cycle events, leads worship services for the seven hundred fifty plus households that comprise the congregation, and is actively involved in the teaching of young and adult members. She also teaches courses on Jewish life and thought in both the Jewish and non-Jewish community.
A past president of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association, she was ordained by Hebrew Union College in Cincinnat in 1981, where she earned a Master’s Degree in Hebrew Letters. She was honored with the college’s Stephen Levinson Award for Community Service after founding the Jewish Early Learning Cooperative, Ohio’s first licensed infant childcare program in the workplace.
In 1992, the Jewish Federation of St. Louis awarded her their first Woman of Valor award. In May 1993, she was given the Trumpet of Justice Award by the Institute of Peace and Justice. Rabbi Talve received the Brotherhood and Sisterhood Award of the National Conference of Community and Justice for the year 2000 and was a 2003 Woman of Achievement.
Strongly committed to Tikkun Olam -- healing the world -- she is a member of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, Parenting for Peace and Justice and the National Conference of Community and Justice. She is the Vice President of the Board of Dollar-Help, Inc. She serves on the Community Advisory Committee of the Regional Health Commission. In 2004, she helped her congregation found CHIPS@CRC, a monthly health screening and education clinic for the under- and un-insured, in coalition with the CHIPS Clinic. Rabbi Talve helped start and continues to lead a group at St. Louis Children’s Hospital for families of children with congenital heart defects and serves on the Board of the Children's Hospital Foundation.
Rabbi Talve has led her congregation in promoting inclusivity by developing ongoing relationships with African-American and Muslim congregations, and by fostering civil liberties for the LGBT community. She served as the Vice-Chair of Missourians for Freedom and Justice, an organization that supported the LGBT community and is on the Steering committee of Children of Abraham, a group committed to keeping a dialog open between American Jews and Palestinians.
She and husband, Rabbi James Stone Goodman of Neve Shalom Congregation, have three children.