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April 10, 2026

Rabbis of LA | Rabbi Guzik’s Healthy Choice

Ten years ago, Nicole Guzik, who shares the title of Senior Rabbi of Sinai Temple with her husband, Rabbi Erez Sherman, decided she needed to pursue something that was distinctly her own. Five years later, as an associate marriage and family therapist, she launched the Sinai Temple Mental Health Center to address the mental and emotional health of the Sinai community and beyond.

She became interested in becoming a therapist because she was “meeting with all different kinds of people at various stages in their lives. I felt I could be giving more to my congregants. The conversations would go well. They were helpful to a point, whether the people I was seeing were going through marital struggles or some kind of issue with anxiety or maybe reaching the next stage in life. But I was looking for insight.”

She gained the trust of congregants. More people were coming to her and baring their souls But even after 10 years of seeing clients at the Conservative temple, she was still “looking for the right questions to ask.” She needed a map.

Ambitious, curious, sometimes frustrated, Rabbi Guzik concluded that “if I wanted to dig deeper, perhaps the way to do that would be to get a degree in mental health.” So she sat down with the wisest and most respected mind at Sinai Temple, the former senior rabbi David Wolpe, whose office she now occupies. “I remember telling him ‘I think there is more to my academic career. … What do you think of my going back to school and getting my Master’s in marriage and family therapy?’” His response was unsurprising. “Of course you can,” he said. “What are you waiting for?”

One thing she noticed is that many of her clients would tell her, “Rabbi, I came to you first before going to a therapist.” She asked herself “why they had such trust and confidence” in her. The reason, she soon realized, is that “there is a sense of familiarity in walking through the doors of a synagogue. That is what research shows us: Before seeing a clinician, most people walk through the doors of their faith institution first.”

While she thought she was doing a good job, she “knew I could be doing more if someone were coming to me – I could be both rabbi and not necessarily their personal therapist – but I would be able to ask the right questions and get that person to the therapist they potentially needed.”

Her course chosen, Rabbi Guzik soon found an outlet where she could get all classes online. “I didn’t want to take anything away from my responsibilities here [at the synagogue],” she said. “It was fantastic! Online was fantastic for me because I am a book person. I was happy with my book. I was happy with writing essays at night. At the time she was the mother to little kids (her oldest is now 14). “I’d put them to bed and just sit on the couch and write, which worked out. Being in school all day, I loved it.”

She was a year into her studies when COVID hit. Seeing a way to make an opportunity out of a crisis, she asked, “Who knew that we would need a mental health center? And I would need my degree more than ever?”

Being already online, transition felt “seamless for me because my school already was online. And then my practicum – I again worked online with the Maple Counseling Center, Beverly Hills, a sliding scale mental health center people should know about. They will see anyone in California.  Some clients can pay a dollar. Some can pay $100.  They meet you where you are.”  During her time there, she didn’t believe people knew she was a rabbi since she was behind the screen. “As a clinician there,” she said, “I gained a lot of experience from that internship.”

Talk about a working mother! During her internship, she still was working fulltime at Sinai. Mondays are her day off, depending on what’s happening on a Monday.

“The timeline kind of worked out,” Rabbi Guzik said. “Practicum [at Maple]is about 20 hours a week, which is a lot, but I would do the majority of my work on Mondays. I have a very, very supportive family.”

Fast Takes with Rabbi Guzik

Jewish Journal: What is your favorite Shabbos moment?

Rabbi Guzik.: At about 4:30 every Shabbat I wake up after taking a nap, and I just know I am going to spend time with my family [children 14, 12 and 10], whether Legos or swimming or a walk — 4:30 is family time.

J.J.: Do you have an unrealized goal?

R.G.: I have two for the summer. One is to finish my license as a Marriage and Family Therapy clinician, and I am putting together a book based on [her “A Bisl Torah”] series in The Journal – 365 days of ethical living.

J.J.: Best book you ever have read?

R.G.: Let’s say impactful. That would be – with every student who is interested in Judaism or an introduction to Judaism, I always, always reference Joseph Telushkin.

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L.A. Jewish Symphony Concert, Open Temple Seder Crawl

Wilshire Boulevard Temple and the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony (LAJS), under the direction of Founding Artistic Director and Conductor Noreen Green, held “Opera Favorites with a Jewish Twist” on March 22. An enthusiastic crowd, including multiple senior homes and a local student group, turned out.

Taking place in the historic sanctuary at Wilshire Boulevard Temple’s Glazer campus, this program celebrated the Jewish composers, librettists and influences that shaped the sound of the opera house.

This concert brought together internationally recognized soloists from the opera world as well as local talent from synagogues across the Jewish community to offer opera lovers and newcomers alike a warm, uplifting encounter with music that has shaped both Jewish and classical traditions.

Additionally, WBT Rabbi Susan Nanus formally presented the L.A. Jewish Symphony with the Acquisition International Business Excellence Award for Leading Cultural Symphony Orchestra, 2026 – USA. “This recognition reflects the symphony’s artistic vision, community and educational outreach, and growth,” the event’s organizers said.

Wilshire Boulevard Temple Rabbi Susan Nanus presents L.A. Jewish Symphony’s Noreen Green with an award. Photos by Trisha Harrison Photography

Featured artists in the program included opera singer Tracy Cox; singer Elizabeth Kerstein of Temple Ahavat Shalom; Valley Outreach Synagogue Senior Rabbi Ron Li-Paz; WBT Senior Cantor Lisa Peicott; and Grammy-nominated tenor Brian Vu.


Open Temple Rabbi Lori Shapiro leads an interactive seder crawl on the second night of Passover. Photos by Ryan Torok

Comfortable walking shoes and a sense of playfulness were required when Open Temple Rabbi Lori Shapiro led an interactive seder crawl–dubbed “Seder Synesthesia”–through the Venice neighborhood on the second night of Pesach.

The unique program, held April 2, drew approximately 35 participants of all ages. Attendees followed Shapiro down Abbot Kinney boulevard, through the Venice Canals and other notable spots in the artsy hood. As they walked, they wore headphones so they could hear songs from a pre-programmed Passover playlist, including The Bangles “Walk Like an Egyptian,” and hear a mic’d up Shapiro as she took on double duty as clergyperson and walking-tour guide. For the bulk of the program, Shapiro drew connections between the sights and sounds of the neighborhood and the Exodus story.

The event began around 4 p.m., kicking off with everyone meeting in the parking lot of the Electric Lodge, a theater space that’s also where Open Temple gathers for services. In the lot, the Open Temple Band played Pesach-appropriate tunes, including Bob Marley’s “Exodus,” before several members of Open Temple, dressed in costume as Pharoah and Egyptian taskmasters, appeared – much to the delight of the younger ones in the crowd.

The crawl stopped at places including Salt and Straw, an upscale ice cream shop, and Kreation Juicery, where smoothie samples resembling the blood of the plagues were offered to seder participants.

Attendees of all ages turned out to Open Temple’s seder crawl through Venice.

The event concluded at a Venice arts studio space, where attendees were treated to a light show—referred to as an “Exodus Bath,” as opposed to a sound bath—that was intended to emulate the wandering in the desert. Then, everyone returned to Open Temple’s home base for a kosher-style dinner.

Ultimately, the sensory-filled program allowed those in attendance to “smell the matzah, see the songs and taste the colors,” the event’s organizers said, describing the program as “a twist to seder for twisted times, with Venice as our playground.”

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