We've said that the relationship between Rabbi and President is  endangered by two major factors: The vagueness of the president’s job  description, and the overlap between the jobs of rabbi and president.
To my mind, and from my  experience, a simple solution from the rabbi’s side is for the rabbi to  give the president plenty of space to create his own job, even as he is  cognizant of the red-line boundaries which must not be crossed.
I  say this because I view the president as an Ubervolunteer. You know  what I mean when I say Ubervolunteer: The people who spend hours every  week, all year round, working on the kiddush. Gabbaim who care enough  about their job to make sure that everyone in the shul gets an aliyah as  often as possible. House committee members who come out to mop up leaks  and change light bulbs. The president, if he does his job right, is an  UberUberUbervolunteer (Ubervolunteer3, if you will), so treat  him like it.
This means:
Value the president, and let him  know he is valued.
Allow him a lot of freedom, just as when you  delegate to anyone else.
Assume the best of intent, not the worst.
Be  gentle!
This solves the Vagueness of the presidential job  description - the president gets to develop his job as he sees fit, and  to the best of his strengths.
This solves the Overlap issue - the  president can have his input wherever he feels necessary, and the rabbi  retains his autonomy where he needs it.
This isn’t always  simple, of course:
There’s a lot of deep-seated psychological  baggage involved for both rabbi and president; I know presidents who  look at rabbis and see their fathers. I've heard it's almost an Oedipal thing  sometimes, which can get a little spooky. Telling lashon hara about your  rabbi to get back at your domineering father, talking in shul to work  off your frustration with your mother...
And then, on the other  hand, I know rabbis who look at presidents and see schoolyard bullies  and abusers past. That's a bad one, when you look at someone who's just  trying to help and all you can see is Shmully Mxyzptlk, who beat you up  in the sandbox back in third grade. Get help, please.
It’s also  tough because the president is, technically, an employer, which can  create heavy tension for the rabbi/employee. What if the president  decides to cross a red-line, and doesn’t take it well when the rabbi  tries to limit his actions?
Nonetheless, I believe that the rabbi  is best served by knowing his red-lines and ceding as much of the rest  as he can. Of course, I have violated that rule any number of times... But I’ve muddled  through on the strength of these principles.
Coming soon, we  still need Synagogue Presidents IV:
The President as Employer,  Partner, Congregant
What happens when a president makes a mistake
What  happens when a rabbi makes a mistake (as if!) 
"Mxyptlk"
ReplyDeleteAren't you missing a "z" in there?
(This is a job for ... super-rabbi!)
Shalom-
ReplyDeleteDuly edited, thanks!