10 Questions For CaliMohel.Com Owner Rabbi Moshe Trager
Full-time mohel performs ritual circumcision for young Jewish families in Los Gatos and throughout Northern California.
Los Gatos Rabbi Moshe Trager is a full-time mohel, pronounced moyel, and rabbi. His practice is based on the Torah or the Bible, which says that on the eighth day of life, a Jewish boy should have a “bris” or ritual circumcision. The Jewish people have been doing ritual circumcision for more than 3,000 years and it’s one of their most precious traditions. Rabbi Trager runs his business online and is based out of Los Gatos. He meets young Jewish families who’ve just had a baby boy and performs the bris. It’s not like a circumcision done in a hospital, he said. As a mohel, he said he does the procedure much faster in the family home and the baby is never tied down. The procedure also involves a ceremony for Jewish couples. His business website is www.calimohel.com.
Los Gatos Patch: What did you dream of being as a kid?
Rabbi Moshe Trager: Not a mohel. I don’t think I even knew what a mohel was until I was living in Israel in the early 1990s. I wanted to be a chef. I did that, too. I went to culinary school and opened my own kosher restaurant. But now, I really do have my dream job.
Patch: How does your personality play into your business?
Rabbi Trager: I think in any business where you are working in front of potentially a lot of people, it helps to be calm, warm, and confident. I also have a sense of humor, which can help relax stressed-out and sleep-deprived new parents. And I’m empathetic having five kids myself.
Patch: At what moment did you decide to open a business?
Rabbi Trager: I’ve been working as a mohel for almost 20 years. I relocated to the Bay Area from Philadelphia 2½ years ago. I’d never even heard of Los Gatos before then. Now, it’s my home base for the work I do all over Northern California.
Patch: What inspired you?
Rabbi Trager: According to Jewish law, it’s the father’s obligation to circumcise his own son. Most fathers hire a mohel to complete the commandment for them. I thought it would be cool to do it myself. So, I trained with the Chief Mohel of Israel. I spent a lot of time with him and he inspired me to become a professional mohel.
Patch: Describe the biggest challenge of owning a business in the Town of Los Gatos?
Rabbi Trager: Since I don’t have a storefront, I face different challenges than a storeowner. My challenge is to make people aware that I am here offering a unique service. Not too long ago, I heard about a couple that went to the unnecessary expense of flying in a mohel from Los Angeles because they didn’t know I was here. So, I’m always looking for good ways to get the word out to couples that there is an experienced mohel, living and working in Los Gatos.
Patch: Describe the best thing about owning a business in the town of Los Gatos?
Rabbi Trager: I’m in a great location to reach families in Northern California. On any day I may be in Sacramento, Berkeley, San Francisco or Los Gatos and it’s all an easy drive from here. The best thing about being based in Los Gatos is that I get to come home to beautiful Los Gatos. I have the JCC, the Los Gatos Creek Trail, and the Apple Store in my backyard. Maybe you have to have lived in Philadelphia to realize it’s a slice of heaven here. Well, heaven minus a good Jewish deli.
Patch: What is one thing you would never change about your business?
Rabbi Trager: I would never change the fact that people have the freedom to choose what is right for their son. In San Francisco, there were efforts to put a proposition on the ballot that would make circumcision illegal. Fortunately, the proposition was found unconstitutional by the courts and never made the ballot.
Patch: What is your business' greatest asset?
Rabbi Trager: I’m the only full-time mohel in Northern California and I’m the most experienced when it comes to circumcising newborn boys. Plus, unlike other traditional mohels, I’m happy to work with Jewish, interfaith, and alternative couples. No matter your level of observance, I’m happy to make the bris a meaningful part of your life.
Patch: What is your favorite spot in town?
Rabbi Trager: A moment of silence for Borders, which was my favorite spot. Now it’s Los Gatos Coffee Roasting Company although I’d never wear Spandex biker shorts.
Patch: What's one thing the community should know about you?
Rabbi Trager: I’m here! I’m happy to answer any and all questions about circumcision. My website is www.calimohel.com. I can be reached at rabbitrager@comcast.net or 415-366-6757.
Leslie
8:09 am on Tuesday, February 7, 2012
I have known Rabbi Trager since he arrived in the area. He is a warm, capable, open person who has enabled people in our area to understand the religious meaning of this Brit, covenant with God. He has worked with doulas and midwives and with many individuals who want to circumcise their sons. They want to do so not in the daunting atmosphere of a hospital, but in the arms of a competent,well trained individual who also offers a warm, welcoming atmosphere for a newborn to be brought into a community that loves and cares for him.
Hugh7
12:35 pm on Tuesday, February 7, 2012
It can certainly be argued that cutting a normal, healthy, integral, functional, non-renewable part off a child is unconstitional, violating her or his relgious freedom (and security of person), and many parents just don't want to put their perfect baby through that. Contact details for more than 60 celebrants of Brit Shalom (non-surgical naming ceremonies) are at http://tinyurl.com/britshalom
antonia
1:56 pm on Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Exactly what Hugh7 said. This interview made me cringe. This guy says he has his dream job? sick.
Sheila Sanchez
2:25 pm on Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Gov. Brown signed legislation last October preventing local bans on circumcision. The measure to place the ban on the ballot was ordered stricken from the ballot by a San Francisco Superior Court judge who said the initiative was preempted by a state law concerning medical procedures, and also endangered the free exercise clause of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Read the complete story here: http://patch.com/A-mFds