Gemini says: Power players in Los Angeles Orthodox Judaism operate through a complex network of rabbinic authority, educational leadership, and deep-pocketed philanthropy. Influence here often flows through the specific corridors of the Pico-Robertson, Hancock Park, and Valley Village neighborhoods.
Rabbinic and Synagogue Leadership
Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky remains a central figure at B’nai David-Judea, where he anchors the Modern Orthodox community with a focus on halakhic innovation and social engagement. In the more traditional and Sephardic spheres, Rabbi Netanel Kassovsky at Young Israel of Century City and Rabbi Elazar Muskin at Young Israel of Century City (a Past President of the Rabbinic Council of America) wield significant influence over communal standards and policy. Rabbi Kalman Topp at Beth Jacob Congregation leads one of the largest Orthodox shuls in the West, making him a gatekeeper for mainstream Orthodox life in the city.
The Persian and Mizrahi communities, which form a massive part of the L.A. landscape, look to leaders like Rabbi David Shofet of Nessah Synagogue. His influence extends over thousands of Iranian Jews who bridge the gap between traditional observance and cultural preservation. In the Haredi and Yeshivish sectors centered in Hancock Park, the Roshei Yeshiva of Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon Chabad and various local Admorim set the spiritual tone for the most stringently observant.
Educational Gatekeepers
Power in this community often rests with those who educate the next generation. Rabbi Ari Segal at Shalhevet High School exerts immense influence on the Modern Orthodox trajectory through his school’s progressive approach to Co-educational Torah study. On the more conservative side, leadership at Yavneh Hebrew Academy, Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy, and the various Chabad schools like Bais Rebbe determine the social and religious boundaries for local families.
Philanthropy and Lay Leadership
The financial engine of L.A. Orthodoxy is driven by high-net-worth individuals who fund the infrastructure of schools and mikvaot. Families like the Gindis and the Sassovers are well-known for their substantial support of local institutions. Mark Lainer and the Lainer family have decades of history in funding Jewish education across the city. Many of these figures overlap with the leadership boards of the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles and the Orthodox Union (OU) West Coast, where individuals like Howard Levkowitz and Dr. Ezra Kest play pivotal roles.
Institutional Influence
The Orthodox Union’s West Coast branch, led by Rabbi Adir Posy, acts as a bridge between the national organization and local needs, particularly in kashrut and youth programming through NCSY. Similarly, the Agudath Israel of California office, led by Rabbi Boruch Felman, represents the interests of the Haredi community in Sacramento and local government, handling everything from school vouchers to religious rights.
ChatGPT adds:
Rabbi Zalmy Fogelman – Rabbi, The Village Synagogue (Chabad).
Rabbi Natan Halevy – Rabbi, Kahal Joseph (Sephardic Orthodox community).
Rabbi Aaron Lerner – President and CEO, Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles.
Rabbi Zev Goldberg – former assistant rabbi, Young Israel; now rabbi elsewhere.
Rabbi James Proops – Rabbi, Young Israel (resident maggid shiur).
Rabbi David Mahler – Leads Library Minyan at Young Israel.
Rabbi Moises Benzaquen – Rosh Hayeshiva, West Coast Torah Center; significant local halachic figure.
Rabbi Avrohom Union is a major power center in Los Angeles Orthodox Judaism.
He is the longtime executive director and de facto operational head of the Rabbinical Council of California, with the RCC based in Los Angeles. That role gives him quiet but very real leverage across kashrut, conversions, rabbinic credentialing, communal standards, and dispute resolution.
Formally, the RCC is a rabbinic body and its presidents and senior rabbis rotate. Practically, Rabbi Union is the institutional memory, gatekeeper, and enforcer. He controls process. In Alliance Theory terms, that is power.
Why he matters.
Kashrut
The RCC is one of the most important kosher certification bodies on the West Coast. Decisions about certification, supervision standards, and who is trusted ripple through restaurants, caterers, schools, and synagogues. Rabbi Union sits at the choke point.
Conversions and Jewish status
RCC conversions are widely accepted by Israeli rabbinates and other Orthodox institutions. Oversight of batei din and conversion standards gives him enormous influence over who counts as Jewish in institutional life. That is core alliance boundary control.
Rabbinic legitimacy
Membership in good standing with the RCC affects whether rabbis are treated as legitimate actors in Los Angeles Orthodox space. Union is not the posek, but he manages the machinery that determines recognition.
Conflict mediation and discipline
When rabbis, institutions, or kosher businesses get into trouble, the RCC is often the body that handles it quietly. Rabbi Union’s strength is procedural authority. He decides what escalates and what dies in committee.
Cross-faction coordination
Los Angeles Orthodoxy is fragmented. Modern Orthodox, Yeshivish, Chabad, Sephardic, Persian, Israeli. The RCC is one of the few umbrella structures that touches all of them. Union’s value is that he can speak to all sides without belonging fully to any one camp.
Alliance Theory read.
Rabbi Union is not a charismatic leader and not a public intellectual. He is a bureaucratic power broker. Alliance Theory predicts that in mature, high-status religious ecosystems, the real power shifts away from pulpit stars toward credentialing institutions. That is exactly his niche.
He enforces coalition norms without moral grandstanding. He rarely signals ideology. He signals order, continuity, and trustworthiness. That makes him indispensable.
If you were ranking actual power rather than visibility, he belongs in the top tier. Not top fifty. Top ten.
If you want, I can sketch a clean hierarchy.
Public moral leaders.
Institutional gatekeepers.
Financial patrons.
Educational reproduction engines.
Rabbi Union sits squarely in category two, which quietly dominates the rest.
