Former UUA Moderator Denny Davidoff dies

Former UUA Moderator Denny Davidoff dies

Denise T. Davidoff among Unitarian Universalist Association’s most active volunteer leaders, chairing board from 1993 to 2001 and serving in many roles over 50 years.

Tom Stites
Denny Davidoff

Denise Davidoff speaks at the Service of the Living Tradition at the 2017 General Assembly in New Orleans, her fiftieth consecutive GA. (© Christopher L. Walton)

© 2017 Christopher L. Walton

Advertisement

Denise Taft Davidoff, who did much to shape contemporary Unitarian Universalism through decades of volunteer lay leadership that culminated with her service as UUA moderator from 1993 to 2001, died of cancer on December 7 at her home in Bridgeport, Connecticut. She was 85 years old.

Perhaps no UU layperson was so visible to so many over the last half century. She never missed a General Assembly after attending her first of fifty in 1968. (At the most recent GA, she delivered an impassioned appeal to give generously to the Living Tradition Fund.) In addition to presiding over eight Assemblies as moderator, she held leadership positions in a long list of UU groups, preached in more than one hundred congregations, and mentored generations of ministers and lay leaders who are shaping our faith today. When illness overtook her this fall, Davidoff was still hard at work raising money and tending to alumni/ae affairs for Meadville Lombard Theological School, the UU seminary in Chicago, where she earlier had served as a board member and chair.

“Her mentoring never stopped,” said Kay Montgomery, the retired UUA executive vice president, who is now chair of the Meadville Lombard board. “The current students are very distraught.”

UUA Moderator Denise T. Davidoff at the podium of the 1999 General Assembly in Salt Lake City.

UUA Moderator Denise Davidoff presides over the 1999 General Assembly in Salt Lake City. (© Nancy Pierce)

© 1999 Nancy Pierce/UUA

The moderator, Unitarian Universalism’s highest volunteer position, is elected not only to preside at General Assemblies but also to chair the UUA’s Board of Trustees. In this role Davidoff became universally known as “Denny” thanks to her accessible personality and gift for genial unflappability in wielding the gavel in sometimes unruly GA debates. She is also remembered for her productive relationship with UUA President John Buehrens, whose term as top executive coincided with hers as moderator.

It was not only through her work in the foreground but also behind the scenes that Davidoff widened Unitarian Universalism’s horizons. Two of her efforts, advancing gender equity and antiracism, lead a long list of her accomplishments.

In 1973, as feminism was taking hold in the culture, Davidoff became a board member and later president of the UU Women’s Federation. The federation’s efforts led to revision of the Principles and Sources in 1985, then to the 1993 publication of Singing the Living Tradition, with its pioneering gender-inclusive language.

In an oral history recorded in 2011, Davidoff recalled that her antiracism commitment dated to her first General Assembly, when she joined in the debate that roiled the denomination in the late 1960s over how UUs could best work for racial justice. Then, at the 1992 GA, she helped write a resolution that directed congregations to pursue antiracism and multiculturalism, and floor-managed its passage. And as moderator in 1997, she directed debate as delegates voted to adopt a business resolution that established structures and procedures to institutionalize antiracism and multiculturalism in the UUA.

As moderator, Davidoff also established the UUA’s Task Force on Socially Responsible Investing, which subsequently became the Socially Responsible Investment Committee, and worked to broaden Unitarian Universalism’s interfaith engagement. Also, she saw the need to simplify the Association’s government structure and make it more open and inclusive, and initiated a task force to explore possibilities. Gini Von Courter, a successor of Davidoff as moderator, shepherded a governance overhaul that fully took effect in June 2017 with the election of the Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray as UUA president.


Davidoff grew up in a Conservative Jewish household in the New York City borough of Queens. After college at Vassar she embarked on a successful career in marketing and advertising that led to her own agency, which specialized in branding. She and her husband, Jerry Davidoff, a lawyer and civil liberties advocate, settled in Westport, Connecticut.

In her oral history, Davidoff said it was the patriarchy of Judaism that sent her searching for a new religious home, and she and Jerry found it in 1960 in the Unitarian Church in Westport. “I hesitated to leave the worldwide Jewish community, which I felt needed my support. I still do,” she said. “So by the time I joined [the Westport church] I was already serving on committees and Jerry and I were teaching RE [religious education].”

Jerry and Denny Davidoff, 2006

Jerry and Denny Davidoff receive the Award for Distinguished Service to the Cause of Unitarian Universalism at the 2006 General Assembly. (© Nancy Pierce)

© Nancy Pierce

They both became so active in the denomination that they were joint recipients of the 2006 Award for Distinguished Service to the Cause of Unitarian Universalism. Jerry Davidoff’s UUA volunteer contributions included service on the Ministerial Fellowship Committee, Commission on Appraisal, Elections Review Committee, and Election Campaign Practices Committee.

Beyond her service as UUA moderator and as chair of the women’s federation, Davidoff was a trustee of Meadville Lombard and of the UUA, chair of the General Assembly Planning Committee, a member of the Ministerial Fellowship Committee, and chair of the board of the Church of the Larger Fellowship, the congregation for UUs who are isolated from brick-and-mortar congregations. She was also a trustee of the World Conference on Religion and Peace and co-founder and president of the Interfaith Alliance Foundation.

Throughout her life, Davidoff’s religious perspective continued to evolve, and in her later years, she said in the oral history, was re-exploring the theistic roots of her childhood. She also had come to value Universalism, and credited the late Rev. Dr. Forrest Church of the Unitarian Church of All Souls in New York for his theological insights about it.

Davidoff is survived by two sons, Douglass of Bridgeport and John of Evanston, Illinois, and four grandchildren. Jerry Davidoff died in 2009.

Davidoff’s Facebook page is filled with tribute after tribute.

“I loved her years as moderator,” the Rev. Jane Dwinell wrote, recalling General Assemblies where Davidoff had presided. “I would go to business meetings just to watch her grace.”

The Rev. Sarah Gibb Millspaugh posted a photo showing Davidoff with twelve young adults, many who have gone on to become ministers, with this description: “I found this picture from the UUA General Assembly 1996 showing just one of the generations of leaders Denny Davidoff nurtured.”

Shortly before her final surgery, Davidoff posted, “Alas, I cannot be in Boston September 14–16 to cheer on and chaplain our wonderful Meadville Lombard students who are candidating before the MFC [Ministerial Fellowship Committee]. Surgery and follow up radiation have me temporarily sidelined. Know I love you all and wish you well. Oh, how I love you!”

John Davidoff announced his mother’s death with a Facebook post on the afternoon of December 7. He said that a memorial service is being planned for sometime in January at the Unitarian Church in Westport.

Listen to this article

Corrections

An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Davidoff chaired the Meadville Lombard Board of Trustees; she served as a trustee, but not as chair. An earlier version characterized Gini Von Courter as Davidoff’s successor as UUA moderator; Diane Olson served a partial term between them.

Advertisement