Background
Her mother Rebekka Brilleslijper, also known as Lin Jaldati, was a well-known singer of Yiddish music
Her mother Rebekka Brilleslijper, also known as Lin Jaldati, was a well-known singer of Yiddish music
In 1987 Rebling helped organize a Yiddish culture festival in Germany, which occurred every year into the 1990s. Rebling herself eventually became one of the best known Yiddish singers in united postwar Germany. She also acted in Yiddish at the Hackischer Hoftheater.
In 1979 the Anne Frank Kindergarten in Berlin had Rebling and her mother perform for the fiftieth anniversary of Anne Frank’s birth.
The production was shown on German Democratic Republic television and sold as a record, and it became the family’s signature production on tour. They performed it at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, and Rebling noted that while “we sang in Yiddish, there was also a German song by Paul Dessau.
In fact, we brought the first two pieces of German-language music into Yad Vashem.”
Rebling wrote "Yiddish Culture — a Soul Survivor of East Germany," which was included in the book Speaking Out: Jewish Voices from United Germany, published in 1995. That year she also became the first woman to lead the High Holiday services in Lund, Sweden.
She also led the first egalitarian service in the traditional Jewish community of Hamburg, Germany.
In a Norwegian synagogue of Trondheim, she became the first Jewish female cantor who (together with Rabbi Lynn Feinberg) led Shabbat Services and read the Torah in public. In 2009 and 2011 she performed during the Program in Jewish Studies’ Week of Jewish Culture at the University of Colorado, Boulder.