Usually, rabbis become ordained during their late 20s and early 30s.
yes Yes, as of the 1970's, there have been women ordained as rabbis.
Sometimes. Families can have several generations of rabbis. However, there is no requirement that a person come from a family of rabbis to become a rabbi, even in the most traditional movements; nor is there any guarantee that a person born to generations of rabbis will also become a rabbi.
Not exactly. Rabbis begin their training after high school.
A Rabbi is a Jewish teacher, but rabbis in modern times also have other functions:Prayer leader (including weddings and funerals)Kosher food supervision (orthodox rabbis only)Religious counselingReligious school principals
Rabbis are primarily teachers. However, they can specialise in different fields of Judaism, some lead congregations, others are counselors, legal experts, etc.
You first have to be ordained as a rabbi.
-- The modern Reform and Reconstructionist Jewish movements ordain female rabbis. -- The Conservative Jewish movement began to ordain women within the past 20 years. -- Orthodox Judaism has never ordained women.
No, there are female rabbis, even amongst the Orthodox. (Orthodox female rabbis aren't pulpit rabbis.)
The rabbis in Israel.
Rabbis don't have "helpers".
Mostly Orthodox rabbis do that.