Lyourn-±1 :Vitt Lti-FACETS MSTY can mean many things to 750 Reform teen-agers in the Michigan area. RUTH LITTMANN F Special to The Jewish News Andy Lax is president of Michigan State Temple Youth. fifteen-year-old Josh Baru warily eyes Tem- ple Emanu-El's foyer. The synagogue has been besieged by 135 teen-agers kissing and hugging each other. "I don't know if I'm going to fit in here," Josh says. A member of Temple Beth Emeth in Ann Arbor, Josh is new to this crowd, which has migrated to Oak Park for Winter Conclave, a February weekend retreat sponsored by Michigan State Temple Youth (MSTY). "All last year I didn't want to come," Josh says. "But a bunch of my friends told me MSTY's fun. They said I had to come to an event, but I'm nervous about meeting peo- ple." Josh's anxiety afflicts other MSTY maybes. Ambivalent teens worry that youth groups will dramatize their worst nightmare: drowning in a sea of strangers. However, MSTY members say new- comers fret needlessly. "MSTY is an organization you can join if you want to be yourself and make new friends," says Jodi Berger, a North Farmington High School sophomore from Tem- ple Israel. "People who have been pushed at first end up really liking it," adds Rachel Jacobs, a 15-year-old Winter Con- clave co-chair who attends Temple Emanu-El and Berkley High School. Unconvinced by the hype, Josh nonetheless stuck around and conceded he might like it. MSTY, created in 1939 by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, is one of 21 regions of North American Federation of Tem- Ruth Littmann, a 1990 University of Michigan graduate, freelances and works as an assistant editor at Gale Research Inc. in Detroit. 92 FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1991 ple Youth. Until the middle of World War II, NFTY and its regions catered to college graduates. During the mid- 1940s, however, high school students were allowed to join and they took it over. Today, MSTY unites Jewish youth between the ages of 14 and 17. Scattered throughout the suburbs, they take advan- tage of cultural opportunities past generations took for granted. "When I was a little girl, most Jews lived around Dex- ter and Linwood. That was our youth group. It's a whole different life now," says Muriel Sherbow, 65, a Temple Emanu-El youth group adviser. Ms. Sherbow says MSTY conclaves attract young peo- ple to a Jewish forum where they can develop friendships with people who share their religious beliefs and cultural values. Half the fun at the conclaves is the interaction between the teens. "I pay for all the conclaves by myself," says Andrea Wiatrak, a junior at Troy Athens High School, where "there are very few Jewish people. The conclaves give me a sense of being religious, of who I am." Other MSTY-ites, like Tracey Jackier, a 17-year-old member of gemple Emanu-El, says, "We always have ser- vices. They're wonderful. They make me feel like I'm really Jewish." To Andrea, Tracey and others, the allure of Judaism, MSTY-style, is a combination of religion and recreation, synagogue and self-expres- sion. "Kids don't normally like going to services," Andrea ad- mits. "But when you get to write poems, put them in the services and sing songs, they're wonderful!' "Meaningful fun," says MSTY president Andy Lax. "MSTY has given me a sense of a whole heritage!' explains the Cornell-bound senior from Ann Arbor's Temple Beth Emeth. "My parents don't drag me to temple anymore. I choose to go!' MSTY consists of 14 youth groups from temples in Grand Rapids to Toledo. The consti- tuent congregations take turns hosting nine conclaves through the year. Host temples invite all 750 MSTYites to their synagogues for services and daytime programs. Between 35 and 150 show up, depen- ding on the conclave. Host families offer their homes for room and board, and parents act as chauffeurs. The preparations usually start weeks in advance. Winter Conclave '91 touted the theme: Am Echad Parim Rabot, one people, many faces. "The Winter Conclave pro- gramming involved ap- preciating those different facets!' says Rachel Jacobs, who conducted an interactive exhibit depicting a Jewish Ethiopian wedding. . Leah Folb, a senior from