/ Rabbi Joshua Bennett of Temple Israel H \ _ Rabbi Joshua Bennett Josh Bennett has a new passion: Climb- ing steep rock faces at Planet Rock in Pontiac. He says it's a way to avoid "func- tional fixiveness" or the certainty there is only one way up. "It's changed my entire perspective. It's taught me about risk-taking and trust," he says. Rabbi Bennett, 28, has never taken the easy road, nor readily accepted the way things are. His choice of sports runs along the "one step beyond the norm" kind. Another example: As a fourth- and fifth-grade student at Hebrew school in his hometown of Flossmoor, outside of Chicago, he got kicked out of class re- peatedly. In retrospect, Rabbi Bennett believes he wanted to get sent to the rab- bi's office because he liked chatting with him. "I didn't think he was a role model growing up, but I guess, looking back, he really was." Coming to Detroit — he joined Temple Israel in 1994, fresh out of Hebrew Union College — came at a time when he was grappling with sea changes in his own life. At the time, he was engaged to his wife Meg and his mother Marian was battling a long-term illness. She died 12 days after Rabbi Bennett took the pul- pit. He believes he is a better rabbi because of his firsthand experience with the death of a close relative, but the death also meant that his life had radically changed the same time he assumed his first pul- pit. "My mother was sick for many years, and her death was very expected, but to move to a new town and be in the process of making friends and in the process of starting a new career ... I realized an enormous amount about my life and this congregation. This congregation opened its arms to me. "Meg and I were nervous about start- ing our lives together, we were nervous about coming to a new community, and all of a sudden we were given this sense of real respect and honor," he says. Like his peers, Rabbi Bennett is ab- sorbed in his work at the temple — one of the largest Reform congregations in the country. His wife, a freelance special-events co- ordinator, is busy, too. That's a good thing. `There are weeks when I spend no time with Meg, but she works hard. We also play very hard," he says. Meg also likes scaling walls. Like Rabbi Michael Moskowitz, his close friend, Rabbi Bennett was exposed to the demands and the joys of the rab- binate before he decided on a career. His older brother Jim is a rabbi in St. Louis, and for years, he spent his summers at Goldman Union Camp, a Reform move- ment camp, where he traces his com- mitment to Judaism. He also met Meg there, a point he makes to young people when he recruits for the camp. "I met rabbis, saw them playing soft- ball, swimming with us, rabbis in a dif- ferent mold from what I saw in my congregation growing up — in a robe and standing on the bimah. I was a high- school student and I sort of began to think in the back of my mind that it was a neat career. I wanted to become the kind of rabbi who went to camp, the kind of rab- bi who changed kids' lives. And that's re- ally where I focus all my energies today," he says. But Rabbi Bennett chose to attend the University of Illinois as an undergradu- ate because it is one of a handful of schools that offers a program in clinical psychology. He also considered veteri- nary medicine or law school. His brother Jim's experience ulti- mately led him to a career in the rab- binate. "He taught me a valuable lesson about the rabbinate: You don't have to go to rab- binic school with an enormous amount of knowledge. You learn," he says. His parents were not surprised at his decision, given Jim's career choice. But his friends were astonished. "My fraternity brothers thought it was crazy, absolutely and completely crazy," Rabbi Bennett recalls. "I didn't have doubts. Becoming a rabbi for me wasn't a scary thing. I wasn't giving up anything like other clergy members may give up. I had an older brother who I saw was happily married with a wonderful fami- ly and who loved his job." For himself, the job fulfills all his per- sonal and professional aspirations. "I don't consider myself to be a person who has a calling. I'm happy to have found a career where I can help people through religion. I consider myself part psychologist, businessman, politician, re- ligious leader: They all fit together in a beautiful picture." 'Unlike his colleagues, Rabbi Bennett is not under contract. He considers that as another sign of respect, a willingness on the part of the Temple Israel congre- gation to nurture its rabbis. "It's a different way of looking at the rabbinate. The lives I change today and I work with today become my colleagues. The 10-year difference between a youth- group teen and me becomes nothing. The congregation wants to make things work, and it has." Like the rabbis he knew at Goldman Union camp, Rabbi Bennett devotes him- self to making Judaism relevant to young students and his peers. "I think people want to listen to a guitar, talk to one an- other and connect to tradition in a dif- ferent way. I haven't identified what it is yet, but I know my friends aren't coming to services here. "At some level, Judaism has to move into the home. A family that sits at home and teaches friends and family what it means to celebrate Shabbat is equally important as a Shabbac experience here at temple," he says. Being young helps him to relate to changing attitudes about religion and spirituality, but naturally, it has elicited lots of comments. Fortunately, they aren't negative. "I really take it as a compliment," Rab- bi Bennett says. "I think people are amazed that somebody can be so young and actually know what he's doing. Every time I do a wedding, I still get butterflies in my stomach. But I don't think it ham- pers me. If the worst thing people say about me is that I'm young, I'll definite- ly grow out of that."