Putting n The Beth Greenapple works to enrich the Judaic content of the JCC. PHOTO BY DANIEL LIPPITT JULIE WIENER STAFF WRITER II n encouraging people to learn about Ju- daism, Beth Greenapple likes to think of chocolate cake. "You don't have to have a big piece or eat it with a fork, but it's there for you," she says. As director of Judaic enrichment, a brand-new position at the Jewish Com- munity Center, she's dishing up a lot of metaphorical chocolate cake. Her responsibilities include developing and implementing Jewish educational programming as well as helping to infuse all of the JCC's pro- gramming with Judaic content, atmosphere and learning. She also coordinates partnerships and joint projects with other Jewish organizations in the community. In what Ms. Greenapple *calls a growing trend, directors of Judaic enrichment are becoming de rigueur at JCCs throughout the country. "There are a lot of JCCs that have experienced the same kind of loss of identity that this JCC was suf- fering from," she said. "And one of the ways to regain a sense of purpose as separate from a gen- eral, civic community center is to focus on that Jewish piece that makes us a Jewish commu- nity center." Since starting work in late February, Ms. Greenapple has been brainstorming new pro- grams and working on ways to improve exist- ing ones. Plans include bringing students from day schools and supplementary schools into the JCC gallery for study related to the exhibits. Work is also under way for educational programs commemorating Israel's 50th birthday. Ms. Greenapple has a knack for slipping Jew- ish programming into departments within the JCC not normally thought of as Jewish. Like the JCC's fitness center, where she has posted ta- bles listing the distances between cities in Is- rael so that people can learn about Israeli geography while charting their progress on the treadmill.. She also hopes to make Jewish learn- ing videos available for people to watch while they work out. Or the "physical activity" the JCC provided for last month's Israel fair: Ms. Greenapple transformed an obstacle course into a simula- tion of Israel Defense Forces basic training. With assistance from Friends of the IDF, Ms. Greenapple used the activity as an opportunity to teach children about the IDF and the skills necessary to become a good soldier in Israel. A native of New York, Ms. Greenapple moved to Detroit just two years ago, in part because she was drawn to Detroit's Jewish community. "'Me friends I knew here I'd met through [Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education] — I encountered a vibrant Jewish community [in Detroit] where people were looking for ways to innovate and looking for creative educators with experience and talent." Before accepting her current job, Ms. Greenap- ple balanced three part-time teaching jobs in the Jewish community: music and liturgy at Tem- ple Israel, Sunday school at Beth Achim and sec- ular studies at Sally Allan Alexander Beth Jacob School for Girls. As a young adult, Ms, Greenapple probably wouldn't have pictured herself becoming a Jew- ish educator. Although she grew up in "a strong ethnically Jewish family," she found her reli- gious upbringing spiritually unsatisfying. "My bat mitzvah was the singularly most dis- appointing spiritual experience I have had," she recalls. Instead of the "thunder and lightning kind of epiphany" the young Ms. Greenapple had been anticipating for her entrance into adult- hood, she shared the bimah of an enormous Long Island temple with three other b'nai mitzvah and got to read only four lines of her Haftorah. To make matters worse, the rabbi forgot her name. Disenchanted by the lack of learning and spirituality in her temple, the young Ms. Greenapple dropped out of her confirmation class and spent years in a spiritual quest that included explorations of Bud- dhism and Christianity and a move away from organized re- ligion altogether. But years later, a job teach- ing secular studies at the Abra- ham Joshua Heschel School, a nondenominational day school in Manhattan, reawakened Ms. Greenapple's faith in Ju- daism. She was drawn to the welcoming and accepting phi- losophy of the school and has "been on a learning curve ever since." She now identifies as a Con- servative Jew and places a high premium on creating a safe space for Jews who are un- affiliated. "In some ways, I'm uniquely qualified for connect- N- ing with people out there who cn o, are disaffected, who don't know — what it's about, who feel like .=;- they don't have the skills," she says. "I hope to give people options and choices, but we have to be welcoming and friendly," she adds. ❑ z Beth GrApnanole: Spiritual Quest. 1