Ethan Gilan T hree years ago, the lawyer with the soft smile and gentle disposition was playing basketball with Adat Shalom's Rabbi Danny Nevins, and he got an idea. Why not, he suggested, offer a Shabbat service that would be "casual, inter- active, participatory, non-threaten- ing, to get young adults back into the synagogue." Gilan, who had come back to Detroit in 1993 after law school, pointed out that Adat Shalom, a Conservative congregation, wasn't tailoring programs for the needs of young adults. "I felt the young adult commu- nity, twenty- and thirty-somethings, were really unclerserved program- 7/17 1998 100 matically," he said. "People my age were not going to synagogue for any reason, they weren't comfort- able with it, couldn't relate to it, it wasn't relevant to them," he contin- ued, and "the synagogues seemed to be somewhat comfortable with waiting until these young adults became young families to include them." With careful attention to the details -- like choosing Friday night over Saturday morning, due to its popularity for socializing among the younger set -- he and Rabbi Nevins created the monthly Young Adult Shabbat Service. It has become a screaming success among Detroit's Jewish young adults. Between 30 and 75 young adults gather at Adat Shalom on. Shabbat eve once a month, wearing any- thing from long dresses to jeans and knitted kippot. Gilan, who is 30, traces his com- mitment and love of Judaism to his parents -- his mother has taught Hebrew for more than 40 years. He balances a serious law career with Israeli dancing (he has performed in Windsor, Flint and other venues) and laughter. Gilan tried out for Second City when it opened and was part of the Comedy Company as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. In law school at Vanderbilt, he co-founded and built the Jewish Law Students Association. The Jewish community is going to face a lot of tough issues in the future," he said, pointing to the ris ing cost of day school education and a "growing gap between the haves and have-nots, do and do- hots. As a young adult, I'm very sensitive to issues of money. I don't want the Jewish community to focus solely or primarily on the money. Instead, he'd like to see organiza- tions focus on "time-raising get people to donate time. I hate High Holiday pledge drives, but I'd love to see people pledge 100 hours of Jewish community service." Gilan, who will marry Project STaR graduate Lisa Freiman next month, has little to do with YASS these days, but a committee of his dedicated. peers has taken over. The-y've even published a "YASSiddur" to guide participants through the service in English, Hebrew and transliteration, "I think the struggle is to really keep it fresh, innovative," said Gilan.. "That can only happen by having new leaders step to the front. They're obviously doing some- thing right. There's a Singles Shabbat gathering that jumps from shul to shill, and last year, the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit launched Rekindling Shabbat, Its Young Adult Task Force has partnered with YASS and other groups to get young adults involved. with Shabbat. Copying? YASS, Gilan said modestly, was "probably the stimulus for a lot of similar programs throughout the community." He paused, then noted, "Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery." • Stephanie Jacobson tephanie Jacobson has dis- pelled the notion that "out- siders" have a tough time breaking into Detroit's tight-knit community. The 31-year-old Chicago native and her husband, David, together created the young adult committee of JARC (Jewish Association for Residential Care), mostly out of the love and respect she was raised to have toward developmentally dis- abled individuals, including her own c±, brother. "I think it's a very important cause, from personal experience," she said. "And David's mother is on the board of JARC. So we were asked to help them start getting the young adults involved. Young adults had really not been involved at that time. "I do this because I think JARC is a great cause, and I come from a spe- cial events and marketing back- ground, so a lot of this fits into what I like to do. It's easy for me," said Jacobson. She says it is easy, but like many of her peers, she maintains a non- stop pace. With a friend, she runs a small custom invitation and corpo- rate gift packaging business called Paper Rose. Before that, she worked in public relations for seven years. And she has two young daughters. Jacobson's first goal was to bring young adults to JARC's annual fall fund-raiser. Five years ago, it was a concert, and Jacobson succeeded in