C o m m u ni ty Spirituality tura Adat Shalom's newest clergy t m member b r i ngs ra bb in ic ■ eSS1011 • • a, x g A 0 8 • 0 fa AisK M r a- sa NI NI Rabbi Jay Strear brings administrative, leadership and fund-raising experience to Farmington Hills congregation. office staff member. The 'cou- ple will celebrate their fourth wedding anniversary on Aug. 25. Interviewed at Adat Shalom last February, the rabbi said he was impressed to discover the synagogue's search committee "already knew about me and my various management, hind-raising and young adult leadership skills. I felt very honored that they did their homework and knew what they wanted and expected." Rabbi Jay Strear Rabbi Strear unpacks boxes of books in his new office. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer W hen Jay Allen Strear entered the University of Judaism in 1994, he was a single guy with an under- graduate degree in 'English literature from the University of Colorado in Boulder and a resume filled with Jewish communal experience. This past May, he left the Los Angeles-based school with his rabbinic ordination, a master's degree in business administration, a wife he met while a student there and his first career post as the new rabbi at Adat Shalom Synagogue. Rabbi Strear, a Denver native, first got involved in the Jewish community as a teen through leadership roles in the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization. He spent his junior year of high school on a kibbutz outside of Afula, Israel. At col- lege in Boulder, he formed the Jewish A Familiar Feel Student Council, an organization estab- lished within Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life, to enable local col- lege students to participate in communal activities. In 1990, the Allied Jewish Federation of Colorado recognized him as the state's most outstanding Jewish student leader. After college graduation, his interest in youth led him to teach Hebrew high school and to'head four tours to Israel with teenagers. While studying at the University of Judaism's Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies, Rabbi Strear worked as interim director of the Los Angeles school's undergraduate leadership development program. He later was special assistant to the university president, Dr. Robert Wexler, acting as liaison to the board of directors and their committees. The future rabbi managed special projects and the fund-raising portfolio. It was at college that he met Beth Solursh Strear, former development Adat Shalom was one of nine synagogue interviews Rabbi Strear scheduled at the Rabbinical Assembly-sponsored interview week at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York. The Adat Shalom contingent includ- ed Rabbi Daniel Nevins, then syna- gogue president Terrin Leemis and search committee members Beverly Liss (current synagogue president) and Larry Wolfe (synagogue first vice president). After speaking with them, Rabbi Strear said he and his wife decided to decline offers to spend Shabbat with the other congregations. "Everything just felt familiar," the rabbi had said, during a late February visit to Adat Shalom. He and his wife "looked at each other and decided Adat Shalom and Detroit felt beshert [meant to be]. We decided to listen to our kishkes (gut feeling)." Rabbi Nevins said Rabbi Strear was chosen because "we wanted a rabbi who would concentrate on outreach to youth and young adults.". He calls him "an extremely talented and exciting rabbi who stood out for his background in leadership development," the focus of Rabbi Strear's master's thesis. He has "a good musical ability and much experi- ence working with youth," Rabbi Nevins added. "We expect that impact will be felt throughout the congregation and will strongly complement our already strong team of clergy and professionals at Adat Shalom," Rabbi Nevins said. The clergy include Rabbi Herbert Yoskowitz, Cantor Howard Glantz, Rabbi Emeritus Efry Spectre and Cantor Emeritus Larry Vieder. Rabbi Strear and his wife, a graphic designer, whose job followed her to Detroit via telecommunications, have purchased a home in Farmington Hills. Proxithity to the synagogue was a priori- ty because the rabbi expects to walk there twice each Shabbat: for services on Friday nights and Saturdays. But a trip home to Denver for an ordination party and two weeks in Israel with Adat Shalom youth on the Teen Mission 2000 to Israel (concluded July 31) have kept the Strears from truly moving in yet. Rabbi Strear.sees his role at the 1,250-family Conservative congregation as focusing on life-cycle events and on synagogue members age 45 and younger. He plans to be the rabbinic presence in the nursery school for chil- dren and their_parents, conducting par- enting classes and bringing Judaic enrichment into homes. The rabbi also will assist in Adat Shalom's education program. He will oversee the development of curriculum in Nosh 'n Drash, the synagogue's Hebrew high school program. Rabbi Strear recalled the synagogue's search committee members asking what qualities he would bring to Adat Shalom. He answered at the time, "I strive to be a mentsh [good-hearted, responsible person]." Now in his new congregational post, he said, "I feel I am surrounded by mentshen — those who j treat us right." ❑ 8/11 200 so