Spirituality A _o 0 o . Perfect Fit fa RECONSTRUCTIONIST STUDENT RABBI BLENDS LIFE EXPERIENCES WITH SPIRITUAL LEADERSHIP AT T'CHIYAH. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN StaffWriter A Steve Gutow talks with T'chiyah members. fter a successful 20-year climb up the political and legal ladder, Steve Gutow found himself jumping off the rungs and landing in rabbinical school. Referring to himself as "a recov- ering Texas lawyer," members of Congregation T'chiyah under- stand what it took for Gutow to make the career and life change that, at age 54, brought him to spend his sixth and final year as a Reconstructionist rabbinical stu- dent at their synagogue. "In addition to his enthusiasm and intensity about his rabbinic studies, he brings to us such diverse life experiences," said Mary Ellen Gurewitz, T'chiyah presi- dent. Once a law firm partner prac- ticing business and government law with dreams of running for political office — even of becoming governor of his home state of Texas — Gutow is confi- dent he has found his place as a spiritual leader within the Reconstructionist movement. The Road To Philly In the early 1990s, Gutow had been living in Washington, D.C., where he had organized and was directing a new group built around Jewish social justice values, American liberal- ism and grassroots populist politics. At first, he said the task sounded like "a pathway to Nirvana." But as the organization grew with success, he found himself questioning his choice of political involvement. "I found myself looking at people and thinking, "What could I get from them? How much influence does he or she have?" he said. 3/14 2003 56 About that time, he was able to fulfill a longtime calling to visit Cambodia. "I saw monuments to those who had died. I had an English-speaking guide who had been afraid to speak English because he feared his own broth- er would turn him in to authorities, and I vis- ited a high school in Phnom Pen that had been turned into a torture prison," Gutow said. "I felt such humility and such great anger at what had happened to these people and I questioned whether goodness and grandeur could live side by side." . The deep realization of the suffering that had occurred there changed the focus of his life. "Suddenly, the pursuit of power seemed like a prison sentence," he said. "Nothing I would want to spend my life doing. For me, the idea of being governor, president or chang- ing the world through political action encoun- tered a timely and justifiable death." After a visit to Israel, he returned to Washington, D.C. "I started the move to turn my life around," he said of a decision to look into the rabbinate. Raised as a Conservative Jew, Gutow says he visited the Reconstructionist Rabbinical School in Philadelphia "almost on a lark. I realized the movement embraced a very spiritual compo- nent but, even more importantly, I knew I belonged there. I knew I wasn't doing this for a' job — but for a life," he said. Accepted to the college contingent on pass- ing a Hebrew language test, he said, "I became a Hebrew maniac." He spent three months in Israel, living in an absorption center, studying Hebrew. The Reconstructionist Synagogue Since arriving at T'chiyah in Sept. 2002, Gutow has taken on all the roles of a rabbi at the synagogue with 35-40 member families. While services are held each Shabbat — on alternating Friday nights or Saturday mornings — Gutow is there one weekend each month. He joins the congregation's lay leadership in running services, using the Reconstructionist movement's Kol Haneshamah prayer book. "He is available to give advice about the Torah portion and offer himself as a rabbinic resource," Gurewitz said. "He also meets with the children in the congregation on Sundays and is available for pastoral care — even by phone — when he is back in Philadelphia." , Gutow has become involved in the monthly lecture series Gurewitz and the synagogue board have sponsored on Jewish-Arab relations titled, "Connections and .Conflicts: The Complex Relationship Between Jews and Arabs — Past, Present and Future." He helped organize the classes that run February through May, and led the first session, "The Golden Age of Spain: The Rich Dynamic Community Forged by the Connection of Jews and Muslims," attended by nearly 60 participants. • A former Democratic Party organizer, "he was so intense at transferring his skills into rab- binic Judaism," Gurewitz said. Gutow also had incorporated Jewish inter- ests into his legal and political life. He served as regional director for Southwestern United States, American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), was executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council in Washington, D.C., and was a founding board member of Amos: National Jewish Partnership for Social Justice. Reconstructionist Judaism One of more than 100 Reconstructionist com- munities in North America, T'chiyah is joined in the Detroit area by the Ann Arbor Reconstructionist Havurah and the Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit. Established by Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, Reconstructionist Judaism is based on the evolving religious civilization of the Jewish people. Reconstructionist congregations look to bridge the gap between tradition and