CDITOR'S NOTEBOOK Tuning Out, Tuning In I is not about the music, uplifting as it is. Nor is it about the melodies, beautiful as they are. Rather, it's about feeling, intensity and connection. It's about being at one with God and with each other as Jews. It's also about fun and informality That's the aim of Shabbat Unplugged, the new, informal Shabbat service open to young adults throughout metro Detroit. Still experimental, the monthly service hopes to inspire our 20-, 30- and early 40-somethings to embrace Shabbat, whatever their Jewish background. Clearly, the need is urgent. More than 800 young adults gathered on Oct. 10 for the first Shabbat Unplugged at the host synagogue, Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. The Reform temple's Roseanne and Bennett Fienman Family Young Adult Fund is S.U. underwriter. The Detroit Jewish News is cosponsor. Some had come to sing with their heart and pray with their soul. Others were there ROBERT A. just because friends or family had asked them" SKLAR to go. If all they did was follow along in Editor hopes of catching a few spiritual sparks, so be it. "It was a rockin', jivin, joyful, prayerful, songful time — a celebration," said Temple Israel Student Rabbi Jennifer Tisdale Kroll, 26. "I think we're off to an amazing start. All I can say is, 'God will- ing.'" To which I say, Amen. "Just sing at the top of your lungs," a gui- tar-strumming Rabbi Paul Yedwab urged as the 9 p.m. service began. He asked each per- son to choose one care, worry or chore and unplug it — then another and another. Kroll "Remember," he said, "we're not severing these cords. You can plug them back in on Sunday. It's just for Shabbos." "Imagine," he said, "that for this one Shabbat; you are unplugged from it all." I sensed a momentary hush as the crowd responded to his call to relax, recalibrate and unplug. We Are One Shabbat Unplugged attendees were as eclectic as the larger Jewish community. Some are active in Federation, Hillel, the communal world or their synagogue. Others hadn't been to a service since their Hebrew school days. All were looking for a reason to be there. Most found it in the music, or the emotion cascading from it. For others, the sushi, cheese, fruit and cappuchino oneghooked them. It didn't matter. They were one. "I liked it," said Steve Lonn, 25, a third-year graduate stu- dent in education at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. "It's a combination of a not-so-formal service an41 being able to feel the community getting together around song." There were no prayer books — just one of the conventions of everyday life the group unplugged from. Lyrics and prayeis were shown on two large screens. The idea was to pray out- ward, not down. That distinction wasn't lost on Lonn. "Everyone is watching the same screen, the same words," he said. "That was a kind' of binding force and uniting influence." Lonn sensed what confronts us all, whether we know it or not: Reaching our young adults now, before we lose them to the lures of a fully assimilated lifestyle. A poignant moment was when Rabbi Harold Loss blessed the fighting forces of both Israel and America; many of the soldiers are the same age as S.U.-goers. The newly released National Jewish Population Survey, commissioned by the federated network United Jewish Communities and largely funded by Franklin philanthropist Mandell Berman, shows that 26 percent of all U.S. Jews are in their 20s and 30s. Many no doubt are part of the 60 percent of households unaffiliated with a synagogue. Only 45 percent of U.S. Jews ages 35 111.1 feel being Jewish is "very important." Just 20 percent belong to a Jewish com- munity center. Unaffiliated Jews are substantially less engaged in Jewish life and have weaker ties to Israel, the survey shows. Notably, the intermarriage rate hovers at 47 percent. It has risen steadily since 1970, though at a slower pace . since 1985. Shabbat Unplugged isn't unique. Congregation B'nai Jeshurun in Upper Manhattan draws thousands of young peo- ple every Friday night. S.U. co-chair Binay Wayburn, 27, of West Bloomfield first sipped the joy of praying with peers at Sinai Temple in Los Angeles. Hillels everywhere are regroup- ing. In Ann Arbor, Machon L'Torah's Jewish Resource Center resonates for Orthodox and less observant students alike. Up With Music . Shabbat Unplugged is specifically for young adults, but musi- cal Shabbats dot the Detroit Jewish community. They beckon with cantors, instruments or simply the voices of congregants. Congregation Shaarey Zedek, a Conservative synagogue in Southfield, unfurled Friday Night Fever! in 2002. About 40 percent of the up to 300 worshippers are ages 20-45. .In sum- mer, a piano or guitar enhances the welcoming of Shabbat. Conservative synagogues don't use instruments once the Shabbat candles are lit, but SZ Rabbi Jonathan Berkun knows the power they hold. "We feel that even if we do not know all the words perfectly, the stability of the musi- cally accompanied prayer welcomes and envelops our voices," he said. • Making Shabbat speak to young adults gives Jewish meaning to their lives and helps keep them here against the pull of hip cities like Chicago, New York and Boston. Lonn Rabbi Berkun put it this way: "Young adults aggressively pursuing careers certainly find that which they value most becoming obscured and ignored through- out the week. They are often the ones who work late. They need the joy and celebration of Shabbat as much as anyone." He added, "It is our responsibility to teach them about Shabbat in an engaging fashion as well as provide for them communal opportunities in which they can experience Shabbat together." At Adat Shalom, a Conservative synagogue in Farmington Hills, ShabbarRocks and Havdalah Rocks are homeruns. "Rocks does attempt to be many things to many people and that is a challenge," said Cantor Howard Glantz. "That said, our attendance when we 'rock' is rarely less than 200 and has often been over 400. That is 5-10 times our usual numbers." The undercurrent running through these experiences is that we unplug from worries on Shabbat and plug into something far greater: God's love, each other and Israel. "What it all comes down to, on Shabbat Unplugged or any other Shabbat," Rabbi Yedwab said, "is that we are all one." Cl 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 10-6 Thursday 10-9 Sunday 12-5