The Whole Day! Adat Shalom's SYNergy will revolutionize Shabbat. ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor D etroit-area synagogues have been modifying the way they celebrate ' Shabbat for decades. But the current flurry of alternative services, musical services, young adult, yoga and healing services is going one step further at Rabbi Nevins Adat Shalom Synagogue. With a $100,000 grant from an anonymous donor, Adat Shalom is planning 10 once-a- month programs that are designed to bring people into the Farmington Hills synagogue throughout Shabbat. And the new programs will include anything from tradi- tional Shabbat prayer services to nationally known speakers, Shere and Marty Liebman on Saturday night bonfires and s'mores treats, comedians, musi- guitar; young family dinner, or sit-down dinner and Noam cal services, baby massage, Neusner, former domestic poli- pilates and nature walks — all cy speechwriter and Jewish on the same Shabbat. You don't community liaison for President have to be an Adat Shalom George W. Bush, speaking on member to participate. Rabbi Daniel Nevins said the "Modern Day Mordechai: Representing Jews in the West idea is to "not have people just Wing" sitting around listening to the • 8:30 a.m. Sept. 17 — rabbi and the cantor." Adat Shmooze with Rabbi Nevins, Shalom, he said, is trying to make Shabbat participatory and "Battlefield Ethics, an Oxymoron?" a time for the family to come • 9 a.m. — tradition- together. al Shabbat service in The first SYNergy main sanctuary Shabbat is scheduled • 9:30 a.m. — for Sept. 16-17 and the Shtiebel Minyan congregation has a spe- • 10 a.m. — cific outline for Neshamah Minyan, SYNergy Shabbats Oct. youth services, Junior 14-15, Nov. 11-12 and Congregation and Dec. 16-17. The Noam Neusner USY September program • 10:30 a.m. — includes: Prayerful Pilates • 6 p.m. Sept. 16 — (workout clothes OK), nature Minchah and Shabbat Rocks walk, "Darth Vader and musical service with Rabbi Teshuvah" with U-M Hillel Nevins on drums and Dan Paul Magy Rabbi Jason Miller, book dis- cussion: Naomi Ragen's The Covenant • 12:30 p.m. — Kiddush lunch and Noam Neusner, who was once a Detroit Jewish News intern, speaking on: "Faith and Politics — A Personal Journey to the White House" • afternoon — relay races, flip-flops and Frisbee, basketball • 8 p.m. — outdoor Havdalah, songfest, comedy night, ice cream For Adat Shalom's youngest members, SYNergy starts Friday morning with a nursery-kinder- garten Shabbat campout on the playground and an 11:30 a.m. shmooze. A Shabbat Shaboom service for preschoolers through first graders and their siblings will be at 5:30 p.m. Friday. The Saturday morning programs include baby massage and Torah for Tots. Meal events for the September SYNergy will include a 6 p.m. Friday camp- Rabbi Miller style dinner and sundae bar for families with young children ($18 per family), a 7 p.m. catered, sit-down Shabbat din- ner ($25 per family) with Noam Neusner speaking, 8:30 p.m. tea and shmooze with Neusner, and the noon Saturday Shabbat Kiddush lunch (no charge). Rabbi Nevins emphasized that SYNergy will not "water down the message of Judaism, but expand the message. It will show why Shabbat is the cen- terpiece of our lives and where the synagogue thrives." Rabbi Miller, an Adat Shalom member since child- hood, is serving as director of SYNergy. He is making the focus "family time, not just the father praying." He said when he was growing up, "Shabbat meant putting on my uncomfortable sport coat and tie and sitting in a pew. With SYNergy, we are saying, `Come in your college sweat shirt. If Saturday morning for you means a pilates class or a book club, then do it as part of Shabbat. If you want to come and then leave — finer Adat Shalom President Paul Magy added, "We want to grow people spiritually at our synagogue. There are people who love to come to the syna- gogue wearing a tie. There are people who love chazzanut (cantorial music). This remains a place for those people ... "But SYNergy is a way to make our mission and vision come to life. The quintessential day for the Jews is Shabbat." Rabbi Nevins said SYNergy will expand the boundaries of Shabbat. "Maybe people will make a challah on Friday after- noon. Maybe they will come to a melaveh malkah [get-together] Saturday night. "There are new trends in Jewish music," he said, "and we want to take advantage of that. We don't want to make it a per- formance [where people sit back and watch]. We want peo- ple to get up and to sing and dance before sundown. We want to deepen our roots, not abandon our roots." SYNergy co-chairs are Barbara Kappy, Carol Weintraub Fogel and Gray Graff. Adat Shalom Rabbis Herbert Yoskowitz and Rachel Shere are involved in the plan- ning with Rabbis Nevins and Miller. [1 For information on SYNergy programs, go to shabbat@adat or call (248) 851-5100. Meal reservations due Sept. 12. \;‘ V WW sub Sq 9/ 8 2005 17