Elissa Berg Amy Appelman Rabbi Jason Miller Rabbi Eric Yanoff Danielle HarPaz Mechnikov as a study hall and meet with an ATID staff member as a tutor. For graduates of Hillel now in public or non-Jewish pri- vate schools, a special study track will be implemented. A travel component includes Shabbat- experience visits to New York City and Chicago, social action and civic-based trips as well as a tour of the Paper Clips project in Whitwell, Tenn. "Adat Shalom and Shaarey Zedek have been doing these types of trips, but for the others this will be a new opportunity," Miller said. Leadership training programs will be led by directors of Camp Ramah in Canada, Tamarack Camps and B'nai B'rith Youth Organization. The larger number of students will allow for more specific courses to be offered. "We may not have enough students at each individual synagogue for classes to be run at various levels:' Berg said. "But with hundred of teens, we can run a course like conversational Hebrew with beginner, intermediate and advanced classes. "Students who want to major in a spe- cific subject can take an elective related to that interest — like social action, Jewish text or art — during each of their five years in ATID:' she said. The school's faculty will have wide- spread expertise. "There is so much poten- tial for passionate teachers when staff members from several congregations are involved," Yanoff said. As Hillel becomes the gathering place for Jewish education on Monday nights, an adult component also will be offered, featur- ing guest speakers, a weekly Torah portion class led by Shaarey Zedek's Rabbi Joseph Krakoff and a Hebrew literacy course hosted by area Conservative men's clubs, with more programming in the works. New Faces, Old Faces "There is a lot of ruach (spirit) and excite- ment in being part of a large group:' said Yanoff, whose religious school is the larg- est Conservative synagogue high school in the area, with 120 students. Adat Shalom's enrollment is next with 85. Leadership at the 380-family B'nai Moshe — where 24 students attend pro- gram for grades 8-12 — is undecided about joining ATID, but excited about the possibilities. "We have an excellent teaching staff, low attrition and our kids have bonded through the years; but I see a huge poten- tial bonus to join in with ATID," said edu- cation director Mechnikov. "Kids who are part of ATID will have so many new connections:' she said. "They may even notice someone from their public high school they didn't know and realize they have something in common. It also gives them the chance to see friends they don't see as often because they aren't in school together. And later on, when they go to college, they will already know so many more kids. "Some of the parents are nervous about how their quieter kids who've been part of a smaller synagogue program could be lost in a big crowd:' she said. "A task force at B'nai Moshe has been meeting weekly to discuss this kind of issue and others. We want to make sure we bring the right approach to the program before we decide to bring all the kids into the fold!' Miller said, "For some, there is a com- fort level in staying where they are, with what they're used to. ATID will have small classes, small social groups and a lot of opportunity to bond with the students' own congregation's clergy." For Beth Ahm, ATID means providing a high school program where there have not been the resources to have one for the past few years. A couple of Beth Ahm's high schoolers attend a congregational religious school at another synagogue. "We have at least 60 members who are the right age:' said education director Appelman, "but we are a big day-school synagogue with many students at FJA. "We definitely fit the bill for ATID because it is open to day-school kids as well. We are very excited to be part of the momentum that will be created by all the other synagogues!" Appelman understands the probability of ATID's success. "I am a graduate of a community supplementary high school in Cincinnati, where the students of four Reform synagogue schools were together in classes:' she said. "We weren't in neutral space like ATID will be; each semester, we jumped from synagogue to synagogue. I had a very positive experience?' In addition to synagogue teens, ATID expects to attract students from unaffili- ated families, too. What About Fun? Organizers hope ATID, with its mass of students, will lead to a revival of the Conservative movement's United Synagogue Youth (USY), which in the past several years has dwindled locally. "USY is a place that encourages teenag- ers to live Conservative Jewish lives:' Berg said. "Even if teens didn't live observant lives, when they were with USY they were in a model that showed them how; and they observed while participating." Some area Conservative congregations have no USY chapters; the 1,050-family Adat Shalom has only 20 active members. To help spur participation, USCJ's Gutin has pledged free two-year memberships to USY for ATID students. "We are not giving up on the next gen- eration," Yanoff said. "ATID is an invest- ment in our future And "future" is the definition of the Hebrew word atid. Together But Separate "ATID is not a merging of identities or of congregations:' Miller said. "Each congre- gation will maintain its separate identity, mission and vision!' In addition to an ATID graduation, indi- vidual synagogues also will hold separate graduations and confirmations. Special programming may be held at individual synagogues or at Tamarack's Camp Maas in Ortonville for the entire ATID group during the school year. Having all those teens in one place makes it advantageous to promote community-wide programs, such as Federation's Teen Mission '08. "When I make announcements during services about teen-related programs, the kids look at me and then they look at each other and say, Are you going to that?'" Yanoff said. "Imagine if there were 200 of them asking each other. Teens go where teens are The ATID steering committee is headed by Rabbis Miller and Yanoff, Adat Shalom President David Schostak, Shaarey Zedek President David Wallace and Adat Shalom's Executive Director Alan Yost. Other members include educational direc- tors from all area Conservative synagogues and parent representatives. An advisory committee includes clergy from all area Conservative synagogues as well as corn- munity leaders, additional parents and a contingent of teens. The initial idea for ATID came 31/2 years ago during a monthly Conservative leader- ship gathering to discuss issues impacting the local community. The concept of ATID is new, but other communal programs have existed before. United Hebrew Schools, which dissolved in 1988 with the formation of Federation's Agency for Jewish Education, once was the largest communal-based Hebrew school system in the country with its own build- ings as well as partner-run branches and a summer camp. Last year, a combined pro- gram of some Detroit-area Conservative and Reform synagogue schools was attempted but did not succeed. The cost of ATID is $700, which is com- parable to current tuition at the partici- pating congregations. "Adat Shalom and Shaarey Zedek have been responsible for the initial start-up costs of ATID,"Yost said. "The rent for Hillel Day School is built into the opera- tional budget for the school. It is anticipat- ed that the expenditure for teachers' sala- ries will be reduced by the commitment of time, energy and active presence of the clergy and educational directors who will be active faculty members?' In addition, Yost said, "Parents will be able to apply for scholarships from Federation's Alliance for Jewish Education in the same format as prior years when synagogues operated their own indepen- dent high school programs?' Miller added, "No Jewish student will be denied an ATID education because of financial difficulties?' And the hope is that many students will join in. "There is a tremendous power in being part of something bigger than ourselves," Yanoff said. "We are putting a fresh face on the next generation of Conservative schools. We are going to take the core enrollment to provide enthusiasm — and then invite the world?' ❑ For information on ATID, contact individual Conservative synagogues, access the ATID Web site at www. atidhs.org , or contact Rabbi Jason Miller: atid.hs@gmail.com or (248) 535-7090. iN March 27 • 2008 A43