metro By cellphone light, Paul and Wendy Yedwab on the Yedstock dance floor Yedstock! Temple Israel congregants help honor Wendy and Rabbi Yedwab. Robert Sklar Contributing Editor M emories of Woodstock — the turbulent 1969 music festival on Max Yasgur's dairy farm in the Catskills that changed our cultural dynamic and elevated the social justice movement — provided the spiritual back- drop to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Wendy and Rabbi Paul Yedwab's arrival at Temple Israel. A commitment to tikkun olam (repair of the world) has been a hallmark of their years at the West Bloomfield synagogue. Before 500 guests at the Nov. 19 celebra- tion, dubbed Yedstock, Yedwab noted he was too young to go to Bethel, N.Y., to experience that emotive soundtrack of the '60s. "So I wasn't an official hippie," jested Yedwab, 54. But the Woodstock era left an indelible imprint on him — "why I hate wearing neckties, why my love of folk music and, most of all, in my own rabbin- ate, why the importance of social justice and what we do here at Temple Israel!' The New Jersey native grasped the social justice ropes from his giving parents, Myra and Rabbi Stanley Yedwab. "People think that I am a rabbi because my father was a rabbi," Yedwab said. "Really, I am a rabbi because my parents were involved in mak- ing the world a better place. And that's really what it was all about." Speaking from the heart in Temple Israel's peace sign-decorated Herman Hall, Yedwab said: "My father was the head of the civil rights movement in Lakewood. And he was the founding president of Ocean Inc., which was the poverty program there. My mother founded a Head Start program and was very involved in so many social issues. Both my parents marched 12 December 8 • 2011 with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." Myra, a Jewish educator, also was involved in the Soviet Jewry and the Vietnamese boat people causes. Laughter To Pensive In a lighter moment, the Princeton University graduate peered into the Yedstock crowd, and its colorful array of headbands, vests and shirts, and declared: "This is so groovy, man. I love this!" "Yedstock — I could live in Yedstock," he added, referring to its sense of community. Yedstock was replete with a lively '60s musical revue by Cantor Michael Smolash and Cantorial Soloist Neil Michaels to the beat of the Simone Vitale Band. Yedstock event committee member Judy Seigel said Yedstock grew from a desire to fuse popular music, peace, love and a total lack of social hierarchy — all deeply held per- sonal beliefs of Rabbi Yedwab." Turning melancholy, Yedwab shared the letter he wrote at age 6 to President John F. Kennedy. "I asked him to end the war," Yedwab said. "Of course, I had things a little mixed up: I asked him to end the war with the Germans and the Russians. I was only 6, after all!' Evelyn Lincoln, personal secretary to the president, responded, writing, "Dear Paul: The president has received your friendly letter. He wants me to assure you he real- izes his great responsibility, and he is determined to do his best in every way to keep America safe and strong!' In a haunt- ing coincidence, the letter was dated Nov. 22, 1963, the day JFK was assassinated. " Family/Communal Ties The Yedwabs met in 1978 at the Reform movement's Kutz Camp in upstate New York; she was 16 and he was 21. They now have three children: Ariella, 20, a University of Michigan junior; Jesse, 18, a Michigan State University freshman; and Zoe, 16, a West Bloomfield High junior. Wendy's mother, Sally Hertzbach, moved to West Bloomfield after her husband Morris' death in 2005. Stanley Yedwab, rabbi emeritus of Temple Beth Am in Lakewood, lives in Seattle, following the 2006 death of his wife. Professionally, Paul inspired Shabbat Unplugged and Joga at Temple Israel, helped inspire the local teen mission to Israel and serves on the local Forgotten Harvest prepared-food distribution agency advisory board, the Mazon: A Response to Jewish Hunger national advisory board, Michigan's Board of Ethics and Federation's Board of Governors. He has published six Jewish books, including The God Book and Shema Yisrael, Hear 0 Israel: The Temple Israel Siddur. Shared Plaudits "For most of our 25 years, we didn't have our families here, yet we were embraced by you and you became our second family," Wendy told partygoers. "You were there for all our simchahs, and there for us when we experienced loss!' After showing the wind chime the nurs- ery school gave them, she kvelled over her husband's yen to innovate: "It doesn't really matter to him whether it is tiling a floor, smoking a fish, composing a song, editing a prayer book or creating a new kind of service. He always likes to do things in a way they haven't been done before The night before at Shabbat Unplugged, oldest daughter Ariella said from the bimah: "Dad, I have always been in awe of your creativity, determination and insight. Mom, your compassion and undying love In their revue, Neil Michaels and Michael Smolash penned two sets of Yedstock lyrics set to 1960s popular music. The Yedwabs: Paul, Ariella, Wendy, Zoe and Jesse at Temple Israel. for everyone around you is truly inspiring." Amid the afterglow of Yedstock, Rabbi Harold Loss said his younger colleague understood the Temple Israel philosophy instilled by founding Rabbi Leon Fram and nurtured later by Rabbi M. Robert Syme — namely, "the creation of an envi- ronment where members of the congrega- tion could explore their Jewish identity in a creative and nurturing environment." "Whether through the writing of a prayer book or a textbook or the devel- opment of a special class," Loss added, "Paul is constantly engaged in the search for depth and meaning. I am so very grateful for all that he brings to Temple Israel!' I I 0 .0 0