metro >> on the cover Media Savvy Personable rabbi goes beyond typical outreach. Shelli Liebman Dorfman I Contributing Writer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 safety pins in earlobes, the whole works, now a working mother:' His journey to the rabbinate began when a chemistry teacher explained quantum mechanics by telling him, "That's the way God wants it:' "Something hit me he said. "Was it pos- sible that science could not answer all my questions? Was there indeed something more?" Before finding his calling, Finman spent five unfulfilling years in Hebrew school, briefly considering and nixing Christianity and then Hinduism. By the time he was 17, he was studying Buddhism. "My eldest brother went off to Thailand at age 19 to learn the secrets of Buddhism:' he said. "He kept a 32-volume set of Buddhist philosophy in my mother's garage. I began reading it and became enthralled. Its simple complexity hit a chord with me, and I want- ed to follow in my brother's footsteps:' A friendship with new neighbors in his hometown in New Jersey altered the plan and changed the course of his life entirely. Now a Chabad rabbi in Oak Park, Finman spends much of his time teaching Torah, Kabbalah and other Jewish topics through one-to-one sessions in homes and offices, by phone, through Web conferences, lunch-and- learn classes, online and on-air as facilitator and founder of The Jewish Hour, Michigan's only Jewish radio show. "I like to refer to The Jewish Hour as the largest Torah class in Michigan:' he said. A Winning Show Last week, he celebrated the 19th anniver- sary of the program — Sundays from 11 a.m.-noon on WLQV-AM 1500 and online at faithtalk1500.com. And last year, competing among entries from North America, Finman received a first-place American Jewish Press Association (AJPA) Simon Rockower Award for Excellence in a Multi-Media Story. The first-time win was for The Jewish Hour's airing of "Ephraim Zuroff — The Last Nazi Hunter; an interview with the direc- tor of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, who coordinates Nazi war crimes research worldwide. The interview can be heard on Podcast, iTunes, stitcher.com and Jcastnetwork.org. The radio variety show includes Israeli and entertainment news, words of wisdom culled from the week's Torah portion or 8 March 5 • 2015 _Te Rabbi Herschel Finman, host of The Jewish Hour, interviews Specs Howard (Jerry Liebman) for his "chai anniversary" show last March; he had been Finman's first interview 19 years ago when the show first started. related to the Jewish calendar or Chasidic stories, along with guest interviews relating to the Jewish community or a political theme affecting local Jews. Music genre ranges from Old World klezmer and New Age funk-Jewish, from artists including Avraham Fried, Zoomgalli Boogey, Theodore Bikel, Carlebach and Mickey Katz. Brownies And Tea The Jewish Hour adheres to the philosophy of the Orthodox, Chabad-Lubavitch — the world's largest Jewish educational outreach organization — a connection that, for Finman, began with neighborly conversation and enticing baked goods while he was a teenage student of Buddhism. "My grandmother had recently passed away, and my mother had rented her apart- ment downstairs to a young Lubavitch cou- ple Finman said. "We became close friends, and I began a debate with them, Judaism verses Buddhism. We were both beginners, and the playing field was basically level. They did have an advantage: chocolate brownies. "For three years, we spent Friday evenings feasting on brownies and peppermint tea and discussing philosophy until well after midnight," he said. Upon a suggestion from his host, he attended Shabbat services at a Chabad synagogue and was soon studying the weekly Torah reading and attending classes on Tanya (the main work of the Chabad philosophy). "I did it so I would know the material well enough to argue against it:' Finman said. All the while, I kept up my Buddhist readings, careful not to get too close. Buddhism was my journey:' But still, he said, "These weekly classes inspired me to thinking deeply about our purpose of existence and how to achieve that goal. In one of my Friday get-togethers, I admitted to my host that Buddhism and Chassidus (Chasidic wisdom) were very, very similar and that I enjoyed the contrasts and comparisons. His response to me was, `If you believe they are saying the same thing, why run to Thailand? You have it right here: At that moment, I thought one thing: `Checkmate: I could not argue. I had to agree. I stayed put:' His neighbor suggested he attend the Lubavitch Youth Organization's annual week- end program in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. "That Shabbos, I was billeted with a mod- est Lubavitch family. In the middle of the meal, the phone began to ring. After about 20 rings, I asked the host if he was going to answer the phone, perhaps it was important. His response: 'Maybe it's not: A lightning bolt hit me. Here was the inner peace, the simplicity I was looking for. In one small phrase, 'Maybe it's not; this simple man had transcended time and space, something I had been trying to do for three years. I felt encouraged:' A New Education By the end of the weekend, Finman was offered a week of study in Teferus Bochurim, which he describes as "a remedial yeshivah for the newly observant:' in Morristown, N.J. "I found the food foul and the learning incredible," he said. "I understood there was a world underneath the Judaism to which I had been exposed:' Describing his home, he said, "Judaism was there, and we went to an Orthodox synagogue, but we were not religious:' After his weekend in Morristown, he went back home. "My mother served spaghetti and meat- balls with parmesan cheese he said. "After I ate, I went into the bathroom and threw up. I put on the tzitzit and yarmulke that I had procured in Crown Heights and announced to my mother that I was frum (observant). My mother's reaction: 'Not in my house: I quizzed her as to her reaction. My brothers were Buddhist, Shinto and hippie Jewish. My sisters were strung out and Christian. Why was mine different? She never answered the question. "A month later, I was in yeshivah full time and at the beginning of my journey:' For five years, Finman lived in Crown Heights, where Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters is based. "I davened with the Rebbe's minyan," he said of the late Lubavitch rabbi, Menachem Mendel Schneerson. After eight years in various yeshivot, Finman received ordination from the United Lubavitcher Yeshiva in Brooklyn. He and his wife, Chana, parents to seven children, spent four years in Australia before settling in Michigan. Chana Finman is co-producer of The Jewish Hour, bringing with her a resume that includes her years as a professional clown. Now, she says, working on the show is "a huge part of my life. My role has been to act as a story hunter. I travel abroad and in the U.S. to find stories. We use the Internet, too, but meeting people, going to art exhibitions and visiting museums is best:' She also reads half a dozen books a month, in addition to those sent by publish- ers, in search of interview subjects and topics for her husband. "Currently, I'm doing research on the Jewish angle of the Detroit Institute of Arts' Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera exhibition:' she said. "My next ambition for a story is to Media Savvy on page 10