>> ... Next Generation ... Gifted Couple: In a Big Circle of Friends Meet Sarah and Benji Rosenzweig. VIVIAN HENOCH I SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS I am a big believer in the laws of attraction and the laws of reciprocity." With an opening statement like that on his Linkedln profile, you know meeting Benji Rosenzweig will be a rare experience. To be sure, meeting Benji together with his wife, Sarah, will make that experience doubly worthwhile. Benji and Sarah personify the laws of attraction and reciprocity. Sarah and Benji started out as friends 10 years ago, working as volunteers with a spiritual connection to the Friendship House — a division of Friendship Circle in West Bloomfield. At the time, Sarah was at Wayne State and Benji recently had moved to Detroit from New York. Self- described as a "Jack of most trades and master of few," being only 23 and still working to find himself, Benji had started a construction business and then was forced to leave after a back injury. So he turned to the employment counseling services of JVS, a program for which he has been forever grateful. According to Sarah, it was friendship, not love at first sight. "Benji asked me out about a million times before I ran out of excuses and said yes," she says. "We dated 52 September 17 • 2015 for six months, were engaged for nine months and now we're married eight years with two beautiful daughters, Na'amah, 6, and Ellah, 4." "Sarah is a Super Mom," says Benji. "She is supportive and loving but also a fierce and passionate advocate for the people and causes she believes in." About Benji, Sarah observes, "He is the creative person in our relationship. Benji really has an amazing imagination, a way of looking at things that sparks new ideas. Always! If he's awake, he's creating." All those attributes go into the balance of Benji's and Sarah's professional careers and family life today. Benji is a top-producing commercial real estate broker with Indigo Centers, a commercial real estate firm in Birmingham, where he is vice president of brokerage. He also describes himself as a music producer, a blogger, a marketer, a passionate Detroit advocate and a full-time dad and husband — with "the order of those things changing daily," depending on how much sleep he gets. Sarah is a social worker with bachelor's and master's degrees from Wayne State University. She began her clinical practice more than a decade ago, has been a therapist for children, families and addicts and now is a neuro-rehabilitative therapist, specializing in patients with brain injuries, at Life Skills Village and a geriatric care manager with Michigan Senior Planning. Breaking from what would typically be a busy afternoon with clients, Benji and Sarah meet me at 751 Griswold St. — one of the many old buildings Downtown in the process of redevelopment. "Projects like this are something we work on quite a bit," says Benji as we marvel at the detail of the two-story ceiling of what used to be a bank. "We expect that very shortly this building will be fully occupied and thriving as another asset Downtown." Brokering the deal is on the long roster of projects in the city and on the homefront for the Rosenzweigs. On Entrepreneurism Q: Benji, you've started many businesses. Do you consider yourself an entrepreneur? Benji: While I've run a few businesses, primarily in music and consulting, today I have put most of that aside to focus on my real estate practice, my family and my community service. I suppose you could call me a social entrepreneur, always looking for better solutions to