Brett Mountain metro » o n the cover Rabbi Daniel Syme has been a rabbi for 44 years — 20 of them at Temple Beth El. Tireless Advocate Beth El’s Rabbi Syme will bring a lifetime of passions to his new role as rabbi emeritus. Jackie Headapohl | Managing Editor I f a person saves one life, it is as though that person saved the entire world.” That Talmud verse has been the guiding principle by which Rabbi Daniel Syme has tried to live his life. “People, especially children, have always been my major emphasis,” he says. “You have to attend to people in pain, people who are dreaming, people who are in need — that’s been the major theme of my life.” Syme, 70, who’s the third longest- tenured rabbi in Temple Beth El’s 156- year history, will be honored Friday, June 24, at the temple as he becomes only its third rabbi emeritus. Syme has been a rabbi for 44 years, the last 20 spent at the Bloomfield Township temple. As a young man, Syme said he had aspi- rations of being a musician or a lawyer, but God had other plans. ROAD TO THE RABBINATE “I’ve been a failure musically in my life,” Syme says, although that might be a bit of an exaggeration. After his first piano recital at age 11 — Beethoven’s “Für Elise” — he came home and watched his brother, David, sit at the piano and play it by ear. “I had to practice six months,” Syme said. “Of course, David eventually became a concert pianist, and I never touched the piano again.” Next, his parents got him an electric guitar. “My baby brother, Michael, became one of the best guitar players in America, mak- ing music with the likes of John Lennon and Frank Zappa. I gave him my guitar,” he said. “But I had the best singing voice, so I became the lead singer and played the tam- bourine in our family rock and roll band. That was one of the ways I worked my way through college. I also drove a Good Humor Ice Cream truck in the summer.” Syme earned his degree at the University of Michigan in 1967 with plans to continue on to law school. Those plans came to a halt when he was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. “I made a vow that, if I was cured, I would become a rabbi and devote my life to God,” he said. His surgeons called his recovery a “mir- acle.” That summer, he went to Hebrew Union College for its summer program. “My father, who was the rabbi at Temple Israel, didn’t want me to become a rabbi out of fear,” Syme said. “He told me if I didn’t like it that he would free me from any obligation I might feel. But he didn’t convince me. I was certain that if I didn’t become a rabbi, I’d die.” Syme was ordained at the Hebrew Union College in 1972. He also earned a master’s degree and a doctorate in education from Columbia University Teachers College. A SAD CHAPTER When Syme was a 29-year-old rabbi, he had gone to services with his parents on a Saturday night. When they returned home, they found his youngest brother Michael, 21, had taken his life. “I’m still angry, and I still feel respon- sible,” Syme said. The day of Michael’s suicide, Syme had asked his brother how he was doing. Michael had just returned to Michigan after being on the road as an accomplished musician and told Danny he had never felt worse. “But the therapist Michael was seeing had just told my parents that he appeared to be doing well,” Syme said. “I never shared that conversation with anyone; and that night, Michael died.” That death continues to haunt him. Throughout his career, Syme has been a vocal advocate of suicide prevention. He created Hand of Hope, an educational continued on page 12 10 June 9 • 2016