metro » continued from page 10 Rabbi M. Robert Syme of Temple Israel with his son, Rabbi Daniel Syme resource program teaching kids and par- ents about the warning signs of suicide. He partnered with national sports teams, celebrities and athletes to spread aware- ness and raise money to curb the epidemic of suicide. Syme now is starting a new nonprofit called “A Single Soul” that will enable rab- bis and other professionals who support youth to identify those at risk. It will even- tually provide training and crisis interven- tion (see sidebar on page 15). He also is the co-executive producer of a documentary with local Emmy Award- winning filmmaker Keith Famie called Death is Not the Answer, which will be shown on public television this fall. PASSION FOR MUSIC As a rabbinical student, Syme was sent to lead High Holiday services at Interlochen Arts Academy, which, at the time, had a Jewish president. “I borrowed a Torah from Temple Israel and took it on the plane with me,” he said. “The stewardess thought it was a set of bagpipes!” After Yom Kippur services, a distin- guished man with gray hair approached him and asked to learn how to blow the shofar. “I showed him, and he started playing classical music on it,” he said. “After he left, I learned I had just taught the famous jazz musician Dave Brubeck the shofar.” Syme was also a big fan of the Persuasions, an African American a capella group that began singing together in Brooklyn in the mid-1960s. When he first got to New York, Syme said, he picked up the Village Voice and saw they were playing at a club in Greenwich Village. He bought tickets for the 8 and 10 p.m. shows and made sure he was sitting in front of the bass singer. “The music was glorious,” said Syme, who went backstage to tell the musicians how much he loved the show. “They were surprised to learn I was a rabbi,” he said. “Later, as I was about to leave after the second show, they asked me if I knew their songs. I did. They invited me on stage to sing ‘In the Still of the Night.’” From that night on, whenever Syme was in the audience, they would call him to the stage to sing. Once, in Houston, Syme filled in for lead singer Jerry Lawson, who had laryngitis. He sang five songs. Syme also has a profound love of folk music, becoming close friends with folk legends Peter, Paul and Mary. He saw them for the first time in 1963 at U-M and fell in love with their music. In Miami, years later, while he was sitting in the lobby of a hotel, the elevator door opened and out walked Mary Travers. “I’m never at a loss for words, but I was overcome,” Syme said. “I told her I loved her music, and she said, ‘Wait a minute. What’s your name? Let’s sit down for a few min- utes and talk.’ That was the start of a great friendship. She introduced me to Peter and to Noel [Paul]. “One of the great joys of my life was bringing Peter, Paul and Mary to Temple Beth El in 2007. It was one of the small- est venue they had ever played and one of their last live performances,” he said. FIRST RABBINIC POSITION After his ordination, Syme headed to New York to work at the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now the Union for Reform Judaism), where he would spend the next 24 years. He started as the director of National Federation of Temple Youth (NFTY), then national director of education, then vice president and, finally, senior vice president of the Reform move- ment. He oversaw all of the UAHC’s programs, including his special interests of outreach, education, television and film produc- tion, and the task force on youth suicide prevention. During his time there, Syme wrote or co-wrote 23 books on topics such as Jewish parenting, youth suicide preven- tion, Christian-Jewish relations, Jewish social action, ritual, theology and Jewish education. He’d spend 120 days a year on the road as scholar-in-residence in various communities. When he was ready to leave New York, he planned to go to Los Angeles because “I had always promised myself I’d live in a warm climate.” Then his father [Rabbi M. Robert Syme] called. “He said, ‘Danny, would you consider coming back to Detroit for one or two years because your mother and I are get- A young Daniel Syme ting older and it would be nice having you here.’ At first I said no, and then he began laying it on until I finally I said, ‘OK, please, no more guilt! I’ll come, but only for two years.’ That’s how I came to Temple Beth El.” PUTTING DOWN ROOTS When Syme was 16, he had met his future wife, Jill, at camp and was completely smitten. But he never plucked up the cour- age to ask her out. “Fast forward 36 years,” Syme said. “She’s been married. I’ve been married.” Jill’s parents were temple members; and when her father had open heart surgery, Syme went to the hospital to sit with her mother. “Jill was living in Baltimore and flew in. I got her phone number. Our relationship grew, and my aspirations of living in Los Angeles ended.” They were married in 1998. Syme has a son, Josh, 38, who is a lawyer in Orlando, Fla. LIFE AT TEMPLE BETH EL “I was ready for congregational life because I’d been raised as a rabbi’s kid,” Syme said. “My father used to tell me, ‘You’ll never be a real rabbi until you’re in a congregation and share the moments of people’s lives.’ He was right.” Over his career, Syme has shared in 5,000-6,000 life cycle events. Through it all, he focused on people and education. “When he came to us, he oversaw a renaissance in primary, secondary and adult education,” said attorney Alan May of Bloomfield Hills, a Beth El past presi- dent. “He was instrumental in the adult b’nai mitzvah program, without which I wouldn’t have made my bar mitzvah in 1995.” Syme started the Morning Minyan, a chavurah-style prayer group that meets each Sunday for those in need of support during difficult times. Partnering with Jim Hiller, who owned Hiller’s Markets, Syme established the Mitzvah Meals program to provide food for families in need and engage congre- gants in the practice of gemilut chasidim, acts of lovingkindness. “When I met him in 2005, we clicked,” Hiller said. “He instantly became my rabbi.” When they began Mitzvah Meals during the economic recession, “he provided the vision, and I was the Clydesdale,” Hiller added. “Together we generated 150,000 meals before I left the supermarket busi- ness.” Syme has always loved working with children, so when then-8-year-old Noah Ostheimer had a dream of starting a char- ity that would help kids make a difference in the lives of others, Syme helped him make it a reality. Noah’s Angels and Dreamers Foundation has brightened the lives of many. “I love him,” Noah, now 11, said. “He’s like my grandpa. I hope he knows how much he means to me and how much he’s helped me these last three years.” Other Beth El clergy have benefitted from Syme’s example. “It’s been a blessing for me to have the unusual advantage of having time with Rabbi Syme as a colleague,” said Beth El continued on page 14 12 June 9 • 2016