(he/him)
Since his arrival to Temple Micah in 1983, Rabbi Daniel G. Zemel has woven his open-minded, creative approach to Judaism into the culture and worship of our community. He feels his primary role as rabbi is grappling with the challenge of “translating” the inherited Jewish past into a theology and practice that speaks to today. A graduate of Brown University, Rabbi Zemel received his rabbinic ordination from the New York campus of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in 1979. Over the years, he has been involved in numerous community and Jewish organizations but derives greatest satisfaction from being a founder of Micah House, a group home for formerly homeless women in recovery from addiction. His twenty year involvement with Synagogue 2000 was instrumental in shaping his vision of synagogue life and the role of rabbi.
Rabbi Zemel has written many articles and essays on a wide variety of Jewish topics; he contributed an essay to each volume of the Prayers of Awe series, a multi-volume commentary on the High Holy Day liturgy edited by Rabbi Larry A. Hoffman. Rabbi Zemel published A Time to Speak, a book of his sermons and writings, in 2019, followed by A Time to Reflect in 2025. Rabbi Zemel is blessed with a loving family that is the center of his life. When not at Micah, he is either with family, visiting Israel, reading, studying, thinking, or dreaming of his beloved Chicago White Sox playing in the World Series.
Rabbi Zemel retired as senior rabbi at Temple Micah on June 30, 2025.
View our online collection of Rabbi Zemel’s sermons spanning from 2018-2025.
A Time to Speak: Selected Sermons and Writings from 1983-2019 is a collection of twenty-five sermons and writings that encapsulates Rabbi Zemel’s innovative leadership over the years, and reminds us all of how he led Micah through so many temple celebrations, national storms, and baseball seasons, with wisdom, vision, and humor.
A Time to Reflect: Sermons and Tributes includes Rabbi Zemel’s ongoing explorations of his evolving perspectives on Israel, his favorite philosophers, and key sermons addressing significant national and global events.
The books were edited by Micah member Martha Ransohoff Adler, designed by congregant Rob Sugar, and introduced by Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman.
Embedded in the very meaning of Judaism is an expression of social justice and action, and what it means to be human. The Jewish story is one of human history’s longest-running, powerfully dramatic, and wise explorations about our shared humanity. Part of the work of our Jewish lives in our time is to reanimate this Jewish story that gives life to the Human Project as the defining soul of Judaism.
Developed by Rabbi Daniel Zemel and used to guide his leadership of the Micah community, the Human Project states that we are part of a shared humanity, and that to be human is to: