FOCUS B EYOND COUNTING Detroit's Jewish population study is more than just a census. AMMMINIMMEMM ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor D etroit is one of the last of the 18 major Jewish communi- ties in the United States to re-survey its Jewish population. Next month, after the holidays, the Detroit Jewish community will begin a 16-month look at itself for the first time in more than 30 years. To accomplish this, more than 1,000 Jewish households — one in every 30 Jewish families — will be interview- ed by professional researchers. What does the Jewish Welfare Federation, which is spending $270,000 to study Detroit's community, hope to gain? "The study forces communi- ty leaders to think about peo- ple they don't normally think about," says Steven Cohen of Queens College, New York, co-director of the Detroit study. "The people wanting the study are highly motivated and deeply caring. Their perceptions are shaped by their peers and the people in the individual agencies that they are concerned with. "This is the rich and the poor, but they don't se s the people in the middle or their needs. This study won't make decisions, but it will help the leaders make decisions?' Co-director Jacob B. Ukeles, of Ukeles Associates in New York, sees the results as a tool for a community that will spend millions of dollars in the coming years on agency buildings and Jewish programs. "You are already spending hundreds of thousands to preserve Oak Park and Southfield (as Jewish com- munities)," says Ukeles. "How much is the right amount? If we can provide in- formation on why people move, we can help make the right decisions that will be ef- fective." Adds Cohen, "Where do you plan to live? If you have grown children, where do they live? Is there an out- migration? An in-migation?" "And if a lot of young peo- ple are moving away," says Ukeles, "should the com- munity develop intervention programs?" Deciding which questions to ask thousands of Detroiters has been the major focus of the two researchers since May, when they and Detroit's Market Opinion Research firm were awarded the con- tract by the Jewish Welfare Federation board. They and their staffs have organized and met with four focus groups totalling 40 Jewish Detroiters from all walks of life. They have also met with lay and professional leaders from a number of Jewish agencies here. "By talking to Jews of various circumstances about their concerns," says Cohen, "you learn about the com- munity from different angles. Each meeting has added a new piece of knowledge?' The two researchers were not concerned that the focus groups were statistically representative. Cohen was seeking diversity: singles, married, divorced, with children, without children, and diverse in terms of age, sex, neighborhood and finan- cial status. Says Cohen, "I wanted to hear a single Jewish mother speak about her problems!' Cohen and Ukeles first worked together in 1980 on New York's Jewish popula- tion survey. Cohen is a pro- fessor of sociology at Queens College and his focus is the American Jewish community. Ukeles has been involved with urban planning and con- sulting since 1962 in New York and Pennsylvania. He was the founding chairman of the graduate department of urban affairs and policy analysis at the New School for Social Research and was executive director for com- munity sery ices from 1981-85 for the New York Federation of Jewish More than 1,000 Jewish households will be contacted in October and November. Philanthropies. Cohen describes himself as "a policy-oriented researcher" and Ukeles as a "research- directed policy analyst. We complement each other." The Detroit study is based in part on a group of core questions developed by the North American Jewish Data Bank, a project spurred by Detroiter Mandell Berman and which Ukeles helped THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 39