SOUTHFIELD: the Reconstructionist rab- binical seminary, moved from Boston to Mt. Airy. In addition, offshoots of the Chavura movement, like the New Jewish Agenda, a polit- ical group advocating liberal social causes, are staples within the community. Crucial to the neighbor- hood's stabilization is the Germantown Jewish Centre, often more politically active than other Conservative congregations. During the Vietnam era, actress/activist Jane Fonda spoke there. When a con- troversial AIDS shelter (to soon move into the neigh- borhood) couldn't find a place to hold organizational meetings, Rabbi Sanford Hahn provided a room. The rabbi even testified on behalf of the shelter before the Philadelphia City Coun- cil. When a synagogue employee named Ralph Granger died, the congrega- tion held a funeral service at the synagogue. A memorial is held each year in his memory. Mr. Granger was black. In addition, Germantown, which first began in 1936, is the site of an annual com- munity-wide Martin Luther King celebration. "This congregation reflects everything," Rabbi Hahn said. "It is unusual. Most congregations are more monolithic. "Everybody has an opinion here," he said. "Members get very passionate." On the pulpit, Rabbi Hahn addresses current events in his consciousness—raising sermons. He speaks about AIDS, black-Jewish rela- tions and the homeless. Since the days of the late Rabbi Elias Charry, the con- gregation has always been at the forefront of social issues. "We have no rules," Rabbi Hahn said. "My task as rabbi here is circus master. What is fact is that most of the success here came from grass-roots work. "You can't live in a society without social issues," he explained. When whites began mov- ing out of the neighborhood in the 1960s, Rabbi Charry, spiritual leader at German- town for 40 years, united with other religious leaders to encourage whites to re- main in the area. They had no public grants, no private funding — just a few tireless clergy members who went door-to-door, ask- ing residents to stay. Although other congrega- tions fled, Germantown made a conscious decision to stay out of the suburbs. For a while, it lost members — plunging to just over 300 families from its heyday fig- ures numbering close to 700. Today membership is on the rise, with about 500 units (families, singles and even 20 Reconstructionist rabbis.) In 1974, Rabbi Charry again dared to be different, allowing the first outside minyan to meet in a room in the synagogue. The minyans were a hit, combining tradi- tional observances with lib- eral values. Women and men lead the services, rejecting services with organs, choirs and clergy. Many younger Jewish residents said German- town's alternative services were a- major attraction to Mt. Airy. This created a spot for New Age Jews, who chose to live in Mt. Airy for its racial and religious di- versity. Mike Masch, 40, an economist for the City of Philadelphia, was one of the first minyan goers at Ger- mantown. He and his wife, Rachel Falkove, who grew up in Philadelphia, moved to Mt. Airy in 1974 after they finished school at Temple University. "It was urban. It had charm — old houses and trees," Mr. Masch said. "Living in a segregated neighborhood was not some- AT _RISK? thing we wanted to do. This was a place where a lot of people were involved in so- cial action and politics. There were a lot of Jews, many of whom were totally assimilated." When they arrived in Mt. Airy, Mr. Masch and Ms. Falkove, both involved in the Jewish student move- ment during college, were certain others shared simi- lar religious interests. They were right. They organized a meeting in their living room from which a minyan form- ed. The minyan later moved to the synagogue. On any given Shabbat and on holidays, Germantown is still host to offshoot minyamin, which are separate from the services in the main sanctuary. At Germantown, member- ship costs are substantially lower than other area con- gregations, and there is no building fund. Sometimes, Rabbi Hahn said, he doesn't know how they make it. "We operate on a deficit," he said. "We are always behind the 8-ball. But there is a strong commitment to keep this going. This repre- sents prophetic Judaism. It is an important part of Jew- ish life." Mt. Airy is "a neighbor- hood that seems like it stopped in the 1960s, where causes are big and every- body votes," according to Al Erlick, editor of the "We thought about mov- ing," said Rabbi David Wortman, the executive di- rector for the Jewish Com- munity Relations Council who lives in Mt. Airy. "But we moved here for an ideal. What does it say about an ideal if we leave?" "The jury is out on the future, but that doesn't mean we will just sit around," said Mr. Masch, the city economist. "That is not how Mt. Airy happened to become racially diverse and it is not how Jewish rebirth happened. "People really believe in it," he said. "People are the ones who must decide they want something and then they must do it." Dr. Berkowitz, a professor emeritus of electrical engi- neering at the University of Pennsylvania, said the success of Mt. Airy is not permanent. "You have to work at it. This doesn't happen natural- ly," he said. "It can erode fast." ❑ Ernie Covington is president of the East Mt. Airy Neighbors. Philadelphia Jewish Expo- nent. "If there were an elec- tion 365 days a year, all Mt. Airy residents would vote." Today Mt. Airy has its share of problems out of reach for even the most altruistic. Philadelphia is on the verge of bankruptcy. Taxes are exorbitant. City services are not up to par. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27