Will the future locked. Parking lots cracked and over- and it gives bring avenues them direction grown. of kosher Current places of worship might in their lives, restaurants — or a ghost- stand as churches, secular centers, then every- town of Jewish missionary outposts — or warehous- thing else falls culture? into place," he es — 50 years from now Mt Applebaum believes that, today, said. "If you're a baseball fanatic, old Jewish buildings in Detroit, long since abandoned by their founders, you learn all the batting averages would serve as community grave- and you keep all the statistics be- stones were it not for thriving Jewish cause you care about it. It's life in the suburbs. But what about 50 meaningful to you. And you wont years from now? Will religion remain miss the World Series for any- vibrant, or will Detroit's Jewish corn- thing. It's something inside of irpo ia munity, now with a population of your heart and everything else lliall.111111111 .11111111111nik 1111Na ftam, falls into place." 96,000, fizzle out? The rabbi neither foresees an "We'll still be here," Mr. Applebaum said. "The worst that might happen is upsurge of anti-Semitism in the that we'll have one small Orthodox United States nor a subsequent community, living in a little enclave, ghetto-izing of American Jew- ry. And he doesn't consider op- with only fragments of the rest." Mr. Applebaum forecasts an over- pression good reason to remain all shrinking of the Jewish communi- true. "If anti-Semitism were the ty. He says that most Jews who remain will be Orthodox in the year only thing that kept Jews alive 2044, in part because they marry as a people and as a separate faith, then I don't see any reason younger and have more children. "And they don't marry gentiles," he for it. If being Jewish is only dis- crimination, who in his right said. "They marry only Jews." If his predictions are true, the sit- mind would want to be Jewish?" tudents of the future, take uation would stand in sharp contrast I 11 11 0 11 note! Homework might to today's denominational split. 0 someday become an old- For instance, in 1990, Federation's fashioned, inefficient use demographic survey identified 40 per- cent of Detroit's Jewish community as of your precious time. diction: year-round school. She thinks videos and field trips. (Youth groupers Indeed, some of today's youngsters it would lessen the amount of mater- Lisa Zaks and Michael Stern envision Conservative. Thirty-three percent of metro Jews considered themselves Re- anticipate learning Talmud and secu- ial students forget during summer va- day-trips to Israel via light-speed rock- lar studies during sleep, through some cations. Not to fear, students would ets.) form. Seven percent are Orthodox. Rabbi Martin Berman, of the Con- sort of new-fangled technique of epis- still get days off every two months or No matter how high-tech education servative Congregation Beth Achim temological osmosis. gets, however, Ms. Iczkovitz foresees so. Wishful thinking. in Southfield, acknowledges that these Ms. Iczkovitz believes Jewish day no robot teachers. "There has to be a Rochelle Iczkovitz, principal of Hil- schools in Detroit will be flourishing warm body in there somewhere," she statistics probably will change. He is pessimistic, but not without hope. Like lel Day School, has a more stoic pre- in 2044, with computers, interactive said. Mr. Applebaum, Ten years ago, Rabbi Berman be- Hillel's student lieves that the per- body was roughly centage of 350. Today, it num- Orthodox Jews will bers 635. The same grow as the overall trend is evident at population dimin- Akiva and other lo- ishes. The key to cal Hebrew day sustaining other schools. Jews is education "It's now become and spirituality very mainstream," "If there's a pos- Ms. Iczkovitz said. itive reason to be "It's very acceptable Jewish, if people to send your child to feel in their hearts Hebrew day school. that this is who for both Judaic they are, that this studies and general is their identity curricula." and they're happy Along with an ex- with that identity Michael Stem and Lisa Zaks predict a virtual reality future. Ricky Biumenstein foresees YAD events at a resurrected Caucus Club. panding student Si D'S THE D E TRO IT J EWIS H NEWS Uon 58