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"Because their parents told them
not to go there," he suggests.
"I knew from an early age ...
\
,- that I wanted to one day leave
the suburbs and become part of
an urban environment. I never
expected Detroit to be that place.
Detroit, with all of its negative
stereotypes, was not a place to
live, rather a place to visit for spe-
cial activities like dinner in
Greektown or a concert at Joe
Louis Arena," he says.
Still, he recognizes people on
• • the streets, almost like in a small
town. A few are Jewish, young
and living in the city.
But there are some pitfalls to
living downtown: He has to dri-
ve to Dearborn or Grosse Pointe
for big grocery stores, F&M and
the like, and can only rely on the
city for corner convenience-store
shopping.
\_ Fogelman grew up in West
/- Bloomfield, at Temple Beth El
and Andover High School. He
says sarcastically that "I fought
my way off the streets of West
Bloomfield."
Now, he works at the Detroit
Orientation Institute, giving
tours of neighborhoods and oth-
er information about the city to
reporters and business people.
• On Saturdays, he works at Rafal
/- Spice Company in Detroit's East-
ern Market, surrounded by the
pungent scent of pepper, cumin,
cinnamon.
He attests that there's a lot
more to explore "than tradition-
al Greektown." Harmonie Park.
Eastern Market. The New Cen-
ter area — DIA, Detroit Histor-
ical Museum ("my sanctuary"),
the new Museum of African-
,- American History.
"Detroiters are very nostalgic
people, very proud of the things
they created — cars, Vernors,
Sanders Hot Fudge, downtown
Hudson's." He likes the Histori-
cal Museum because it's small,
manageable — Detroit's heritage
on display.
Does he consider himself to be
\—a sort of '90s pioneer? "As a
'young adult moving downtown
— yes. But I'm not creating any-
thing," he replies.
"I like to ride my mountain
bike around Detroit, look at the
architecture, buildings vs. trees
and suburbs that look the same.
And you find your own treasures
— some sad."
He has ridden his bike
\-- through the Michigan Central
' Depot on Michigan Avenue, a
couple blocks west of Tiger Sta-
dium. And he keeps in his apart-
ment some bedford stone from
when the Gleaners Temple was
torn down (the headquarters of
the Gleaners Life Insurance
Company).
When Wayne State tore down
the "Romanesque building, I
„
;gent
searching through the rub-
/ ble,” he says.
"And it wasn't only me." ❑

IL

"iv v
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