L JLJ 1 BEAM, ELUL, THE GANG'S ALL HERE ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Associate Editor S andy Feldman had an uncle named Sam, who had a brother named Henry, who died of decidedly unnatural causes. "We heard he ended up in the Detroit River," Feldman said. The death was work related. Henry and Sam Shorr were mem- bers of Detroit's notorious Purple Gang, a group of mostly Jewish mob- sters who controlled the city's under- world in the 1920s and '30s. Their tour de force was rum-running. Sixty years later, a few members of the gang are still alive, and their descendants reside throughout 9/19 1997 8 the area. Stephen Rosman has been thinking about these descendants for a long time — for months, in fact, ever since he started working on an exhibit, "Jewish Detroit in the 1920s and '30s: Revisiting Our Past." He also has been thinking about why Jews should tell the truth about history and not ignore its sordid elements. "We won't let anyone else censor their past," he said. "Why should we censor ours?" Sponsored by The Jewish News, the exhibit will begin next month at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center and feature a gala opening with a nostalgic dance and guest speaker. The main aspect of the pro- gram is a collection of more than 900 But they wouldn't be, if some community members had their way. Purple Gang members Louis Gillerman, James Powell, Joe Burnstein, Sam Burnstein, Sam Vassallo, Jacob Levites and John Wolf. photos showing Jewish life around Hastings Street, Oakland Avenue and 12th Street. They include synagogues, restaurants and schools, sports heroes, buildings designed by Albert Kahn, (.\-_-!\ and the west Michigan resort area of South Haven. It's a certain 30 of those pictures that have some community members less than eager to take a sentimental C journey. "We think an exhibit about the Jewish community should disclose and reveal the positive values of that com- munity," said Rabbi Irwin Groner of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, one of the organizations that opted not to participate in the project because it would include 30 pictures of the Purple Gang. "We would like to pro- tect and preserve the good name of the Jewish community "The Purple Gang would have a prominence [in this exhibit] that was unseemly," he said. "We would not GANG page 10