Down Memory Lane A Jewish Historical Society tour takes two busloads back to the old neighborhood. \- • JULIE WIENER Staff Writer Pentecostal churches, congregants dressed in their Sunday finest waved to the tour bus slowly winding down their street. Reminders of the neighborhoods' former residents are still abundant, with churches still retaining the Jewish symbols carved on their walls and faded kosher delicatessen signs still visible on abandoned storefronts. For the many senior citizens on the tour — the Jewish Historical Society's first public tour in two years — it was a cathartic afternoon, stir- ring up decades of memories. And for those who had grown up in the sub- he large vehicles waiting in the Agency for Jewish Education parking lot on Sunday, Sept. 14, may have • just looked like standard charter ri • buses. ,±1 In actuality, they were time machines, filled to capacity and transporting their passengers to a lost a time when there was a vibrant Jewish community within Detroit's city limits. Led by Jewish Historical Society of Michigan volunteers, the five-hour tour spanned • more than five genera- tions and covered a lot of turf: 19th century Jewish settlements near down- ,_town, early 20th century communities east of Woodward, Detroit's first Jewish cemetery (now surrounded by a General Motors plant), the Dexter-Davison area and the University of Detroit neighborhood. Stops included former _synagogues, Jewish insti- tutions and formerly Jewish homes, as well as secular institutions — \--like Mumford and • Central high schools — that contributed to the community's collective memory. The sights weren't all scenic. Many homes were gutted and boarded up, their paint faded, wood rotted and porches crum- bling. Weeds and broken bottles dotted some lawns, poorly maintained playgrounds and side- walks. But not all the neigh- ,--Dorhoods were in ruins, (Top): Most Detroit synagogues, like Ahavas Achim on and some are now home Schaefer, became churches. to vibrant communities. Outside synagogues (Above): Fading reminders of Yiddishkeit linger, as turned into Baptist or with this kosher luncheonette on Wyoming and Curtis. urbs or out of town, it was a chance to see the places they knew only from stories. Martin Gurwin grew up above his father's grocery store on Fenkell and wears a sweatshirt that says, "I'm not 78. I'm 28 with 50 years of experi- ence." Now a retired manufacturers' rep- resentative and a resident of Farmington Hills, the recently wid- owed Gurwin hadn't been back to the old neighborhood in decades. He said the trip brought back memories of going to shul with his grandfather, and of synagogue-hopping with his friends as a teen-ager. "We used to sneak into the different shuls and make the rounds on the High Holidays," he recalled. Denny Brown is originally from Montreal, but since moving to met- ropolitan Detroit she has become interested in the history. "The tour brings a lot together," she said. "I'm a member of Temple Beth El, so it's interesting to see its history." A volunteer tour guide for eight years, Adele Staller says the tours are meaningful for all generations, of Detroit Jews. "It's a chance to get back and reminisce without worrying about how or how not to get there," she said. And as the buses made tight turns and bumped over potholes, the remi- niscences occasionally drowned out Staller: "My old house is still there!" and "Here's where I delivered papers," and "That used to be Nagel's grocery store where we bought the five-penny candy!" But Jewish Historical Society of Michigan President Judy Cantor wants participants to know that Detroit is not just an archive, and added a new segment to the tour: a visit with someone from the Greater Detroit Partnership, which is working to revitalize the city by developing the riverfront, parks and a historic district. Prices so low, you'll walk all over us. VM/INN, 14, " • •••-•-.- • ,•." "" • • A pt I L L FLOOR COVERINGS • This Week Featuring: HORIZON NOW ",., Reg. $16.95 SAXONY - 0 0 PLUSH 43QPQP per Sq. Yd. PER SQ. YD. Last Ten Days HOURS MON., THURS., FRI.). 9-9 TUES. & WED 11.9-6 • SAT 10-9-5 2380 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD /—/ Just West of Telegraph, Sylvan Lake (248) 738-6554 9/26 1.997 15