City Roots HARRY KIRS BAUM Staf Writer D Music Entertainment provided by Sam Barnett and his orchestra AR FAR/WRIER SHOES & BOOTS 5V/0 OFF THE BOARDWALK 2/5 1999 12 Detroit Jewish News (248) 737-9059 avid Weinberg says Jews who live in suburban Detroit still have deep roots within the city, they just don't realize it. "It might be direct, having grown up in the city, or more general with institutional activities," said the direc- tor of the Wayne State University/ Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies. "My perspective would be that the urban area has played a role in their lives." With that perspective, the Cohn- Haddow Center organized "Jews and the Urban Experience: A Historical Assessment," a conference from March 7-8, which kicks off with a bus tour of Jewish Detroit, visiting synagogues and various institutions that were the center of Jewish life 30 or 40 years ago. Nathan Glazer, professor emeritus of Harvard University, will make the keynote speech, "Jews and the Urban Experience: A Historical Perspective," at the opening session on Sunday evening, March 7 at Temple Beth El. The bus tour, co-sponsored by the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, will be 2:15-4 p.m. that afternoon. To Glazer, Detroit is far from anomalous in Jewish flight from the city. "I'm not surprised that it sort of fits into the history of a lot of other com- munities," he said. "The movement of Jews out of the city of Detroit in corn- parison with Cleveland was a little slower, because I suppose they hit the edge of the city moving northwest later in Detroit than the Jews in Cleveland moving southeast." He said he is thinking his speech's major theme might contrast the age of Jewish urbanism and the "city without Jews" issue. "Most Jews lived in the city as politically defined, the central cities as described in all the novels and mem- oirs and sociological studies, and now they don't. "I have some interesting points, but I'm mulling over them, and I'm read- ing and thinking." Jeffrey Shandler of New York University will end the conference at Adat Shalom Monday evening, March 8, with "The Urban Jewish Landscape in Television: A Multimedia Presentation." Both the opening and closing ses- sions will be free and open to the pub- lic. A reception will follow each lec- ture. Call the Cohn-Haddow Center, now in its 10th year, for registration information: (313) 577-2679. The daytime session at Wayne State University campus will feature eight speakers in three sessions, comparing Jewish urban life in Europe, Israel and New York City, dis- cussing Jews in Greater Detroit, and relating how the urban Jewish experience has been represented in arts and architecture. The speakers include Sidney Bolkosky of the University of Michigan- Dearborn ("Holocaust David Weinberg Survivors - in Detroit") and Kenneth Waltzer of Michigan State University ("East European Jewish Detroit in the Early Twentieth Century"). The day session will cost $35 alone, the bus tour included will cost $50. "The urban experience has been central for the development of the modern Jewish identity and modern Jewish institutions and cultural life," Weinberg said. "It's very much been embedded in the Jewish experience in the past 200 years. Jews have played a very major role in the development of institutions and activities in urban life across the world and we think it's kind of a reciprocal kind of relationship and one that needs to be addressed." Weinberg said the Detroit urban experience has not been investigated in any depth in a conference or publi- cation format. "It also dovetails with the centennial celebration. Since the central portion of the conference deals with the Jews of Detroit, it seemed perfect choice to do it this year." fl Conference will examine what cities meant to Jews and vice versa.