COMMUNITY VIEWS Building An Inspired Community r opmental cycle. What does the fami- ederation's Alliance for ly with small children need in order Jewish Education has been to be involved in and excited about in business" since January our Jewish community? What do 1999. It began with a call families with children in lower and from community leadership to create upper elementary school a strategic vision for formal need? The workgroups and informal education for included families with up our community, and a call to 4 year olds, 5-11 year from some Jewish leaders to olds, 13-18 year olds, col- create an "inspired" Jewish lege and young adults, and community. empty nesters. In brief, we In responding to these are looking to create a calls, the Alliance faced sev- community of life-long eral challenges: learning using all of our • How do we make cer- institutions, from the tain that our plans integrate DR. L YNDA Fresh Air Society and the formal and informal educa- Jewish Community Center GI LES tion? to the congregations and Spec ial to I How do we see and the day schools. Our goal the Jew ish News understand the accomplish- is to create portals so indi- ments and needs of educa- viduals can enter our community tional institutions and groups with through any door, from a congrega- whom we may be unfamiliar? tion to the Internet. • Finally, how do we begin a This is not simple. We know that process that will stimulate the com- key factors in the process should be munity to dream along? a careful examination of the cost, Since May, the Alliance — affili- accessibility and retention within ated with the Jewish Federation of our institutions. We also know that Metropolitan Detroit — has expand- the professionalism of our educators, ed its participants from 40 to 80 teachers and youth group workers, members. It has enlisted 80 educa- as well as the quality of our pro- tors, rabbis, congregants, youth grams, needs to be reviewed again. group workers and experts who pre- Because we have repeatedly heard viously had not been involved in from every part of the community helping us dream. These people were with whom we have spoken that divided into five small workgroups professionalism is paramount, our concentrating not on individual committees have begun with that institutions but on the family devel- issue. How can we recruit and retain, inspire and re-train profes- sionals in all walks of Jewish educa- Dr. Lynda Giles, Ph.D., is co-chair of tion? the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan The first round of recommenda- Detroit's Alliance for Jewish Education. , tions is expected by the end of December. Those recommendations will have come through the work- groups and the Alliance in coopera- tion with the appropriate planning and allocation divisions of the Fed- eration. The recommendations will be presented to the Board of Governors of our Federation. Our next tasks will be to examine not only affordability and accessibility, but also how to keep people engaged after they've entered our institutions, while accessing the quality of the services that we deliver. It is important to note that although we are in a process of cre- ating new collaborations and syner- gies, the Alliance has maintained a healthy respect for what has already been established. The Detroit Jewish community has led the way in a variety of fields of Jewish education. Without becoming self-congratula- tory, it is important to understand what we are already doing well. Maintaining a strong sense of the unique nature of our institutions at the same time that we are trying to retool for the year 2000 and beyond has been a difficult feat. However, we also learned from one of our con- sultants that "the greatest block to change is full enrollment." When our programs continue to boast enrollment with waiting lists, we sometimes believe that they are beyond reproach. This balance between honoring establishments and institutions and striving to do better is one of the most difficult challenges facing the Alliance. Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski teaches us that although frequently translat- ed as "dedication," Chanuka also means "renewal." Renewal assumes that the gateway to a better future requires a backward look at the importance of what we have built. How- ever, the way that we celebrate Chanuka teaches us that renewal requires more than returning to a former state, even if that state itself has been satisfactory. Renewal requires advancing beyond the previ- ous state. To achieve renewal, we must progress. Adding a Chanuka candle every night symbolizes this concept in a spiritual way. Remaining at a plateau is utterly unacceptable for people who seek progress. And progress is not only essential for growth, but also for survival. As the High Holiday season comes to an end, and our shorter days direct us toward the light of Chanuka, we need to keep this in mind. The community has charged Federation's Alliance to bring us to the next level, to help build an inspired community that will con- tinues its progress toward a greater Jewish life. ❑ their own way, can make a meaning- ful, positive impact upon the society in which they live. • That social crises can be solved and their repetition in future genera- tions avoided, only by confronting them head-on and seeking a better way. • That dialogue and coalitions must be nurtured and strengthened across boundaries of ethnicity and class, else we tarnish and ultimately destroy the very mechanism that allows the most successful among us to achieve and excel. The Stanley and Margaret Winkel- man Fund for Social Justice will carry its namesakes' legacy into future gen- erations. The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit will administer Winkelman Social Justice Fund- endowed programs, which will be carefully designed to best perpetuate their vision. Stanley Winkelman's commitment to social justice was active and public. The Winkelmans' specialty store chain, which was well known to the community, offered its shares for pub- lic trading in 1966. Shortly thereafter, Detroit was rocked by one of the nation's most devastating urban riots. It would have been easy for the Winkelmans' corpo- Alliance's goal: a community of life-long learning. A Fighter For Social Justice s tanley J. Winkelman spent much of his remarkable life- time affirming the need and right of our society's newcom- ers, ethnic and religious minorities, and the economically disadvantaged to share in America's unique culture of opportunity. In a full partnership of ideals with his wife, Margaret, Winkelman repeat- edly demonstrated that the great human obligation to family does not end with those who are closest to us. When Winkelman died in August, Robert Aronson is chief executive offi- cer of the Jewish Federation of Metro- politan Detroit. 10/8 1999 36 Detroit Jewish News his widow and his children founded a profoundly fit- ting tribute to a man who Would have liked to be remembered not as an enterprising businessman — which he was — ROBERT but as someone ARONSON who understood Special to several vital truths the Jewish News and who sought at every opportu- nity to increase their resonance in the community at large: • That individuals, besides making JUSTICE ON PAGE 38