Detroit rabbis and Baptist ministers travel to Africa and Israel together and discover an interfaith dialogue and connection. SHARON LUCKERMAN Staff Writer A BSA Top to bottom: An impromptu memorial service at the site of Moment C e, the Jerusalem site of a March 9 suicide bombing that ki led 11 people and injured 54. Shown are: The Rev. Kenneth J. Flowers, Rabbi Maria Feldman, the Revs. Nicholas Hood III, Benjamin Baker and Robert Dulin, Rabbis Arnold Sleutelberg and Jonathan Berkun, the Revs. Ronald Turner and Darryl Robinson, Rabbi David Nelson. The Rev. Robert Dulin and tour guide Menachem Wertheim at Massada. Rabbi Arnold Sleutelberg of Shir Tikvah and the Rev. Nicholas Hood III ofPlymouth United Church of Christ in front of the "Door of No Return" on Goree Island off the coast of Senegal trip to Senegal and Israel touched roots in ways that truly allowed Detroit-area rabbis and ministers to share their dis- tinct heritages. "I've gone to Israel with Christians before, but this was a very different experience," says Rabbi Marla Feldman, assistant director of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit, who organized the March 11-21 trip. By sharing each other's historic and tragic sites, she says, the trip was more personalized for the clergy. "It was absolutely incredible," says the Rev. Dr. Ronald Turner, minister of Peace Baptist Church in Detroit. It was his first trip to both countries. Six Detroit-area ministers and four rabbis shared historical and cultural heritages to reinforce ties in the two communities back home, says Rabbi Feldman. The group also included the Revs. Nick Hood of Plymouth United Church of Christ, Kenneth J. Flowers of Greater New Mount Moriah Missionary Baptist Church, Robert Dulin Jr. of Metropolitan Church of God, Dr. Benjamin Baker of New Light Baptist Church and Dr. Daryle W Robinson of Community of Faith Baptist Church. Their coun- terparts were Rabbis Arnold Sleutelberg of Sliir Tikvah, Jonathan Berkun of Shaarey Zedek and David Nelson of Beth Shalom. "The value of the trip," says the Rev. Turner, "is inestimable. I was enamored, mesmerized when taken to the old city of Jerusalem ... Yad Vashem, Massada." But it was his first visit to Senegal, and especially to Goree Island, the main embarkation point for the slave trade, that brought him to tears. Here was the point where more than 22 million slaves were processed over a 300-year period, he says. "It was the most moving thing to happen in my life." The Rev. Flowers, who made his second visit to the island to see the slave house, agrees. "It was very painful to stand in the doorway of no return ..." On the island, slaves were separated from their families, children from their parents, and sent off to different continents, never to see each other again. Many died there. . "There was a lot of embracing [at the site]," says Rabbi Nelson. "I learned a missing piece of our [American] history." The Rev. Turner found that visiting Goree Island and then the holy sites in Israel enlightened him. "Listening to our Jewish brothers and sister talk about their history, I found a kinship through our paths, the Holocaust and the Middle Passage [the Atlantic Ocean slave route]. We found union and we learned a lot about each other's faith and how important faith is to both our religions." Infusing Humor What's it like traveling with clergy? "Every place we go everyone had to preach a sermon," the Rev. Flowers says with a laugh. He adds that humor was helpful, especially to relieve the tension when they arrived in Israel. The streets were much less crowded, says Rev. Flowers, who has been to Israel four times. Their group was the only tour at Masada. Yet, their experience was no less powerful. The ministers joined the rabbis in an impromptu visit to Moment Cafe, the scene of a recent terrorist attack, where they broke into song and lit candles. The rabbis accompanied the ministers to biblical sites in east Jerusalem, where Jesus was crucified, and to his empty tomb. It was eye-opening," says Rabbi Nelson, to see the Old City through the ministers' eyes." They vis- ited many religious leaders of the Old City, he adds, which was a lesson in hope and reconciliation. A visit to the Ethiopian absorption center in Yemin Orde was ey,e-opening. "What jumped out at me this time," says the Rev. Flowers, "was that these students were filled with hope and promise." His experience took a more personal turn when an 18-year old Ethiopian Jew befriended him. He calls the student "my new adopted son," who he hopes will visit him next summer. But there's a small hitch: The student is Shabbat and kosher observant. By the end of their journey, the Rev. Turner found "a healthier appreciation for humankind in our commonality, in our faith." There are already plans for a black-Jewish clergy alliance, along with religious and cultural programs between the two communities, says the Rev. Flowers, whose congregation has a seven-year rela- tionship with Temple Beth El. Rabbi Feldman notes that the black and Jewish communities have worked together in the past. But, since they no longer live side by side, "we have to work harder to build the bridges." To Rabbi Nelson, this was a good start. "In all my years dealing with interfaith groups, he says, "on this trip we reached a new level of com- munication." ❑ ,, eIN 4/12 2002 55