RISING EXPECTATIONS Victor's Avalon bakery inspires the rebuilding of her Detroit neighborhood. SHARON LUCKERMAN Staff Writer Inspired By Jewish Roots The warm, earthy Victor attributes her skills to Jewish family values. "My grandparents were very honest, extremely hard-working and grateful for everything they had," she says. Victor is the granddaughter of the owners of Ben Victor's Department Store on Hastings Street in Detroit's old Jewish neighborhood. She says her parents were mentshen and creative thinkers. Victor remembers going on a ski trip with her father as a young girl. He wanted to publicize a business class he would teach lawyers who were on vacation. "He made a deal with me," Victor says, "that if I put up posters, we'd ski for a day." She agreed and hundreds of people showed up for his class — the beginning of his business, the American including restaurants like the Whitney in Detroit and specialty grocery stores like Nino Salvaggio. "We're exploring what it means to be a successful small business in this economy," Victor says. "We're not interested in growth for growth's sake. Our dream is to do what we do well and hopefully inspire and help others to fulfill their dream and start other businesses." Detroit activist Grace Boggs, who received the Anti-Defamation League Lifetime Achievement Award in 2001, says Avalon has been "a great suc- cess" at just that. A cooperative that includes a gallery, gift shop and clothing store opened next door and Back Alley Bikes opened around the corner, she says. Also University of Michigan students are work- ing to revitalize nearby Chinatown on Cass. I is 10 degrees outside, but the people streaming into Avalon International Breads near Wayne State University warm up quickly. Jewish MBAs And Detroit A businessman lines up behind a couple of stu- dents, a young mother cradling her infant and a Victor says Judaism has always been a big part of her man from a nearby homeless shelter waiting in the family's identity. Her father has led AIPAC (American neighborhood bakery and cafe. They're all there Israel Public Affairs Committee), and her brother, for the homemade breads, muffins, cookies, sand- David, currently plays that role. After her mother's death wiches and coffee — and the caring ambiance. last July, she returned to some Jewish study and services. "The atmosphere is relaxed, the people are diverse Victor and her siblings promised their mother and easy-going, and it's a fun place to work," says they would say Kaddish for her for a year. So while daughter Rafaella goes to Temple Emanu-El's day Lesley O'Connell, 41, of Wayne, one of Avalon's 30 full- and part-time employees. It's no accident that Avalon, a gathering e're not interested in growth for growth's sake. Our dream is to do what we do well and place for the community, landed in the middle of Detroit. For more than a decade, hopefully inspire and help others to fulfill their dream and start other businesses. —Jackie Victor the neighborhood has been home to owner Jackie Victor, 37, formerly of West Bloomfield, her partner Ann Perrault, 42, care in Oak Park, Victor gOes daily to morning and their daughter Rafaella, 2. g services at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in They chose to open a small business there as a Southfield, and also studies with Rabbi Joseph way of rebuilding their Detroit neighborhood. "Avalon has a commitment to the city," says Krakoff. "It's a very powerful experience going to syna- Kenny Rose, 23, of Detroit, a bakery regular. gogue every day," Victor says. At her study ses- The business donates food every . week to sions, she says, "We're deconstructing the service Food Not Bombs, he says, as well as to other and we discuss the essence of prayer." organizations that feed the poor and hungry, Impressed by his new student, Rabbi Krakoff including shelters such as COTS and the says that Victor is a deep thinker. "She's very spir- Mariner's Inn. Avalon's owners also mentor itual and really passionate," he says. "I'm learning fledgling business owners in - the area on busi- with her twice a month." ness plans, insurance and licenses. He also sees Victor's work as a community The community also gives back to Avalon. leader in Detroit as an outgrowth of her Judaism. One Christmas, during the bakery's busiest Jackie Victor "Community is such an important value in time of the year, its oven broke. Dough was Judaism," he says. "It's living in partnership with shaped into ready-to-bake breads, and Victor and Educational Institute, that now does seminars for doc- other human beings. Jewish teachings give you the Perrault decided to give them away to anyone who tors and lawyers on vacation around the country. mechanics to go into the community and translate wanted to bake them. People not only took them, Victor carries on the family business tradition these values into actions." but gave donations, which totaled more money with her own blend of politics and community Victor believes Jews have a special part to play in than if they had sold them baked. involvement. this community development. "Jackie's making a difference and teaching a lot Her and Perrault's ideas buck the notion that to "Many of our parents were small business owners, of us that one can and should make a difference in run a successful business, profit is the bottom line. many Jewish kids now have MBAs. What if people Detroit," says Elaine Driker of Detroit, who chairs Though important, Victor-says, profit bows to mentored with small business owners in the city? the executive advisory board of the Detroit Jewish other bottom lines at Avalon that include respecting Partnership opportunities are not just with the elite in Initiative of the Jewish Community Council of the environment (by using more expensive, but Detroit, but also with people in the neighborhoods." Metropolitan Detroit. healthier organic flour that's not grown with chemi- Growing up, Victor says she was mentored by her The reality of doing business in the Cass cals or pesticides) and nurturing "right relationships," father, a lawyer and businessman, who taught her Corridor neighborhood near WSU is not easy, which means respecting all customers and treating how to analyze things that later helped her open her Driker adds. "But she's verysairvy,:ex4ilisitely ' -' ' -' employees fairly. own business. bright,- passionate,undideep1}7 c"ommicteti t to things Such beliefs led Avalon co, pull put of the Detroit When Avalon opened, his teachings so clearly she believes'iti ..•J-ackie , has' all7vayg marthid to yher Chamber of Commeite When' ii 'asked members to imprinted the fledgling business that, Victor says, own drummer. She reflects very positively on the fight against paying a minimum wage. her partner Ann used to joke, "Avalon's run by an Jewish community and on her generation within That didn't hurt the bakery. It continues to grow. old Jewish guy: Me!" 0 the Jewish community. She's a real role model." Now about 25 wholesale customers feature its bread, 7 2/14 2003 28