c. 4 .1.• EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK A March To Remember I t was Aug. 28, 1963, a sticky day. The crowd of 250,000 at the historic civil rights march on Washington was hot, weary and restless. But the charis- matic keynoter, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., had yet to speak. There were scattered sighs when Rabbi Joachim Prinz, the American Jewish Congress president, began to speak from the Lincoln Memorial's granite steps. The wait for Dr. King — and his message of freedom, equality, justice and nonviolent civil protest — seemed interminable. The 61-year-old rabbi was spiritual leader of Temple B'nai Abraham in Newark, N.J., and a civil rights activist. After 11 years as the leader of Berlin's Jews, he was exiled from his native Germany in 1937 for speaking out against Nazism. He drew Hider's wrath for trying to keep the tide of hate from obliterating European Jewry. Rabbi Prinz spoke for just two minutes at the March on Washington for Jobs and ROBERT A. Freedom; still, his words lingered. S KLAR "As Americans, we share the profound con- Editor cern of millions of people about the shame and disgrace of inequality and injustice, which makes a mockery of the great American idea," he said. 'As Jews, we bring to this,great demonstration, in which thousands of us proudly participate, a two-fold experience — one of the spirit and one of our history" Rabbi Prinz talked about how God created man as a uni- versal neighbor. He defined neighbor as "our collective responsibility for the preservation of man's dignity and integrity" Dr. King spoke next. Midway through prepared remarks, he chucked them so he could share his unflappable dream: for freedom to ring from every nook and corner of this great nation. "And when this happens," he said, "we will be able to speed up that day when all God's children, black men and white men, Jews and gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, 'Free at last! Free at least! Thank God Almighty, we King are free at last!'" The march paved the way for the Civil Rights Act of 1964. What We've Done Dr. King — the son of a Southern Baptist minister and a quintessential American hero — was just 39 when he was gunned down in Memphis, where he had come to support the sanitation workers. His 1968 murder came 13 years after he rose to prominence in the Montgomery bus boycott, a seminal event in civil rights history. More the originator of ideas, Dr. King accepted the American Jewish Committee's Liberties Medallion in 1965 by quoting Rabbi Prinz. "The most urgent — the most disgrace- ful, the most shameful and the most tragic — problem," Dr. King said, "is silence," not "bigotry and hatred." This week, 40 years after the Washington march, is a timely opportunity to reflect on what we've done in metro Detroit to bolster bridges of black-Jewish understanding. More and more Jews and blacks live near or work with one another — or are business partners. Some f ,-ws have moved back to the central city; others never left despite the 1967 riots. An important Detroit job placement and training agency JVS, has Jewish roots. The Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue and the Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit nourish the soul for an eclectic mix of Jews. Suburban syna- gogues mingle with black urban churches. Jews lead ecumenical events, social action projects and diversity walks. They give to black causes and tutor in black schools. They also are key players in Detroit's politics, com- merce, redevelopment and cultural arts. At the very least, Jews and blacks are in sync with Dr. King's belief that our destiny is intertwined. Yet we live in the most segregated metropolitan region; our public schools are a grim example. So we need to do more. Whats Needed For starters, we need deeper racial and moral ties. Ninety years ago, blacks began to follow Jews north and west through the region. Today, more of us live side by side and are friends, but I wonder how many of us truly know each other. In general, we don't socialize, learn together or commiserate with one another. Nor is there a coordinated effort to address the inner- city scourges of drugs, crime and poverty. Jews in Detroit and Southfield, each home to more blacks than whites, have what Dr. King saw as the will "to transform the dangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood." The same applies to Jews in Oak Park, where the number of blacks and whites is about even. Mayors Brenda Lawrence of Southfield, Kwame Kilpatrick of Detroit, Gerald Naftaly of Oak Park and many other local leaders want rainbow cities, Prinz villages and townships that flourish. Meanwhile, the Jewish Community Council has made it easier for Jews to help less-fortunate blacks through a literacy outreach effort. The council's clergy mission to Senegal and Israel in 2002 inspired interfaith concerts and a black-Jewish Habitat for Humanity day. And Summer in the City, the Jewish-led volunteer corps of suburban teens and adults battling blight and stereotypes, is working to better Detroit neighborhoods. Still, I can't help but feel we need to be more proactive indi- vidually. Blacks and Jews were joined at the hip in the fight for civil rights. What a waste if we don't aggressively build on that shared history by reaching across racial, religious and geo- graphic lines to embrace one another. In 1967, Rabbi Prinz used his pedestal as head of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations to urge "all responsible Negro leadership" to condemn "the tragic crime of Negro anti-Semitism." The urg- ing came as the notion that lasting black-Jewish harmony required a two-way commitment was spreading. "We have so much to gain from each other," said Detroiter Elaine Driker, the lay leader of the JCCouncil's Detroit Jewish Initiative, a bridge builder between blacks and Jews. I admire her and her husband, Eugene, for never giving up when championing civil rights was no longer in vogue. "We're enriched," she said, "not only by what we can learn from collaborating with and living among people of other backgrounds and cultures, but also by all those unexpected similarities we find in the values and wishes we have for our children, grandchildren and succeeding generations." ❑ 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 10-6 Thursday 10-9 Sunday 12-5 8/29 2003 5 'MOW