4 of how people live in the city. Summer in the City's ::?..freshing and invigorating, that's why I go and bust up concrete with them." Also an educator at Temple Shir Shalom, Nathan of West Bloomfield discovered that she wasn't the only one wowed by this group. Of all the places her b'nai mitzvah students volunteered, the teens said that Summer in the City had the greatest impact on them. Times A'Changing As teenagers, Falik and Greenberg first cycled, then drove from the suburbs into Detroit to explore the city. "The suburbs were not a place to be gathering," says Falik, who is an urban studies and creative writing major at Columbia University in New York City. "It's a great place to be from age 0-10 and 40-90. But it's stultifying in between. I wanted a place with a pulse." Born after the 1967 Detroit riots, Falik and others his age seem more open to explore a city that sent their parents' generation seeking safety in the suburbs. Falik says he and his friends sense Detroit's problems, but found the city had a great potential the suburbs didn't. Greenberg says the suburbs are unstim- ulating. Both believe the city's cultural and socio-economic diversity as well as its rich history have much to offer. They are aware of the city's problems and know Detroit is losing young sin- gles like them every year, says Greenberg. "Look at cities like Chicago, Cincinnati and Toronto that have young people. The cities are planned around young people who can meet on the streets, in parks," he says. "People don't get to see people in Detroit; they're isolated in cars or fear people because of their color," says Greenberg, a junior at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He dreams of working on a Detroit- area regional transportation system. "There's the potential, but little in the way of public spheres in Detroit," Falik says. Yet he and Greenberg persist, feeling both a connection and a responsibility. to Detroit. "I was probably most captivated by building community in the city, an important part of my Jewish back- ground," Falik says. "And I'm interested in social action and tikkun olam (repair of the world). There's not much of a market for that in affluent areas. You have to expand your concept of com- munity in the suburbs to include Detroit and Pontiac." And by expanding their sense of corn- Tunity, the SITC volunteers gain a deeper understanding of their surround- ings. "If you help out in the city and take the time to see what it's like, all you've heard about Detroit is a little off," says SITC volunteer Samantha Solomon, 15, of West Bloomfield. "The people are just like us, but not as fortunate. When we meet, it's really great and they're so appreciative and nice." Gail LePage, a social worker at Andover High School, brought her daughter Mallory, 16, and several of her friends to a SITC site and got hooked. She wasn't always a Detroit fan. LePage says she was nervous at first about going into the city. When she got her master's degree in 1981 at 313 CALLING on page 54 Detroit urban artist Tyree Guyton, and Ben Falik discuss Guyton's contribution to the Summer in the City mural. 1N 4 1 9/ 5 2003 53