as 61) O 0 Thriving community radiates Jewish diversity, fellowship. LYNNE MEREDITH SCHREIBER Special to the Jewish News W hen Rabbi E.B. "Bunny" Freedman bought his house on Sherwood Court 27 years ago, he struck up a conversa- tion with some neighbors about how long he'd live there. "We figured if we lasted five years, it would be worth buying a house," says Rabbi Freedman, who has since made three additions to that house. "I grew up in Detroit; neighborhoods don't last Enjoying the afternoon are neighbors JoAnn Drasnin with Yehoshua, 3, and Chana Rochel, 10, and Ida and Nathaniel long around here. You buy a house, and you move Warshay with Anna, 4, Madeleine, 10, and David, 7, all of Oak Park. on. I expected to do that." . That he's still there can be attributed, in part, to Helping Hands mix of Jews, mostly Jewish Russian immigrants, Rabbi Freedman's own August 2003. The biggest power outage in the histo- African-Americans and Arabs. efforts at creating and "My sense is our Jewish community has been ry of the country started late on a Thursday after- maintaining a Jewishly strengthening [for the city of Oak Park]," Rulkowski noon, sending Detroit's suburbs into a tailspin. It diverse, vibrant commu- said. "I work with our zoning board of appeals, and was a hot, humid, blustery day and no one knew nity in Oak Park and the when the power would return. Stocked refrigerators we're having more and more people enlarging their parts of Southfield that homes. started to thaw. People threw open windows to cool border it. There is a spe- "According to the most recent census stuffy homes. Evening fell, bringing cial flavor to this neigh- numbers, cities like Oak Park, which are absolute silence. borhood, despite the "the entering suburbs of Detroit are basi- In Oak Park, Rabbi Freedman started intrusion of Interstate cally built out," he said. "There's no room knocking on doors. "The most critical 696, which physically to grow for new housing," and all of these place in our town was Federation divided the enclave. It communities, including Oak Park, have Apartments," he says. "Hospitals have gen- also survived the depar- experienced population decline. But while erators. The apartments were completely ture of Congregation cities like Ferndale reported nearly 9 per- vulnerable. People could not flush toilets. B'nai Moshe and many Rabbi Freedman cent of a population decline, Oak Park's They had no lights, no water. People were local families after the was only 2 percent, he noted. People aren't leaving; frightened." highway came in more their household size is diminishing, which is a The lights were still out on Friday. When it start- than a decade ago, and it remains a Jewishly national trend. ed getting dark around 8 p.m., able-bodied Jews diverse place despite a rapid influx of Orthodox "I'm no expert, but I have a feeling that one of the arrived at the apartment's carrying Shabbat meals residents. reasons our population decline is so small is that we and bringing comfort to residents. Oak Park is an anomaly, an inspiring story of have such a strong Orthodox Jewish community "[People came out] because they lived nearby," camaraderie among Jews from all streams. [where people have larger families]," he said. says Rabbi Freedman. "There was the soul of Oak The secret to this success, those who live and In her 1955 book, History of Oak Park, Bernadine Park. People felt a responsibility when, nowadays, work in the area say, comes down to four things: the Schoults described the community as "a lazy, quiet neighborhoods don't exist. There's a sense of neigh- former Neighborhood Project, cross-denominational little village with a few scattered homes and acres of borhood here, a sense of loyalty." rabbinic efforts, sidewalks and the presence of an fields and woods." She mentioned back yards full of Oak Park City Planner Kevin Rulkowski says anchoring Jewish Community Center. 30,865 people live in Oak Park. The population is a pheasants, quail and garter snakes. SPE CIAL REP ORT IN 6/ 2 2005 20