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January 19, 2006 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2006-01-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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H2312 H2322 525NP Rev 1

1069190

24

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Januarty i9 0 2006

Walk from page 22

darity for Dr. King's beliefs and to promote
what he believed in."
The inspiring program Monday included
spirited performances by choirs from
Abbott and Orchard Lake middle schools
and the Detroit School of the Arts, Allen
Park and West Bloomfield high schools. The
WBHS African American Awareness Club
did an intricate clapping and shout-out
number; a student from Allen Park High
School read his contest-winning poem on
the theme "Hold Fast To His Dream;" and
Detroit artist Tyree Guyton addressed the
group, but mostly let the audience hear the
recorded voices of young people who had
participated in his shoe project telling of
their dreams for the world.
The project was supported by a grant
from B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region.
Guyton, founder of the Heidelberg
Project in Detroit, worked with students in
the West Bloomfield schools plus 20 other
public and private schools to create an
installation made of shoes painted to rep-
resent the students' dreams. Some shoes
were displayed at WBHS, but a major part
of the work was installed on the lawn of
Temple Shir Shalom at Orchard Lake and
Walnut Lake roads. Many of the marchers
took a detour to look at the installation
there during the 1.5-mile walk.
Linda Rosberg of West Bloomfield and
her children, Emily, 8, and Jacob, 6, were
bundled up for the march. They knew
what to expect because they'd attended
many times before. This year, all had par-
ticipated in the shoe project.
"We believe in what Martin Luther King
did;' Emily said simply.

Southfield Salute
In Southfield, the city held its 21st Holiday
Peace Walk Celebration, concluding with a
90-minute program at the Southfield
Pavilion in the city's municipal complex.
Rudy Simons, co-chair of the Detroit-
based Michigan Coalition for Human Rights,
said 1,100 people took part in the event.
Simons, who traveled with Dr. King in
Selma in 1965, spoke to the crowd and
quoted Dr. King's mid-1960s "Declaration
of Independence from the War in
Vietnam" speech.
"It was in that speech that he spoke of
the three problems facing America, which
were racism, materialism and militarism,"
Simons explained. "Three problems that
we still face today"
Temple Emanu-El Cantor Emeritus
Norman Rose and his wife, Euni, of
Southfield sang the national anthem.

JN Staff Writer Harry Kirsbaum
contributed to this story.

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