Community Profile SPECIAL REPORT Outside The Core Some Jews jumped to Novi and Northville ahead of the Jewish migration, but are discovering themselves. Don Cohen Special to the Jewish News N Lubavitch-run schools when they decided it was time for a change. "We were looking for more challenge, to start something fresh and new:' Rabbi Susskind explained. As they made contacts in the area they were encouraged. "Meeting one family led to another. Each family knew two or three ovi and Northville are com- munities on the edge ... on the edge of the "core" of the Metro Detroit Jewish community. The recently completed 2005 population study done by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit showed the subur- ban area where most Jews live expanded from 13 ZIP codes in 1999 to 23 ZIP codes in 2005. Royal Oak to the east and Commerce Township and Walled Lake to the northwest have been added. But the Jewish population in Novi and Northville did not exhibit enough growth to nudge the core further west. Not yet, anyway. There is no doubt that those who live there are increasingly connected to each other and Rabbi Avrohom Susskind has become the Pied Piper for area Jews. Leah and Rabbi Avrohom Susskind: The Pied Pipers Rabbi Susskind, 31, is other families — not 20, but a few others:' the director of the Novi-Northville Center the rabbi says. "In every subdivision, I'd for Jewish Life, a project of the Chabad- meet a few Jews who thought they were Lubavitch movement. With his wife, the only Jew there. But there was no place Leah, 29, and their three little girls, Chaya for Jews to congregate as Jews in Novi." Mushka, 5, Fayga, 3, and Chana, 1, the So the Susskinds looked to move to Susskinds are playing a Jewish tune that the area and open their home for Jewish has brought Jews out into the open. activities. They plotted Jewish homes and "It's the Susskinds that are trying to businesses on a map in order to decide bring the community and local families where to live. together," Celia Gendloff of Novi says. "We found there was no particular spot And, indeed, anyone you approach with Jewish people. There were some in about the Jews in the community suggests every subdivision, on the west side, and the Susskinds are the people to talk to. the north side. So we decided to move They grew up in Crown Heights, New where we thought we'd be central." York, and were teaching in Oak Park at Their real estate agent thought they were crazy when they decided on a neighborhood — he was certain there were no Jews there. "But we found that two of our neighbors are Jewish, and there is another family just down the block:' Rabbi Susskind says. With unpacked boxes still scattered around their new home, the family held a Sukkot party last October. "We exceeded our expectations:' Rabbi Susskind says of the 60 people who turned out and the connections that were made. "People saw each other and said, `I know you form Temple Israel' ... 'I know you from Adat Shalom:" "We've grown a lot quicker than we anticipated, in both quality and quan- tity," the rabbi says. For example, just a few days after the Sukkot party, he received an e-mail from several parents of teens asking him if he would meet with their kids if they got them together. "It wasn't even our initia- tive," he says. "They came on their own. There were about 10 kids and we met several times." While people aren't moving to the area to be with other Jews, Rabbi Susskind says, they see his Center for Jewish Life as a plus. They've held a Chanukah party in their home and a Purim party at the Novi Civic Center. Leah Susskind runs a monthly Women's Circle and is planning a program for mothers with young children. As more families get involved, the Susskinds hope to further expand their offerings. Further Out More than 30 years before the Susskinds moved in, Julie Abrams, like many other Jewish Detroiters, were looking to move to the suburbs. "At the time, for me, West Bloomfield was out of my price range, and Southfield just seemed to be a lateral move," explains Abrams. "I had some Jewish and gentile friends from Detroit who recommended Novi as a growing community. I knew I would be close to Jewish communities in Farmington and West Bloomfield, and figured they would be soon moving into Commerce Township and Novi." Though that hasn't happened yet, Abrams stays connected to the Jewish community. "Anything I want Jewish is close by to me," she says. She does her kosher shopping at the Kroger on Halsted in Farmington Hills or the Hiller's on Haggerty in Commerce. There was once a Northville/Novi Hadassah chapter — currently there are brams is involved Nevi's public schools 40 Hadassah members in Novi and six in Northville — and back in the late 1980s there was even a United Hebrew Schools branch at Village Oaks Elementary School for a few years for 15 children. Abrams has served on the Novi Community Schools' Board of Education since 1992. The district has 6,372 students. "I think it's been very minimal:' Abrams says of the presence of Jewish families, based on her experience with the schools. "Sometimes, it's mixed marriages so you can't tell by the names, and we don't count religious groups in the school system, but it's always very few." She estimates there are maybe a dozen Jewish teachers in the school district. "It hasn't caused my family any prob- lems at all," she says."I've had no experi- ences with anti-Semitism. They always cover both winter holidays in the schools, very carefully as they should." Up North It's the first anniversary of the Lunch and Learn program run by Rabbi Susskind and catered by Leah, and it brings about a dozen people into the conference room at Global Office Solutions, a national sup- plier of office products and furniture. The owner, Reuben Levy, 33, moved to Novi 10 years ago and established his business there two years later. At the age of 23, Levy came to Novi pri- marily to be on the lake with his ski-boat. "I had a real estate license at the time, and I looked at nine different houses and found one on South Lake Drive with lake access," he says. Since then, he has moved around the lake twice and is now on the east side of Walled Lake, the third larg- est lake in Oakland County and located mostly in Novi. Outside The Core on page 51 August 17 • 2006 49