Editor's Letter A Dream Unfulfilled H Eleonora Rabkin is a physician from Lithuania whose interest and experience in cardiology showed her a need here in Michigan for better access to vascular health screening. Eleonora, a registered sonographer, is now the owner of Portable Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging. She and her equipment travel to the offices of various physicians across the area administering scans and tests to their patients, sometimes with same-day results. "Not all doctors can afford to buy the equipment. They don't always have the space to keep it, and they don't have the technicians on staff to run it," Eleonora says. "Hebrew Free Loan helped me buy the equipment to start my business, which makes it more convenient for the patients, and maybe saves lives." Your contribution to Hebrew Free Loan helps us help local businesses thrive. Donate today. Hebrew Free Loan provides interest- free loans for small business start-up costs, tuition assistance, rent and many other needs: living expenses, summer camp, medical fees, training, and much more, If you or someone you know needs help, please click or call. www.hfldetroit.org 248.723.8184 HEBREW FREEJFLOAN hfldetroit.org lowass We Provide Loans. We Promise Dignity. 011 J) Jewish WE'RE PART OF THE TEAM A6 May 22 • 2008 e was the hip-hop mayor — young, driven, politically savvy and charismatic. He was a big man with big ideas for rebuilding a broken Detroit. So I wasn't surprised that 300 Metro Detroit Jews turned out at a Southfield banquet hall to hear what Kwame Kilpatrick, Detroit's first-term mayor, had to say. It was May 7, 2002. Kilpatrick, a rising political star, was speaking as part of a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit luncheon series. His appearance wasn't by chance. He owed a debt of gratitude to Jewish support. Many of his top contributors were Jewish profession- als who worked or invested in the city and yearned for it to be the next great Robert A. Sklar urban turnaround. His municipal Editor challenges had been festering: blight, crime, drugs, public transit, an insuf- ficient retail base, a cash-strapped school system, the nation's highest school dropout rate. Kilpatrick, just 31, sketched out a vision for educating the city's children while assuring clean, safe streets. It made a lot of sense — and still does. But, oh, how the backdrop has Kwame Kilpatrick changed. held such promise. Detroit bristles from scandal in the wake of He offered real eight felony counts alleg- ing perjury, conspiracy, hope. Voters misconduct in office and obstruction of justice on and supporters, the part of Kilpatrick and including many his former chief of staff, Christine Beatty. Both have Jews, felt he had the been under the public glare since January, when the vision and intellect Detroit Free Press broke the text-messaging scandal. The to change the city stunning messages allegedly for the better. show the two lied under oath about their romantic affair and misled jurors about a police officer's firing. Last October, Kilpatrick got the city council to settle police whistle-blower cases for $8.4-mil- lion, nearly $2 million more than the jury award, in hopes of keeping his damning text messaging with Beatty secret forever. Turning Around Back in 2002, before a rapt audience that included many sub- urbanites who grew up in Detroit and had fond memories of those years, Kilpatrick dreamed of lifestyle improvements, not just a vibrant entertainment district. He was on to something significant. "Many of us think of world-class cities that have thriving restaurants, a thriving retail downtown and huge buildings that you can see for miles:' the mayor said. "But really global cities, cities that are talked about all over the world, are cities where families feel safe and secure with their children, and which are clean — and the world knows it. "When we have that;' he added, "the other things come. In turnaround situations all over this country, it started with some very basic quality-of-life issues?' The problem is that the Detroit City Council now is forced to focus on ousting the mayor to regain the city's reputation rather than on developing a culture where cognitive skills are celebrated, not just athletic prowess. Only by celebrating the mind will Detroiters participate in their city's progress and prosperity. Statistics show that more than 80 percent of all juvenile delinquency in Detroit takes place after school. So there's urgency still to Kilpatrick's call to nurture young minds, not just strong bodies, via after-school youth programs that hone computer and job interview skills. That approach demands not only urban leadership, but also assistance from suburbanites. Kilpatrick had a personal stake in his dream: He and his wife, Carlita, have three boys. Really connecting Kilpatrick caught my ear when he encouraged a reconnection "to the community that gave you your start?' He was talking to each of us who could trace our humble beginnings to Detroit and who parlayed the vast opportunities of its public schools into successful lives and careers. "That connection;' he said, "is what draws everyone back to the central responsibility of making sure the next genera- tion of people have a founda- tion upon which to build their business career or their politi- cal career." He was challenging those of us with a suburban zip code but also a love for the city to not feel like outsiders. "We're going to work togeth- er," he vowed. "For us to be the global community that we purport to be, it's Detroit and the region. We really need to Mayor Kilpatrick have that mentality if we want to compete for our children's sake." I grew up in Detroit, where I had my bar mitzvah and grad- uated high school. My roots in the city go back to the 1890s. A grandfather, Jacob Sklar, helped found the Taylor Street Shul (Beth Tefilo Emanuel) in 1924. So when Kilpatrick proclaimed the need to reconnect, I nodded yes. Today, there are flashes of reconnecting led by business magnates like Dan Gilbert, A. Alfred Taubman, Eugene Applebaum, Bernard Glieberman, Gary Torgow, the Fisher family and others. Many synagogues have partnerships with Detroit churches or schools. The Jewish Community Relations Council struck gold with its Detroit Jewish Coalition for Literacy. The Anti-Defamation League and American Jewish Committee also are active in black-Jewish relations. Jews live, work and worship in the city and sup- port its cultural jewels, hospitals and sports teams. We have a special bond with Wayne State University because of a Jewish presence among students, instructors, administrators, board members and donors over the years. — important Pursuit Kilpatrick took a giant step back in 2005 when he described