the OU Community Services department. The OU Job Board also is working to try to provide additional job listings for com- munities that participated in the fair. And they include the Detroit-based jobs on their Web site (www.ou.orgijobs), which posts positions in the U.S., Canada and Israel. Monica Fischman also created www. Michiganshuls.com, where free member- ship allows the 300 subscribers to post and receive information in areas including events, programs and job opportunities. "We can also be a site for people with portable jobs:' Kaufman said. "Tele-com- muting, virtual business, online work is cutting edge. We can be the place with a great community and a low-cost of living for someone who moves here and brings their own job with them:' Networking It's too soon to assess the total impact of the New York fair on our community, but months later, information and informational packets the Southfield and Oak Park groups provided — on housing, synagogues, city and government life, agencies and day schools — still are being forwarded on. "In our packets, we touched on Oak Park and Huntington Woods, but the focus was on Southfield because of the great programs they have for first-time home buyers," said YIOP president Gil Stebbins of Southfield, who oversaw his synagogue's fair committee. Southfield's city treasurer Iry M. Lowenberg and deputy city administrator Frederick E. Zorn Jr. helped with display items and infor- mation. "In our presentation, we also includ- ed information on several schools, the kosher restaurants and other attractions in the area;' Stebbins said."Obviously, we talked to people about Young Israel of Oak Park but also explained that there are 18 other shuls within walking distance of our shul:' Morris said Detroit representatives spoke with each of the 50 or so families who took a packet at the fair. "Ifs all about network- ing," he said. "By distributing the packets, we know there's a chance that even if someone at the fair doesn't come to Detroit, they may know someone else who will." "No one's moving to Detroit in droves:' Morris said. "But 15 or 20 of those we met with in New York were serious about moving here if they had work." YIS members continue to offer job assis- tance through networking within their professions and other contacts. No matter the reason or the extent of interest, the group plans to keep in contact with anyone who stopped by. Back Home Some of the YIS area's newest families had Michael and Ariella Skoczylas of Southfield never been to the Detroit area before look- ing to relocate. For Michael and Ariella Skoczylas, the move meant coming home. Like others among their Yeshivat Akiva classmates, the couple studied at col- leges in New York. A CPA, Michael holds a degree in accounting and finance from Yeshiva University, and Ariella has a degree in marketing from Stern College for Women. Last year they attended the YIS Shabbaton. "The Shabbaton and the committee members helped us decide to move to Southfield:' said Michael, whose parents live in West Bloomfield. "They showed us an up-and-coming city making seri- ous efforts to grow, with a great group of young couples." Michael, 25, works for Endelman and Skoczylas, a Farmington Hills-based CPA firm, and is applying to law schools for the fall of 2010. Ariella, 21, teaches Judaic Studies and Hebrew Language in the middle school and high school at Akiva in Southfield. The two now are settled in a Southfield home they moved into this past May, not far from Ariella's parents, who are YIS members. The choice to move was three-fold for the couple. "Firstly, we loved the lifestyle that Detroit-Southfield offer; the friendli- ness and the open mindedness and the warmth were second to none Michael said. "Secondly, Southfield offered us a great group of friends that we will have for the rest of our lives. Thirdly, we wanted Monica and Ari Fischman of Southfield and their daughters, Tamar, 1, and Erica, 3 our kids — when we have them — to grow up with their grandparents as a part of their lives, not people they visit with once or twice a year." The newest family to come to the neighborhood is Akiva graduate Daniel Greenbaum, his wife, Gillian, and infant daughter, Lailie. The late October move creates a YIS record, with four genera- tions of the Greenbaum family — Daniel's parents, Marla and Michael, and grand- parents, Faygie and David Greenbaum, the synagogue's longtime High Holiday chazzan. Downsizing Not only did Dr. Martin and Elissa Bluth move their family from New York to the YIS area, but after Martin's parents saw the area and learned about the great hous- ing prices, they created a unique way to visit the family. "They were so enthralled with the community, they bought the house next door to us:' he said. A pathologist looking to make a career move, Bluth said he and Elissa considered many communities, looking at Orthodox Jewish life in several cities.. Among the final choices was Detroit, where Bluth, an M.D. and Ph.D., inter- viewed for and eventually accepted a posi- tion at the Wayne State University School of Medicine and Detroit Medical Center. During the decision-making time, the family was introduced to YIS members, who invited them for Shabbat and intro- duced them to 20 or 30 neighbors. "They made sure we had exposure to Welcome Home on page 30 November 12 • 2009 29