Metro R. KING'S LEGACY Coming Together Jews, blacks join in recalling civil rights struggle and acknowledging the work left to do. Robert Sklar Editor H ow fitting that we met at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield to commemorate the legacy of America's foremost champion of civil rights and a man who freely spoke out against hatred of Jews and anti- Zionism: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Standing in SZ's adult chapel at the Detroit Jewish community's annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration on Jan. 14, the day before what would have been the slain civil rights activist's 81st birthday, Southfield Mayor Brenda Lawrence smiled when asked what this Jewish-black gathering in the heart of her city meant. "This isn't new:' said Lawrence, a friend of the Jewish com- munity and a political leader who has relied on Jewish support not only in her campaigns, but also in charting the Brenda Lawrence city's future. "It's the expectation now, which is confirming and energizing." She added, "People talk about Dr. King's dream; we can talk about the real- ity of it — the successes. For example, both of our communities here today, the African American and Jewish communi- ties, have come together often and with purpose." Lawrence, first elected in 2001 as Southfield's first black and woman mayor, talked proudly about how it's okay to be different in Southfield, a racially and eth- nically diverse city of 75,000 residents. "People here have dignity for one another:' she said, pointing to the day schools, the synagogues and other Jewish organizations that have located in the city. Whether the focus is government, community or faith, blacks and Jews have respected their differences as they go about their day, she said. That's born out by the black communi- ty quickly rallying around Jews who have been assaulted in their neighborhoods and the Jewish community actively sup- porting Lawrence initiatives to make the city a better place to do business and raise a family. 18 January 21 • 2010 Shared Bonds Rabbi Joseph H. Krakoff and Rev. Oscar W. King III, a Jew and a black, gave remarks at the commemoration, hosted by Shaarey Zedek. Seventy-five Jews and non-Jews who work in the Jewish community attended. Both the rabbi and the pastor have nurtured their friendship over the past five years. Krakoff is president of the Michigan Board of Rabbis; King presides over the Council of Baptist Pastors of Detroit and Vicinity. Krakoff described Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as "an inheritor of the great biblical tradition" who "stood up to authority in the fight for peace, justice and freedom from racism, prejudice and hatred of all kinds." "We are the heirs of that legacy',' Krakoff added. "Dr. King understood the urgency of his time and worked tirelessly to convey that sense of urgency to others:' Krakoff retraced Dr. King's journey, citing Alabama flash points that took the minister to "Montgomery to affirm human dignity and courage, to Birmingham to defeat the sickness of separating human life, to Selma to ensure the quality of peo- ple in human affairs — and to a hundred other communities, to extirpate the pain- ful shackles of oppression." "Even when death was confronted as his journey reached Memphis:' Krakoff said, "Dr. King could say that he was on the precipice of achieving the holy vision of liberation, a time in the not-so-distant future where we truly saw each other as brothers and sisters in equality, created together in the image of God." Rev. Oscar King, who leads Northwest Unity Baptist Church in Detroit, said he is "deeply troubled about the attitude of the public policy of this nation when it comes to the treatment of all of its citizens." Locally, he pointed to the drug problem, which is more prevalent in the suburbs than the central city although it's Detroit that gets the bad rap. On a national scale, he said he was tired of "two-tiered economic and social systems where the preferred tier is always resting on the shoulders of the underclass, the under- represented, the under-lawyered and those under the pressure of trying to survive in a world where there is no earthly prescrip- tion to cure hatred." He reflected on what has transpired Coming Together on page 19 "No one observing the history of the church in America can deny the shameful fact that it has been an accomplice in structuring racism into the architecture of American society. The church, by and large, sanctioned slavery and surrounded it with the halo of moral respectability ... Of course, there have been marvelous exceptions. Over the last five years, many religious bodies — Catholic, Protestant and Jewish — have been in the vanguard of the civil rights struggle and have sought desperately to make the ethical insights of our Judeo-Christian heritage relevant on the question of race." - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in his 1967 book 'Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos Or Community?' -mama Rev. Oscar W. King III: "N o, Dr. King, Rabbi Joseph H. Krakoff: "Dr. King was things are not the way they used to be. on the precipice of achieving the holy I cannot say for sure, but I can imagine vision of liberation, a time in the not-so- that if you could come back and see distant future where we truly saw each what we have done to this legacy, you other as brothers and sisters in equality, would be very disappointed." created together in the image of God."