D • ChAldeen News sIN ETROIT .THE 11111, building IMP community MM. INITIATIVE maya, a Chaldean community leader, and son-in-law of successful retailers Ed and Juliette Jonna. (Ed Jonna, whose brothers are the construction executives, founded Merchant of Vino with his wife in 1974 and sold his six stores to Whole Foods Market in 1997 for about $41 million in stock. The couple's sons, Matt and Marc, own Plum Markets in Ann Arbor, Bloom- field Township and West Bloomfield.) Jonna Construction also built the Weight Watchers headquarters. Not all metro moguls have fresh ties to "the old country." As the great- grandson of European Jews, tech in- dustry entrepreneur Josh Linkner is an all-American success story. The 39-year-old founder and chairman of ePrize, a Pleasant Ridge interactive marketing and promo- tions innovator, founded his first company as a University of Florida undergraduate. He sold that com- puter assembly business to one of his suppliers, starting an entrepreneurial streak. A year after graduating in 1994, he created an Internet business development firm in Detroit — GlobalLink New Media — that attracted a buyer four years later. This third-generation American sees creative thinking as a key to success. "Being a leader today is different than it used to be," Linkner suggests. "An effective leader needs to focus on creativity and innovation." That same can-do spirit, he says, can lift Metro Detroit and Michigan into a new economic era – with Chaldean-Jew- ish cooperation as an example. "It's im- portant to focus on finding ways to col- PRESENTING SPONSOR Bank of America. "We worked hard...and did what was necessary to succeed. I think that's how the Chaldean and Jewish communities parallel." Lessons for region At ePrize, where he served as CEO for 11 years, the staff has grown to nearly 250. Branches are open in New York, Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta and Los Angeles. Clients include Microsoft, AT&T, Chase, the Gap, Coca-Cola, Nike, Kellogg's and other ma- jor brands. GOLD SPONSORS WAY N E STATE UNIVERSITY meijer - James Jonna, Chairman, Jonna Companies laborate for a common cause," Linkner says from ePrize headquarters. "To build a region together, we need to focus on building bridges." These models of achievement, of mak- ing the American Dream come true, are another area of affinity for neighbors with long connections in the Middle East and Metro Detroit. DMC DETROIT MEDICAL CENTER SILVER SPONSORS The authors are writers for Tanner Friedman, a marketing communications firm in Farmington Hills. 0 0 rn En "From there on, we began to be partners on most of our real estate deals," adds Najib Samona, a 64-year-old ac- countant educated in England. "Over time, we bonded to- gether as one family. ... I don't give much thought to the idea that Harvey and his father are Jewish and I am. Chaldean." The partnership has profes- sional benefits. "Najib's friends and contacts in the Chaldean community and ours in the Jew- ish community have opened the doors to opportunities that we may never have had," says the younger Weiss, educated at Oak Park High and WSU. Similar opportunities arose for Earl Ishbia, raised in a Jewish family On Detroit's northwest side. A compa- ny he co-founded in 1969 has grown into Sherwood Food Distributors, which ships more than 16 million Earl pounds of goods weekly from warehouses in four states. An- nual sales exceed $1 billion, but Ishbia never forgets whose origi- nal patronage was crucial. Chaldean grocers were a "huge factor in the early stages of the growth of our business," he recalls, noting that supermar- kets and other merchants left Detroit after .1967 rioting. "'This els," • notes the Mumford High and WSU graduate, cn cn 0 whose father came from 0 Turkey. cn These experiences can be an instructive example. "Rather than isolate or segregate the two commu- nities, I see the opportu- nity where they can align and draw on each other's resources and experiences," suggests Na- jib Samona of \Vest Bloom- field. "That is the case with our business and am sure that this will become common in the future." 03 CO Ishbia Najib Samona was the start of our company, and we grew our business with the people in the community." Like the Weiss and Samona families, Ishbia feels economic ties uniting Jews and Chal- deans are unremarkable. "The core values are very similar in both communities – a strong sense of community, religion and being very good role mod- Lawrence arech COLLEGE 411:Mrik. OF BUSINESS DFARBoRN - Justin Fisette and Kaylee Hawkins 'ks;R) 29