Special Report TIES TO DETROIT • 51. 4 .-Av • a CO .40 41 • etrol 635 Miles From Home Young Detroiters in New York look for ways to bolster their hometown. Karen Schwartz Special to the Jewish News L ast April, a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit event in New York drew a crowd of 350 native Detroiters. Slightly more than a year and a half later, a group of about 90 met at a midtown Manhattan bar, where a table stacked with Vernor's pop, Sanders hot fudge and Leo's Coney Island salad dress- ing served as a backdrop. It was the second major gathering of 635 Mile, a new nonprofit group dedicated to turning Detroiters' attention homeward. Rachel Jacobs, 35, a Huntington Woods native and one of the group's founders, was on the steering committee for the original Federation event. When she saw the momentum it generated — and that Federation wasn't actively pursuing fur- ther action — she decided to harness the energy with a grassroots effort out of New York. "I went back to them and said, `Can you help me pull this off?' And they did;' she said. Detroit's Federation provided a list of 14 November 4 • 2010 names and helped the group put together its first invitation. Scott Kaufman, Federation CEO, said while Federation's initial events were a cat- alyst for bringing young people together, now it's up to them to lead the way. "The young people have to own it; we need to support it, but it has to be their idea or it's not going to stick:' he said of the push by Detroiters in various locations to focus on Detroit's future. "We want to definitely be helpful in any way we can:' Flash forward to today: 635 Mile (named for the distance between Detroit and New York) is looking at changing its name and going national, with a kickoff event in Chicago in the works within the next few months, Jacobs said. "Federation had clearly tapped this nerve in the Jewish community and people wanted a follow-up; they wanted to convert that mass of people into doing something that actually benefits Detroit:' she said. That's because where national press sees economic strife and struggle, Michiganders see family, friends and plac- es that built them into who they are today. "When we look at how we want to spend our time and our money, the idea of doing something that's close to home, that helps people in the communities that we know so well, is much more attractive than Zimbabwe or Kyrgyzstan." So over the summer, four founders — which grew to a group of 12 harvested from Federation's original list — got the ball rolling. Jordan Brackett, 31, a Huntington Woods native, said it started with a con- ference call and dinner at a "bad Korean place" in New York's Koreatown. And though the food was bad, the group's intentions were good, he said. "There are a lot of us who have left Michigan; I'm not sure we have a desire to