points of view EDITORIAL BOARD: Publisher: Arthur M. Horwitz Chief Operating Officer: F. Kevin Browett Interim Editor: Alan Hitsky Contributing Editor: Robert Sklar >> Send letters to: Ietters@thejewishnews.com Guest Columnist Editorial Adam Finkel stands Jewish Camp n in front of the mid- town home dubbed Moishe House Detroit. T I Adam Finkel pencer Greenberg is a 28-year-old whose invest- __ ment fund uses complex computer" algorithms to maxi- mize investments in ways legend- ary investors never imagined. So, in an age when we can out- source investing to algorithms, legal investigations to computer software and driving to a robot made at Google, how can our community benefit from this changed world? We must emphasize grassroots ideas, launched at the "individual" level, to unleash our purpose as a people and our competitive Spencer advantage as a Greenberg community. We must inno- vate with the urgency that the dis- interest of one student is like the loss of one entire school; the dis- interest of one member is like the loss of one entire generation and the disinterest of one leader is like the loss of one entire community. I looked at 10 random Detroit Mumford High School alumni from 1960. Nine still have Michigan addresses and one has an Ohio address. I looked at Jewish alumni at Bloomfield Hills Andover High School about 40 years later, between 1998 and 2001. Nine out of the 10 I looked at are currently out of state. " Small ideas and connections can, and will, have a big impact on our current challenges. Maybe a kosher food truck (there is one in the works in Washington, D.C.) up and down Woodward Avenue here in Metro Detroit won't have a noticeable impact on our com- munal future; but lots of smaller ideas will start to add up. Plus, grassroots ideas scale quickly and inexpensively. Reboot, an organization facilitating Jewish innovation, came up with the National Day of Unplugging. This simple idea got major news media outlets to talk about the sanctity of the Jewish Sabbath. Thousands of jobs today can be traced to companies whose found- ers forged friendships at summer camp decades ago. Thousands of more opportunities can be created by simply connecting people to work together or find the resources they need to make an impact. Both local and entrepreneurial need to be part of the equation. We fear innovation at our own peril. Technology allows unique ideas to scale rapidly. Yet assets clinging to yesterday's worldview or artifi- cial engagement or missions that maintain the status quo can depre- ciate in value faster than ever. Don't forget: Hadassah is rooted in the dream of one committed Jew. Teach for America started with the thesis of one dedicated Princeton undergraduate. Three years after a stint at IBM Detroit, Craig Newmark — not a giant bureaucracy, but one programmer — began craigslist.org , which has created a marketplace for 50 mil- lion monthly classifieds. Living And Learning David Cygielman created a residence for a few friends just a couple of years ago where his peers could come over for regular activities that promoted Jewish life. Thirty-three "Moishe Houses" exist today that create programs for 40,000 attendees each year. Moishe House Detroit opens June 1. The goal is to create a corn- munal hub that supports young leaders, markets the best of Jewish Detroit, organizes several events each month that makes our com- munity even more welcoming to young post-graduate Jews and fosters a broader residential land- scape where Jews can call home. Founding donors — from Al Taubman to the founder of New Line Cinema — pledged nearly $80,000 in private funds. The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's CommunityNEXT initiative, directed by Jordan Wolfe, is in a position to be a key builder of Moishe House Detroit. Federation, through CEO Scott Kaufman, served as a repository for the local donations. After the Moishe House idea was showcased at a Detroit town hall meeting in January, a member of the Italian American community called me to express his eagerness to donate. Exporting Ideas on page 43 42 April 21 . 2011 he good times enjoyed at Jewish summer camp strengthen Jewish identity. That once was theory; now it's fact. A new study on the long- range effect of Jewish overnight camp finds that kids who have experienced camp are more involved in Jewish life as adults. This is the first statistical look at the impact of Jewish camping on individual as well as communal Jewish identity. Jewish federations, foundations and philanthropists seeking support options now can give with even greater confidence to Jewish overnight camps. Scholarship dollars are sorely needed. Oakland County-based Tamarack Camps, the dean of Jewish overnight camping in Michigan, can attest to that. Camping is not the end-all. Missing the experience doesn't mean you'll be a marginal Jew in adulthood. But let there be no doubt: It helps you become a more complete Jew. The Foundation for Jewish Camp put the survey in perspective, driving home the point that Jewish over- night camp helps kids grasp what it means to be Jewish and hone their desire to live as a Jew. The New York- based foundation, the survey sponsor, advocates for 155 Jewish nonprofit camps in North America. More than 70,000 kids attended Jewish overnight camp last year. The report shows the greatest increase in Jewish involvement in four areas not usually associated with non-Orthodox Jewish habits. Three of these areas related to Jewish communal identity: Camp alumni are more likely as Jewish adults to say they are very emotionally tied to Israel, more likely to attend syna- gogue at least once a month and more likely to donate to Jewish federations – all significant findings at a time when the organized Jewish world is caught in a briar patch of disinterest among many Jewish 20- and 30-somethings. The other 10 areas under review also revealed more intense individual Jewish involvement among camp alumni, including the lighting of Shabbat and holiday candles. Steven Cohen, director the Berman Jewish Policy Archive (funded by Detroiter Mandell Berman) at New York University Wagner, was the lead researcher. Interestingly, he underscored how if you are younger than 49 and not Orthodox, "you need the intentional- ity of Jewish camp, or day schools or youth groups, to compensate for the loss of the organic Jewish social- ization experience that characterized our parents and grandparents." "It's as if to be Jewish today, you have to be Jewishly educated," he says. But thanks to the "Camp Works" study, only camping has hard evidence of that popularly held belief. Authentic data now confirm that Jewish overnight camps not only help kids awaken the Judaism within, but also help steer them toward an engaging Jewish future and a sense of being part of the Jewish com- munity. The study's success affirms an immediate need to conduct similar surveys of Jewish day schools and youth groups. f l