metro Learning Together JPMorganChase Mission shows how Detroit's blacks and Jews join to fight poverty, racism. Farm, cultivator of numerous commu- nity gardens and supplier to Capuchin Soup Kitchen; Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue, the only free-standing syna- gogue in the city of Detroit; and the Heidelberg Project, two city blocks filled with captivating art. The tour helped showcase a side of Detroit rarely seen in the media. It showed a city full of life and opportunity, a place filled with pas- sionate community members. After seeing Detroit from the road, group members had a chance to get their hands dirty at a community gar- den project. Falik provided mission par- ticipants with the opportunity to work with Summer in the City volunteers at JCPA Chair Dr. Romanowski Farm Park in southwest Conrad Giles Detroit. speaks with The project brought up issues of food Mission to Detroit insecurity, along with underlying issues participant of racism. It became apparent that to Barbara Shannon- fight poverty and hunger on a wide Banister, scale, the racial and city/suburb divide executive director must be resolved. of the Aurora At the end of the four-day confer- Human Rights ence, which included such speakers Commission in as Southfield Mayor Brenda Lawrence Colorado. and JCPA Chair Dr. Conrad L. Giles of Bloomfield Hills, participants were given an opportunity to collaborate with each other to find ways to apply the experience in Detroit to their own com- munities. Providence and California's Silicon Nashville partners Irwin Venick and Valley. From a state representative to a Howard Gentry hope to create a similar JCRC chair to an incoming president conference that brings together African of a local NAACP office, the mission American and Jewish young professionals. brought together a diverse group of peo- Rhode Island participants Jim ple who were passionate about tackling Vincent, Scott Libman and Marty issues of race and poverty. Cooper suggested that an ongoing rela- At the mission's opening dinner, tionship be formed between the Jewish Detroit Arthur Horwitz, publisher of the and African American media, along and Bankole Thompson, Jewish News, with the creation of multicultural net- Michigan Chronicle, senior editor of the working in an effort to create new jobs served as speakers and panelists for the in their community. group. Additionally, Roslyn Duman and Laying the groundwork for conversa- Barbara Shannon Banister of Colorado tions about interfaith and interracial suggested that working together to facil- partnerships, Horwitz and Thompson itate dialogue would be more beneficial told how they strive to build relation- than simply talking about the issues. ships between the Jewish and African Detroit served as a prime example American communities by engaging of a thriving and re-emerging city. their respective ethnic media. The positive view of the city's various On the first full day of the mission, programs contributed to the success of participants boarded a bus for on-site the mission and has opened the doors visits to several successful Detroit pro- to future collaboration between Jewish grams designed to combat blight and and African American communities in poverty in the city. Stops on the tour Detroit and across the country. Li included Focus:Hope, a community building organization; TechTown, a Sarah Crane of Farmington Hills is an associ- business incubator; Piquette Square, ate at the JCRC. Rachael Malerman of West home to 150 homeless veterans in Bloomfield is a JOIN intern at the JCRC. southwest Detroit; Earthworks Urban Jewish News Publisher Arthur Horwitz and Michigan Chronicle Senior Editor Bankole Thompson give a presentation on interfaith and interethnic partnerships to Mission to Detroit participants. Sarah Crane and Rachael Malerman Special to the Jewish News "Does everything but hand viewers a glass of white wine light candles and draw them a bath" BRIDE FLIGHT opens July 29th www.dia.orgicift 313.833.3237 DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS 12 July 21 . 2011 p rominent members of the African American and Jewish communities from across the country gathered in Detroit to team up and confront poverty and racism. From June 27-30, the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) of Metropolitan Detroit hosted the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) Mission to Detroit. Working to facili- tate interfaith and interracial efforts to eradicate poverty, the mission gave participants many ideas to take back to their home communities, along with a new and positive perspective of the city of Detroit. Among the 16 participants were Ben Falik, JCRC board member and co-founder of Summer in the City, a vol- unteer program that engages teens and young adults with the city of Detroit, and QuanTez Pressley, director of com- munity outreach and speechwriter for Detroit City Council President Charles Pugh. Participants came from Denver, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Nashville,