Dorothy & Peter Brown
Jewish Community
Adult Day Care Program
For older adults with
memory disorders
Southfield
West Bloomfield
(248) 233-4000 (248) 592-5033
Congregation Beth Isaac, Trenton
JHSM To Host
Downriver Tour
Of Jewish Sites
L'Chaim
We Wish the Community a Happy
and Healthy New Year - 5775
• Respite for family caregivers
• Personal care and transportation available
• Therapeutic and social activities
• A safe haven with a professional staff
• Health care monitoring
• Days filled with laughter, friends, caring
• Kosher meals and snacks
• Caregiver support and education
Jewish Federation
JVS
OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT
It)
THE
JEWISH
FUND
A LEGACY OF SINAI HOSPITAL
JEWISH SENIOR LIFE
Overwhelmed by caring for
an aging family member?
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ABDA - Interventionist
Founder & CEO
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26 September 25 • 2014
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=NEWS
I
n 1915, a small group of
Hungarian Jewish immigrants,
who all lived in and around
what was known as the Delray area
of southwest Detroit, met above
a bank on Jefferson Avenue and
formed a congregation.
Ten years later, they built a
synagogue on Budeno, near Fort
Wayne, for their First Hebrew
Congregation of Delray, known also
as the Orthodox Hungarian Jewish
Congregation. It was Detroit's
first Orthodox synagogue west of
Woodward. That building, now
occupied by a church, will be one
of the sites visited on a Sunday,
Oct. 19, Jewish Historical Society of
Michigan tour of southwest Detroit
and the Downriver communities of
western Wayne County.
From the Detroit neighborhoods
of Corktown and Delray to the
downriver cities of River Rouge,
Ecorse, Wyandotte and Trenton,
this historical tour explores the
communities where a number of
Polish and Hungarian-speaking
Jews found economic opportuni-
ties as factory workers, peddlers,
merchants and doctors; and where
many found entrepreneurial oppor-
tunity as business owners.
Stops include a visit to the
Corktown Detroit Institute of
Bagels, Congregation Beth Isaac
in Trenton, the only synagogue in
the Downriver area, and a special
luncheon and guest speaker pre-
sentation at Trenton's historic TV's
Grand Event hotel and restaurant.
This elegant hotel was built in 1895
and has been carefully restored and
preserved by restaurant owners
Victor and Tracey Stroia.
The tour is open to the public.
Tour price includes all fees, tips
and food. The bus will depart
from Congregation Shaarey
Zedek in Southfield. Cost is $45
for JHSM members, $55 for non-
members. To register, go to www.
michjewishhistory.org , or call
(248) 432-5517. ❑