>> ... Next Generation ... Jewish Activity Hub Partners Detroit envisions a community house in Royal Oak for young professionals. I magine a center specifically for young Jewish professionals of all religious stripes to gather, cook, socialize and embrace Jewish life. There's no place dedicated to that right now. But the Jean and Theodore Weiss Partners Detroit, part of Southfield-based Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, aims to change that. It plans to open a 7,500-square-foot center on Seventh Street, just east of Main, in Royal Oak, near the Woodward Avenue corridor. An old antiques store on the site will be demolished to make way for a community house designed for Jewish professionals ages 21-35 — bridging the gap between the campus Hillel and the neighborhood synagogue ("the doughnut-hole years") on the Jewish lifecycle continuum. "They are the most underserved Jewish demographic," says Rabbi Leiby Burnham, director of Partners Detroit's Young Professionals Division (YPD). "In the doughnut-hole years, there is no brick-and- mortar place focusing on 21- to 35-year-old Jewish professionals, no place they can go any evening they want and hang out, get some dinner, do some socializing and connect Jewishly. "We want to fill that gaping hole." A Focal Point "This important hub of Jewish activity for young Jewish professionals will be a gathering place for the myriad of Partners programs for the young adult members of the Jewish community," President Gary Torgow said in addressing the Yeshiva's 100th-anniversary dinner crowd in Detroit on Nov. 16. The Yeshiva operates an Orthodox day school for boys and girls. Partners Detroit's flagship is the hugely successful Tuesday-night, pluralistic adult study program. Once funding for the community house for young professionals is finalized, construction and operating budgets will be developed and a timetable for opening will be determined. Also, a name will be chosen. The community house, open to young Jews of all levels of religious observance, is projected to open by late 2015. Rabbi Burnham and two Young Professionals Division colleagues, Rabbi Noam Gross and educator Erin Stiebel, will staff the building. Unlike the Tuesday-night adult study program, which offers one-on-one Torah and Talmud learning, the young professionals program will stress Jewish activities such as social events, dinner classes, guest speakers, kosher cooking demonstrations, and occasional Shabbat and holiday meals. Partnering Efforts Much of Partners Detroit's programming is in conjunction with other Jewish communal organizations. For example, Partners Detroit's community lunch-and- learn programs are in collaboration with Federation's ROBERT SKLAR I CONTRIBUTING EDITOR This is an artist's rendering of the new Partners Detroit community house in Royal Oak. It's slated to open later this year. Alliance for Jewish Education. Partners Partners Detroit's religiously inclusive approach Detroit's Torah on Tap and Lag b'Omer to Jewish life makes it an attractive match blowout for young adults are in collaboration for NEXTGen. "We're non-denominational so with Federation's NEXTGen Detroit. we're looking only for cross-denominational Burnham is a board member of NEXTGen partnerships," Rosenzveig said. Detroit. Along the Woodward Avenue corridor, the "I just concluded a five-year stint on its Woodward Avenue Shul in Royal Oak already executive committee so I am very close to offers some programming for young professionals. Miriam NEXTGen," Burnham said. "I love working Aish in the Woods in Oak Park is more family Rosenzv eig with them. I look forward to a strong oriented in its programming. continued partnership." From conception to opening, Partners Detroit's NEXTGen Executive Director Miriam Rosenzveig community house will have an unrelentingly singular echoes those sentiments. focus on young professionals. "We love working with organizations that do Says Burnham: "I see it being a place where, like the awesome things to engage the young adult population," theme song in the TV show Cheers says, 'everybody she told the 1N. "The new Partners Detroit center will knows your name.' We want it to be the comfort food only enhance Jewish life in Metro Detroit. We think they'll for the young Jewish professional seeking community do great stuff." engagement." ❑ "In the doughnut-hole years, there is no brick-and-mortar place focusing on 21- to 35-year-old Jewish professionals." — Rabbi Burnham JN January 8 • 2015 35