oints of view >> Send letters to: Ietters®thejewishnews.com Editorial Fixing The JCC Demands A Teamwork Approach t's too early to gauge the success of a determined alliance of supporters of keeping the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit's Oak Park facil- ity open in the wake of a spiraling budget shortfall. Overcoming an annual budget deficit of $800,000 to $1 million won't be easy for the JCC and its lead funder and adviser, the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. That kind of funding gap is daunt- ing, to say the least. But the arduous task that lies ahead for the Committee to Save the Oak Park Jewish Community Center shouldn't diminish the noble cause and mission. Closing the 60-year-old building would make a serious dent in the JCC's overall agency deficit, which has fallen to $2.6 million from $6.2 million as leadership scrutiny has sharpened. As the JCC Executive Board wrestles with the pressing need to restructure its governance to recalibrate a vision, reas- sess priorities and balance the budget, it's important to give credence to the work of the grassroots Committee to Save the Oak Park JCC. Its initial goal is to find 200 new members and raise $200,000 by mid-March. Finding non-members will be a lot easier than enticing 200 to join the Oak Park JCC. Building underuse by bud- get standards has been a big part of the problem. In contrast, annual budget losses at the larger, newer (and, as time has shown, overbuilt) West Bloomfield JCC — which houses Frankel Jewish Academy, the Berman Center for the Performing Arts, Jewish Ensemble Theatre and the Inline Hockey Center — total $200,000 to $400,000 a year. Notable Interest Still, when 725 show up for two com- munity forums in the dead of winter to demonstrate their support and ideas for the Oak Park-based Jimmy Prentis Morris Building of the JCC, and when upwards of 100 people turn out on Monday nights to keep the Save the Oak Park JCC embers burning, JCC and Federation must take notice. And they have so far. Their most com- pelling statement was moving back the targeted closing of the Oak Park JCC from May 31 to at least Aug. 31, JCC Interim Executive Director Jim Issner told the IN ("JCC Update Feb. 5, page 16). The solution to the Oak Park JCC bud- get dilemma lies somewhere along the continuum of building closure to restruc- tured operation — and establishing a toe- It's important to give credence to the work of the grassroots Committee to Save the Oak Park JCC. hold among Jewish Detroit's young adults, many of whom are settling in neighbor- hoods not far from the A. Alfred Taubman Jewish Community Campus on 10 Mile, east of Greenfield. In a critical sense, the Oak Park JCC is just a building. JCC services for surround- ing residents don't necessarily require the embrace of that facility's walls. But when hundreds of Jews in a shrink- ing but still engaged community say that particular building matters in the scheme of JCC capital assets, it's wise to let the evaluation process play out through the summer and encourage idea sharing. The next idea could always be better. Longer Reach We're a caring, smart, resilient and some- times daring Jewish community. Amid the backdraft of emotions, challenges, brain- storming, research, anger, calculating and compromise, the right decision for what to do with the JCC's Jimmy Prentis Morris Building has the best chance of bubbling up in a crucible nurtured certainly with direction from JCC and Federation leaders, but also by as much communitywide input they can muster — even inspire. What we are, and what we will be, as a Jewish community stands as a pivotal back-story to solving the JCC budget crisis. Put simply, Federation wins not only by continuing to seek community involve- ment on JCC matters, but also by extend- ing this approach to other central umbrella agencies. For example, Jewish Senior Life and Jewish Family Service could benefit from a public forum covering a range of key issues. JVS could learn how to better serve the Jewish community's employment needs. Ultimately, there's no downside to being more inclusive — more inviting. ❑ Guest Column Debate Over Selma Creates Opportunity W hen the film Selma opened on the weekend of the Martin Luther King Jr. holi- day, a passionate debate ensued center- ing on reaction to the film's omission of Jewish involvement in the Civil Rights Movement as a central part of the story. In particular, exception was taken to the lack of reference to Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, who marched with Dr. King in the third march from Selma. I Heschel's presence, as well as his friend- ship and affinity with King, is well documented, as is the notable and noticeable involve- Rabbi Abraham ment of Jewish col- Joshua Heschel lege students, evi- dent in most other attempts to represent the movement during this period. Dr. Susannah Heschel, who has writ- ten extensively of her father's relation- r ship with Dr. King and their shared values, in particular the centrality to their think- ing of the theme of liberation in the Exodus story and the call for justice by the Hebrew prophets, told JTA.org , "My father felt that the pro- phetic tradition of Judaism had come alive at Selma ... What a pity that my father's presence is not included in Selma. More than a historical error, the film erases one of the central accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement, its inclusiveness, and one of King's great joys: his close friend- ship with my father." Why the omission? Where did the Jews go? When studying Jewish involvement in the Civil Rights Movement as a gradu- ate student, I was instructed by Harvard professors Rev. Dr. Preston Williams, who marched with and was an adviser to Dr. King, and Dr. Cornel West, per- haps the most distinguished academic progressive in the African American community for a generation (who wrote with Rabbi Michael Lerner the book Blacks and Jews, which is concerned with the break- down in black-Jewish rela- tions since its heyday during the Civil Rights era), that the decline in Jewish involvement in the movement is trace- able to Stokely Carmichael's ascendancy to the leadership of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Carmichael embraced the Black Power movement, effectively exiling Jews and Caucasians. He changed his name to Kwame Toure, became a supporter of Louis Farrakhan and an unabashed anti- Semite, referring to Jews repeatedly as "those Zionist pigs." Toure's frequent speaking engage- ments at Michigan State, where I heard him use the aforementioned phrase, is a big part of the reason a handful of us started the Jewish Student Union on campus and became politically active. (For a depiction of the story of Jewish involvement in Civil Rights and the impact of the change Toure brought, the PBS series The Jewish Americans does a fine job in the section titled "Political Activism.") Yet, whether chased out or written out, justified or not, the perception by not just the extremists, but also the mainstream of the African American community, is that since the heyday of Civil Rights, Jewish concerns have been much more parochial. So the better question is not why the omission of Jews from the story, but why is Jewish involvement in the American Civil Rights Movement an important story to tell now? Is it even a Jewish story to tell in 2015? Heschel points us in the direction of the Haggadah, which cites the directive that in every generation we not only need to tell the story of the Exodus, but Selma on page 30 February 19 • 2015 29