The Role Of Jewish Centers Prof. Lupovitch to discuss the dispute over Oak Park JCC. Louis Finkelman Special to the Jewish News take car of you. Detroit NCSY chapter members celebrate their Chapter of the Year win at the spring regional convention in Dublin, Ohio. Regional Champs Detroit NCSY earns highest honor. With great rates, an even better staff, and the speediest buses in the business, trust Qwik Park,. to get you to the airport Qwik as a flash. 6, Save time. LReserve online! qwikpark.com r 7782 Merriman Rd., Romulus, MI Exit 198 from 1-94 Exit 20 from 1-275 1.888.844.7275 • qwikpark.com 2002930 16 June 25 • 2015 Zoe Schubot JN Intern T his year, the Detroit chapter of NCSY took home the Chapter of the Year award at the Central East regional convention May 25 in Dublin, Ohio. The region also includes Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. In 2013, the chapter also earned the title. Noah Adler, Detroit chapter president, explained the honor goes to the chapter that exhibits the most success and growth during the year. Through various events, including barbecues, Pistons games and Jewish learning sessions, the local chapter of the Orthodox youth group grew its membership. "We had more kids than any other chapter at Shabbatons, and we had extremely effective events throughout the year" Noah said. "We had a lot of innovative program- ming, and at the regional events, we had a lot of extra attendees in contrast to the other cities" said Alyssa Adler, Noah's co- president and twin sister. Alyssa said the chapter has about 100 members, who come from various streams of Judaism. The events and the camaraderie among chapter members, she says, are her favorite aspects of par- ticipating in NCSY. "It gives you an outlook on how to mix and hang out and create connections with people with different backgrounds, but who still have the same love for Judaism and religiosity" she said. The Adler twins, who will be seniors at Akiva Hebrew Day School in Southfield, submitted a report to the NCSY regional director, providing a detailed account of the chapter's accomplishments over the year. They also provided statistical data to back up their claims that this year was one of growth. Each chapter vying for the award also submitted similar reports. The report shows an increase in involvement for all documented events between this year and past years, and also details the various ways the Detroit chap- ter accomplished its goals. The chapter focused on outreach to students in public schools, engaging younger members and organizing chesed, or service, initiatives. The Chapter of the Year designation was bestowed at an awards banquet where individual regional NCSY members also received awards and honors based on contributions to their chapters. Detroit Chapter Director Rabbi Dovid Lichtig said this ceremony is the highlight of his year. During the festivities, he has the opportunity to present awards to his students and reflect with them on their growth and success during the past year. "It's always very special to me," Lichtig said. "It's amazing to see a teen come in as a freshman and then see how far they've come and what they've accomplished over those four years" The win is even more impressive because the Detroit Chapter went through a portion of the year without Noah Adler. He was hospitalized last fall with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), a disease that seriously impaired his abil- ity to perform basic functions and caused him to miss the fall regional convention. Rather than allowing Noah's illness to dampen their spirits, his sister, along with other chapter members, rallied in sup- port and kept him involved in NCSY, even from his hospital bed. For example, they hosted their weekly Latte and Learning sessions in Noah's hospital room. "He still really wanted to be involved, and we made sure that he stayed very involved — maybe not actively planning things but still involved in the chapter" Alyssa said. Noah was able to attend NCSY's winter convention, where he delivered a moving dvar Torah talking about his realization that his illness was God's way of giving him a new appreciation for life. As the Adlers' presidencies come to an end, Noah said he's learned that inspira- tion is one of the main focuses of NCSY. "I've learned to be inspired and I've learned to love Judaism more" he said. "I've been trying to pass on the torch and encourage others to be as inspired as I was and want to do even more:' ❑ T o historian Howard Lupovitch, the potential closure of the 10 Mile Jewish Community Center is the latest instance of a type of intra-communal dispute that has been a recurring part of Jewish communal life for centuries: the often-difficult dilemma of balancing between press- ing financial considerations and what seems fair. Lupovitch, who directs the Cohn- Haddow Center for Judaic Studies at Wayne State University, will present a talk titled "Anchoring the Neighborhood and Other Reasons Why Community Centers Strengthen Howard Jewish Life" at 7 p.m. Lupovitch Monday, June 29, at the JCC in Oak Park. "Jewish community centers," Lupovitch says, "have helped preserve the integrity of communities and neigh- borhoods:' As Mordechai Kaplan — a rabbi and visionary social analyst who lived from 1881-1983 — noted, especially in America, the land of Jewish vol- untarism, we need as many different ways as possible for Jews to affiliate and connect. People have to express their Judaism in more ways than just going to synagogue; we need to share a broad range of activities, including those not explicitly Jewish. With this aim in mind, Kaplan envisioned a place where Jews would meet for social, intellectual, cultural, athletic and religious activities — the Jewish community center. The oft-painful decision as to wheth- er or not to close a particular Jewish community center, Lupovitch says, must be considered within the enor- mously complex, ongoing give and take between old and new Jewish neigh- borhoods. In Detroit, the persistently vibrant Jewish communal life in Oak Park and Huntington Woods seems to mark a deviation from a previous pattern of older Jewish neighborhoods eventually disappearing through north- westerly migration and relocation — this is the crux of the current dispute. In his effort to look at this many- faceted crisis as a historian and objec- tive observer, Lupovitch anticipates that "everyone in my audience will find something to disagree with in this pre- sentation:' ❑