jews d in the Speaking With One Voice CREDIT: ANDREA STINSON – STILLS BY STINSON Inaugural event for the Coalition for Black and Jewish Unity inspires passion to fight racism and anti- Semitism. David Kurzmann, Rabbi Daniel Syme and Rev. Kenneth J. Flowers enjoy the program. SHARI S. COHEN CONTRIBUTING WRITER TOP: Coalition for Black and Jewish Unity leadership team: Mark Jacobs, AIPAC, Michigan Director of African- American Outreach; Rev. DeeDee M. Coleman, president, Council of Baptist Pastors of Detroit and Vicinity; David Kurzmann, executive director, Jewish Community Relations Council/AJC; and Rev. Kenneth J. Flowers, Greater New Mt. Moriah Missionary Baptist Church. 30 March 1 • 2018 J ewish baby boomers and their parents may remember the famous photo of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel arm-in-arm with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights lead- ers during the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., to pro- test segregation. Jewish participants were a major force within the civil rights movement, serving as volunteers in voter registration drives, lawyers working to free jailed protesters, and supporters of the NAACP and the Urban League. But, in the decades since the civil rights era, some of the positive connections among African Americans and Jews have been eroded by criticism of Israel; the anti-Semitism of Rev. Louis Farrakhan, a prominent black leader; and the out-migration of many Jews (and other whites) from cities where many black residents lived. “That coalition slipped into a coma and was on life support. God has resurrected this coalition so we can pool our resources socially, economically and politically,” said Rev. Kenneth J. Flowers of Detroit’s Greater New Mt. Moriah Missionary Baptist Church at the coalition’s first event. In recent years, many Detroit-area synagogues, temples and other Jewish nonprofit organizations, as well as the Jewish News, have worked to build relationships with African American jn More than 150 people attended the coalition’s inaugural event. churches and the black community through social action and urban improvement projects. Now, two leading organizations, the Council of Baptist Pastors of Detroit and Vicinity and the Jewish Community Relations Council/AJC, have formed a new partner- ship, the Coalition for Black and Jewish Unity. An inaugural event, attended by 160 invited individuals from both communities, was held Feb. 19, during Black History Month, at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit. “We are not re-inventing; we are amplifying what exists,” explained David Kurzmann, co-chair of the new coalition and executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council/ AJC. “We are stronger together, and this will be a platform to speak from. The Council of Baptist Ministers has significant influence, and Rev. DeeDee M. Coleman is a great friend of the Jewish com- munity. We are the conveners, not limiting the organizations in the coalition,” he said. “We should have one voice to have more impact. When things happen in our city, in this world, we can speak to it. Martin Luther King Jr. molded the two communities together. The Jewish people stood with us and died with us,” Coleman reminded the audience.