passover Passover: Detroit Style SHARON LUCKERMAN CONTRIBUTING WRITER Downtown Synagogue to share its pre-seder with community partners. ABOVE: From 2017 High Holiday ser- vices: Rabbi Ariana Silverman, Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue, Pastor Aramis Hinds, Bethel Community Transformational Center, and his wife, Rosanna Hinds; IADS member Rick Wiener of East Lansing; and Arlene Frank, IADS executive director. 42 March 22 • 2018 jn W hy is this night different from all other nights? The Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue (IADS) grappled with the question anew this year when they learned the Tigers Opening Day landed on the same day as the synagogue’s traditional second-night community seder. The popular game meant impossible parking and difficulty getting to the synagogue, a few blocks from Comerica Park. But the ever-resil- ient congregation, led by Rabbi Ariana Silverman, turned the problem into an oppor- tunity to rethink how to celebrate Passover with their Detroit part- ners. They decided to Rabbi Ariana conduct a pre-seder Silverman from 4-6 p.m. Sunday, March 25, and divert from their traditional Maxwell House Haggadah. This year, the synagogue invited members of Detroit’s Bethel Community Transformational Center (BCTC), where the synagogue held its last High Holiday services, to be guests and to take part in the planning process. “Our focus this year,” Silverman says, “is what the seder as a ritual tells us about who we are as Jews and who we interact with in the world.” The powerful Passover story is about leaving oppression and going to a place of freedom, she says. “We’re taking parts of the haggadah and looking at it through an interfaith lens. We’ll talk about how we were slaves and became free. But what do slavery and freedom mean to our African-American part- ners” still struggling for freedom? Vicki Sitron JCRC/AJC PARTNERSHIP Synagogue Program Director Vicki Sitron, 37, says the synagogue’s stated values guiding the seder are to be good neighbors with the Detroit community as well as the Metro Detroit Jewish com- munity. The growing support from the Jewish community is unique, Silverman says. While they have a 300-person member- ship, which is free, their High Holiday database indicates 2,500 participants. David Kurzmann, executive director of JCRC/AJC, explains why his organi- zation is the other partner of the IADS seder. He personally was moved by the 2017 High Holiday services held at BCTC. Although he’s a third-generation Detroiter, he says he’d never davened in the city until that service. And, from a historic viewpoint, BCTC is housed in the former home of Temple Beth El, now in Bloomfield Township. Kurzmann believes the Downtown Synagogue is an important hub for Jewish life in Detroit and a good fit for JCRC/AJC support. “With the rise of anti-Semitism and racism, our community relations work is more important than ever,” he says, especially in its quest to find common ground. As more young Jews return to the city, he adds, JCRC/AJC’s work with IADS will deepen its programmatic outreach “to help people understand the Jewish community and what we’re about.”