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I

n a small neighborhood just down the 
road from Detroit’s famous Motown 
Museum, a group of young professionals 
are working to restore the area’s Jewish 
history.
Northwest Goldberg may not be Detroit’s 
largest community — currently housing a 
population of just around 2,000 people — 
but a new nonprofit has a vision to change 
that.
Mezuzah founders and married couple 
Jeremy Rosenberg, 24, and Menuchah 
Bluth, 25, who goes by Chella, sought out 
a new home in a Detroit neighborhood 
where other young Jewish individuals could 
see themselves living.
Thanks to its walkability and proximity 
to landmarks like Henry Ford Hospital and 
the museum, Northwest Goldberg felt like a 
natural choice to purchase a home.
“It’s important for people to visualize 
themselves,
” Bluth explains, “and to have a 
space that’s inviting.
”
Rosenberg and Bluth previously 
organized Moishe Pod Detroit, a hub for 
young Jewish Detroiters to gather, share 
meals, enjoy social events and learn more 
about the city.
Moishe Pod Detroit was stationed 
in their previous home in Detroit’s 
Woodbridge neighborhood, where 
Rosenberg and Bluth opened their doors to 
the community.
The goal was to teach young Jewish 
Detroiters all that was beautiful about 
Detroit, encouraging them to relocate to the 
city and build a home there.
Now, Mezuzah, a 501c3 nonprofit 
organization, is the next evolution of that 
mission.

BRINGING MEZUZAH TO LIFE
Mezuzah operates on a simple principle: 
to create a walkable, equitable and vibrant 
Jewish community in Northwest Goldberg 
and Detroit-at-large, where Rosenberg and 
Bluth are residents as of July.
Although they’ve lived in Detroit for 
several years, Detroit isn’t a temporary stop 
before returning to the suburbs or leaving 
for a different city. Instead, Rosenberg and 
Bluth have firmly planted their roots — and 
their commitment to growing Jewish life in 
Detroit.
“Mezuzah is our vehicle to continue 

doing what we’re already doing, but really 
grow the Jewish population of Northwest 
Goldberg and the City of Detroit,
” 
Rosenberg says.
Yet, Bluth says their mission isn’t to 
transform Northwest Goldberg into a 
Jewish neighborhood, but to grow the 
Jewish community in a way that fits 
in comfortably alongside the existing 
neighborhood, which is a predominantly 
Black community.
Many residents, like Daniel A. 
Washington, 29, founder and exxecutive 
director of NW Goldberg Cares, a 
community development corporation, 
are lifelong members of the Northwest 
Goldberg community. Some have even 
lived there for generations.
Before formally starting Mezuzah, 

Rosenberg and Bluth received the blessing 
from NW Goldberg Cares, which has done 
extensive work incubating neighborhood 
businesses and creating a strong, family-
friendly neighborhood.
To date, NW Goldberg Cares has 
built five new public spaces, conducted 
a planning study, executed dozens of 
neighborhood events and is in the process 
of rehabbing three single-family homes.

HISTORY OF NORTHWEST 
GOLDBERG
As Mezuzah’s main partner, NW Goldberg 
Cares is supportive of a Jewish community 
in the growing neighborhood.
“For me, it’s really about having another 
nonprofit in the Northwest Goldberg 
community that is working to acknowledge 

Chella Bluth and Jeremy 
Rosenberg relax in their 
newly refurbished home.

