


JEWISH NEWS PHOTO[/caption] Dr. Melvyn Rubenfire, along with his late wife, Diane, heard Rabbi Bennett’s sermon and took action. Currently a cardiologist at the University of Michigan health system, Dr. Rubenfire prompted initiatives to talk to Detroiters about nutrition and health risks. It wasn’t easy at first; no one wanted to be lectured to, he said. But by September of last year, “the people who were coming through the line said ‘how can I help?’” Rubenfire says. Rubenfire’s commitment to northwest Detroit stems from decades of service to its residents while at Sinai Hospital, where he was its long-time chief of cardiology. The rapid development of programs at Northwest Activities Center, Hartford Memorial Baptist Church, the Bagley neighborhood, MacDowell and Schultz elementary schools and other locations now includes the revamped “global” pantry; a summer camp in the city; an urban garden; a “healthy backpack” program, where children’s backpacks are filled with food weekly to supplement meals at home; the “fun pantry,” where students are taught about the food groups and farm-to-fork methods; dental and other health clinics; a fellowship for a master’s-level student who acts as a program director for several of the directives; and a partnership with the AARP to assist elderly members of the community. “In the beginning, we started giving them food at the end of the day,” Bennett says. “Literally, it’s a monumental change from when we started. There are hundreds and hundreds of volunteers making a huge difference in the city.” Initially, the vast majority of the program’s volunteers were from Oakland County. Now, a third of volunteers are estimated to be from Oakland County and the western Wayne County suburbs, another third are Northwest Detroit community members and another third are high school and college volunteers. The program relies on partnerships with Gleaners Community Food Bank, Forgotten Harvest and the Jewish Fund, the latter of which now provides $20,000 annually for a part-time administrative assistant. That the service has gone this long uninterrupted couldn’t have been predicted at its start, when there was unspoken tension between suburban residents and city dwellers. “Nobody was willing to sort of say it out loud,” Bennett says. “We didn’t hear it off the bat, but there was definitely, there are cultural differences in terms of the way our communities worked, and there was real animosity in the relationships.” The barriers began breaking down slowly. Interfaith services were held at Hartford Memorial Baptist Church and Temple Israel. “A group of women from Hartford attended our Passover Seder,” Bennett cites as one example. Rubenfire adds that suburban volunteers had to make clear early on that they were not there to “take over.” “The vision is an interfaith, intergenerational mechanism to get large numbers of volunteers to get communities to help themselves,” Rubenfire says. Other Jewish communities are watching. Bennett says he has been approached by Chicagoland Jews wondering about going back to their “old neighborhoods” in the same fashion as Metro Detroiters. In the meantime, Project Healthy Community is continuing to expand, including laying the groundwork now to hand out at least 1,000 turkeys at Thanksgiving. Perhaps the project’s biggest accomplishment is bringing people across borders, both physical and cultural, in the midst of Detroit’s financial, social and political distress. “When we come in there, everybody’s in Levi’s. Everybody’s in a T-shirt. And it’s just a lovefest. Everybody’s hugging everybody else,” Rubenfire says. About this series Five minority media outlets with a combined estimated circulation of 120,000 weekly — Latino Press, The Michigan Citizen, The Jewish News, The Michigan Korean Weekly, The Arab American News — are part of New Michigan Media and are taking part in The Detroit Journalism Cooperative. Funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Renaissance Journalism’s Michigan Reporting Initiative and the Ford Foundation, the DJC aims to report about and create community engagement opportunities pertaining to the Detroit bankruptcy and recovery. Each article in the series appears in all the NMM member newspapers. This article is from THE JEWISH NEWS. The DJC is a unique collaboration between important media outlets of the region, and includes The Center for Michigan’s Bridge Magazine, Detroit Public Television, Michigan Public Radio, WDET and New Michigan Media. The Detroit Free Press is also participating in the DJC effort.