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  • Detroit's Call

    Posted by Rich Harwood
    Apr 7, 2009

    Driving through Detroit yesterday it was clear this town is barely hanging on by its fingertips, but that many of the people who will bring it back are already here. The question for me is what will the rest of us do – will we hear Detroit’s call or turn away. I know what I want us to do.

    The NCAA championship game between North Carolina and Michigan State was played just blocks from my hotel. Outside my hotel window last night I could hear and see droves of people filing down the street making their way to Ford Field. A festive mood had come over this part of town.

    But I could also see from my hotel window the towering GM building hovering over this city, a constant reminder of looming bankruptcy and failed manufacturing. Indeed, everywhere I looked I could see buildings draped with for-lease signs, begging for occupants.

    I found myself speechless as I drove through some of Detroit’s neighborhoods. Blocks of boarded up, burned out, stripped homes, many standing right next to houses still occupied. I kept wondering who lives in these remaining homes, what are their names, where do they go during the day? I could keep driving, but what about them?

    One neighborhood was bordered by a multi-story abandoned factory, which literally stretched three or four blocks. Nearly every window broken, parts of the building crumbled, with unruly weeds surrounding it all. This ominous building came right up to the sidewalk; people lived in dilapidated homes less than fifty feet away.

    Some people have suggested that Detroit is living through its own Katrina. Yesterday I was reminded of my time driving throughout New Orleans after Katrina. There, block after block was left in disrepair; FEMA’s white trailers dotted the landscape as far as the eye could see. In Detroit, just as in New Orleans, one wonders if the rest of the country can hear people’s call.

    But when we do, we should not just hear the call of despair in people’s voices. There are amazing people who live in Detroit, who care deeply about their community. I spent the morning with Mike Foster and Bishop Anthony Russell who spearhead the Detroit Community Initiative, where they are building new homes, training people in financial literacy, and providing important human services. We met in an old hospital building they are now turning into a new center.

    Charlie Anderson and Alan Dozier, from Communities in Schools of Detroit, are bringing schools and communities together to change schools and the surrounding communities. We met in a former elementary school building that CIS turned into their headquarters and training center. The building was just a couple of blocks from the factory I described.

    Rich Homberg from Detroit Public Television is demonstrating that public broadcasting can be an important community catalyst and convener, and that even (especially) in hard times stations can step forward and help communities move forward.

    Finally, there was Luther Keith, John X. Miller, and Genevieve Clark from Arise Detroit, a coalition of more than 300 block clubs, community groups, churches, businesses and other organizations that connects people to hundreds of opportunities to mentor, tutor, clean up neighborhoods and to get involved in positive programs to help children and families.

    These examples tell us something important about Detroit: while this city has hit hard times, it is not without its own public innovators and powerful success stories. Now, our task is neither to dictate solutions to the city nor pity the people, but rather to stand beside this great community and join hands with these individuals.

    But will we? It's one thing to celebrate the fact that Detroit hosted the NCAA Final Four games, but such games come and go. People and the place remain. My hope today is that we do not turn our backs on Detroit after the game’s final buzzer. That would be far too easy to do; instead, we must hear Detroit’s call.


        
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  • Re: Detroit's Call
    Apr 7, 2009 | Harriet 
    We have watched Detroit slowly fall away in some areas and in others, it is beautiful. Many people do their best to live in a conscious way with respect for each other. I would suggest the work of F.David Peat @ GentleAction.org may be a good place to start.
  • Re: Detroit\'s Call
    Apr 7, 2009 | Caryn Martinez 
    Are you saying that the burned-out, stripped-down houses are new? They\'re not; they\'ve been like that for twenty years, and so have abandoned businesses.
  • Re: Detroit's Call
    Apr 7, 2009 | rapuffer 
    Detroit is not New Orleans. The demise of the auto industry is not a hurricane. God did not force the horrible decisions that have made the Camry a best selling American car for a lot of years. The crumpling Detroit factory did not get that way overnight, over a month or over a year. As I read your observations about Detroit I find myself framing much of that with the message from HOPE UNRAVELED. From the description, Detroit is a victim of vision-less leadership. While you don't embellish the description, this is a city that was abandoned years ago by those whose taxes and wealth could have made Detroit into an Austin, a Houston, a Charlotte. It strikes me as I listen to some of the Detroit discussion that if Detroit is calling, they probably don't have to dial long distance to reach some who have a stake in the rebirth of this city. I remember Luther's passion for Detroit and I know he is making a lot of those calls but in the picture you have described it going to take a much greater effort by those who are Detroit to find the leaders who will turn things around. We can stand with them but as you noted some within the City are going to have to STAND UP AND STAND OUT and become those new political leaders you have been identifying -- much like the new leader of this country. Those of us who look to your guidance from THI drive through our own (in my case) small city and see neighborhoods where every other house is falling down; where the Food Lion closed, the Winn Dixie closed, and the textile jobs left a few years back. There are lots of folks here who care and who work to Sell Hartsville but here, as in Detroit, it is going to take leadership beyond the non profits if we are not all going to be little more than memories. I think we can encourage our Detroit colleagues. I think we will have a lot to learn from our Detroit colleagues but it strikes me that most of the community builders I have met through THI have their hands too full working to save their own communities to join hands with those working to lift Detroit. As you noted, if Detroit is to rise it will be up to Detroiters. ( I am hoping this comment is not as off putting as I am feeling it to be. I know I wish Luther and Arise Detroit great things but if they are calling, I think the call needs to be some authentic leaders within Detroit who can take the hope being generated by those non profits you mentioned, combine it with some authentic leadership that will lead to real authority so that systemic change can take place.)

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