Video

JHSM docent Gail Fisher gives a 5-minute look at Hans Petzolt's 1596 Double-Cup, tracing its amazing journey from Jewish owners, to confiscation by the Nazis, to restoration, and finally to the DIA. April 8, 2021.

Rabbi Joseph Krakoff (Jewish Hospice Chaplaincy Network) stops by to talk about how Covid has both affected and not affected end-of-life care and ritual. A collaboration with the Jewish Hospice Chaplaincy Network. March 23, 2021.

Gabriel Schuchman (Alrig USA) and Jared Rothberger (Jan-Pro Detroit) kick off our new sponsored series, "Innovators & Entrepreneurs," interviewing Dennis Bernard of Bernard Financial. March 10, 2021.

Feiga Weiss (Holocaust Memorial Center) receives the 2020 Simons Award! Following the award presentation, she shares treasured artifacts from the HMC's collections. March 7, 2021.

EMU's Jewish Life and Language of Southeast Michigan project co-directors discuss the language of ten metro Detroiters to demonstrate that local pronunciations among Jewish women are changing considerably over time. February 15, 2021.

Historian David Nasaw discusses his book, The Last Million: Europe's Displaced Persons from World War to Cold War. February 2, 2021.

J-Cycle 10 (2021) Resources

Looking for more information on J-Cycle 10's automotive-themed stops?

Meyer & Anna Prentis Building
Boston Edison
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant
Beth Olem Cemetery
Eastern Market

 

J-Cycle 8 (2018) Interactive Map

Unable to attend our wildly popular bicycle tour of Jewish Detroit? Our route below gives you a taste of what you missed. This map is made possible by a grant from MotorCities National Heritage Area. We appreciate their support!

 

J-Cycle Interactive Map

 

Looking for Some Good Reading Material on Jews in Michigan?

• American Jewish History, Journal of the American Jewish Historical Society. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.

• Applebaum, Phillip. The Wetsmans: Odyssey of an American Family. William Morse Davidson, 1994.

• Berman, Lila Corwin.  Metropolitan Jews: Politics, Race, and Religion in Postwar Detroit.  Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.

• Bolkosky, Sidney. Harmony and Dissonance, Voices of Jewish Identity in Detroit, 1914-1967. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1991.

• Cantor, Judith Levin. Jews in Michigan. (Discovering the Peoples of Michigan). East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2001.

• Cohen, Irwin. Jewish Detroit: A Pictorial History. Arcadia Press, 2002.

• Demetriou, Karen Kritz, & Fran Rubin Weinstein. Temple B’nai Israel, 100 Years: Saginaw, Michigan, 1890-1990. Saginaw: Golden Jubilee, 1942.

• Devlin, Dennis S. Muskegon’s Jewish Community: A Centennial History, 1888-1988. Muskegon: Dana Corp., 1988.

• Edgar, Dr. Irving I. A History of Early Jewish Physicians in the State of Michigan. New York: Philosophical Library, 1982.

• Friedlander, Alex.  From Suwalki to St. Ignace: A History of the Rosenthal, Reinhertz, Blumrosen, Winkelman, and Related Families.  Brooklyn, NY: Breakaway Productions, 2003.

• Grad, Eli, and Bette Roth. Congregation Shaarey Zedek, 5622-5742, 1861-1981. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1982.

• Katz, Irving I., and Dr. Jacob Marcus. The Beth El Story. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1955.

• Kraus, Bea. A Time to Remember: A History of the Jewish Community in South Haven. Allegan Forest, MI: The Priscilla Press, 1999.
(Available at First Hebrew Congregation, 263 Broadway, South Haven, MI 49090)

• Michigan History, Journal of the Historical Society of Michigan. 1305 Abbott Rd., Lansing, MI 48823.

• Michigan Jewish History, JHSM's annual journal. West Bloomfield, MI.
Contact us to find out how you can receive a copy of the current issue.  Browse our online archive of past issues.

• Rockaway, Robert. The Jews of Detroit, From the Beginning, 1762-1914. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1986.

• Slobin, Dan. From the Pale of Settlement to Michigan: Stories of My Grandparents and Their Families.  Berkeley: Dan I. Slobin, 2016, 2021.

 

Links to some digitized content provided by our friends at the Center for Jewish History.

                                

 

 

 


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