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Sunday, December 10, 2006

Judge Damon Keith: A Giant Amongst Us

There are moments you have in life you realize your in a conversation you will always remember. I had such a moment last week when I met with Judge Damon Keith. Those joining me on the visit were Secretary Rodney Slater -- Chairman of United Way of America, Brian Gallagher--President of United Way of America, and Reggie Turner--Vice Chair of the United Way for Southeastern Michigan.

Judge Damon Keith is someone who has stood for equality, social justice and just plain old decency to one another. He is walking history not only for southeastern Michigan, but for the country.

While in his chambers, he told a story I heard him speak about not to long ago. At the time, I incorporated it into an essay I wrote. I have included below an edited version.

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Judge Damon Keith, United States Court of Appeals Judge for the Sixth Circuit in Detroit, is a giant. He has been bestowed over 35 honorary doctorates by some of the most prominent universities. This country, region and city have been blessed by having the courage, wisdom and presence of Judge Keith.

At a recent community gathering, Judge Keith spoke of his experience when he was appointed by Chief Justice William Rehnquist to serve as the National Chairman of the Judicial Conference Committee on the Bicentennial of the Constitution.

Judge Keith described standing outside of the hotel where the committee was holding a meeting. As he stood there, a man came up to him and said, “Boy, can you park my car?”

An angered committee member wanted to speak out, but Judge Damon Keith said to his colleague, “No, don’t. Understand, there isn’t a day in my life that I am not reminded that I am black.”

While I believe most would say we have made progress on many of our social justice issues, one cannot claim all is well. The divide doesn’t lie just along racial lines.

The 2005 Michigan Women’s Leadership Index came out describing the lost ground that women have made in the private sector, bringing forward one conclusion: “the primary cause of the weakening has been the decline of women among the most important category: top compensated officers.”

Youth have difficulty mounting a voice and participating in issues that affect their future. Our expanding senior populations often are not thought of as essential players for progress.

When we experienced the largest economic expansion in our history through the 1990’s, we didn’t see the same gains on social issues or a closing of the economic gap.
This region does not hold the franchise rights to these gaps. However, closing the gap is possible.

For example, when Madison, Wisconsin eliminated the academic achievement gap among minority students, it took a weakness and made it into a strength. Turning our weaknesses into an emerging strength is an opportunity sometimes leveraged, but often overlooked or ignored.

"Civilization is the process in which one gradually increases the number of people included in the term ‘we’ or ‘us’ and at the same time decreases those labeled ‘you’ or ‘them’ until that category has no one left in it.”
— Howard Winters


There is potency when we widen and include. I once had an associate who always said, “Be careful what you let become normal.” Whether we are focused on the disparity by race, economics, education or gender to name a few, the acceptance of the gap and leaving others behind ought never to be “normal.”

A student failing in Detroit is no less important than a student failing in a suburb. Human need is human need wherever you are. Not only is gender and racial inequity unjust, it doesn’t make economic sense. These issues are a long time in the making so, one can reasonably conclude, a long time in resolving.

Are we a region that wants to be defined by our gaps? Or are we interested in demonstrating that, through intentional efforts, this region can make marked progress over a three, five and 10-year period.

What is the one thing that can help us make progress on these gap issues? Only everyone.

Two words that seem at polar opposites hold a key to progress. It’s creating the seat at the table— ensuring there are bootstraps by which to pull up one’s boots — engaging voices that often are excluded. It requires increasing the number in our “us”.

Judge Keith learned a long time ago, for a region to be great, it must be great for everyone.
All are needed. All are welcome.

Thanks for reading. Pass it on.

The Winning Detroit Lions


For any fan of the Lions, this has been a rough season. As I write this, we have just dropped down two touchdowns to the Vikings. As I see the players running the field, I reflect on another side of the players not always seen by the general public. This side --- the side of service to others---- maybe as important for the youngsters who stood beside them on a cold, windy day outside of Ford Field.

The United Way and the NFL have the longest running partnership between a professional league and a non-profit. The 33 year partnership has connected the players and the community. Just this week, there were many of the current players and some past (thank you Lem Barney) who helped load 30,000 pounds of chicken into trucks, vans and cars. Each vehicle represented an organization who is serving residents in need in the region.

So there was Lem Barney yelling out directions for all, Jason Hanson crawling into the back of a van hauling boxes in, and Dan Orlovsky guiding boxes onto the back end of a truck. Everyone wants a winning team on Sundays. Sometimes that can happen, sometimes it doesn't. But one thing that can be constant is the ability to serve others.

The kids helping out that day saw players in a different way. Games will come and go. By rolling up their sleeves and getting in the game of volunteerism, the players taught school age children that service to your community is important. My guess is each of the kids helping out will forget a particular game or season. I doubt,however, that they will ever forget working with the players in helping those who need help the most.

In my book, the Lions are a winning team ---- in a different way.

Thanks for reading......pass it on.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Other People's Reports

My office is at 1212 Griswold---next to Capital Park and the bus terminal----in downtown Detroit. One block from Campus Martius Park and Compuware. Or for long time Detroiters, one block from the old Hudson's on Woodward.

I walk through downtown wondering what it might have been like when the city was at its peak ----- two million strong in 1959. Buses, trains and trolly cars. Shops, businesses and restaurants at each turn. My father, having returned from China after WWII and gone to University of Detroit on the GI Bill, worked two blocks from where I do today at that moment. Many of the buildings are the same, yet, it is a different time and condition.

I think of my relationship to Detroit: to this region. In the past three days, I found myself in downtown Ann Arbor doing an errand, shopping for produce at the Eastern Market, listening to our city's orchestra at the Max, having a coffee in downtown Northville and over to Lansing to meet relatives. My workday can as easily have me in Auburn Hills, Downtown Detroit, Mount Clemens, Northern Oakland County or downriver. This is the geography of my community.

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In Orhan Pamuk's Nobel Prize winning book "Instanbul", he writes about his relationship with his city after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. These insights made me think more about my relationship with my city and region. As I read these, I inserted the word Detroit for Instanbul and Auto Industry for Empire.

"Instanbul's fate is my fate. I am attached to this city because it has made me who I am."

"For me, it has always been a city of ruins and end-of- empire melancholy. I've spent my life either battling with this melancholy or (like all Instanbullus) making it my own."

"I sometimes think myself unlucky to have been born in an aging and impoverished city buried under the ashes of a ruined empire. But a voice inside me always insists this was really a piece of luck"

"Once imprinted in our minds, other people's reports of what we've done end up mattering more than what we ourselves remember. And just as we learn about our lives from others, so too do we let others shape our understanding of the city in which we live."

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At a recent meeting with civic leader's from around Southeastern Michigan, I was struck at how many had found their way here in the past 5 to 12 years. Yet, how much of the conversation trickled to events that took place 40 years ago.

2007 will mark 40 years since the riots of 1967. I was five year's old when the riots took place and I have no recollection of the events. Most of the nearly 5 million residents in Southeastern Michigan either have no recollection of '67, weren't' born, or didn't live here. Yet, I feel the presence of its impact in my work almost daily.

Pamuk says: "...just as we learn about our lives from others, so too do we let others shape our understanding of the city in which we live." I wonder how much of the shaping of our relationship to the city of Detroit has been through other people's reports? Have the historical deficits blinded the present day assets and opportunities?

Since I was a child, I have always witnessed the relationship people have to their birthplace in the region as an 'either/or". Either I am pro- suburb or pro-city. It is rarely an 'And'.

As long as I can remember, the region has struggled economically because of the world moving from an industrial giant to a service economy to a global information age. Even in our self-described boom times of the past decades, there has been a constant shrinking of the industry that built the city and region.

What is the relationship I am shaping for my children to the city and the region? That is why for me the work of the regional alliance One D: Transforming Regional Detroit is so important. One D is working on the new story to this region. It recognizes our history, but it is putting its energy on building a new capability to lift the financial stability and quality of life for all in the region. One D is about the work of today and tomorrow: faith that when we work in the collective we will see progress.

Might this 'new story' be the "other people's reports" that are passed onto our children to shape their understanding of the city and region?

How have 'other people's reports" shaped our relationship to the City of Detroit and the region?
Thanks for reading, pass it on.