Wednesday, September 13, 1017 “Flocking back to the D: Detroit Homecoming 2017”
Is this the third or the fourth Detroit Homecoming? 3 high-profile days when former Detroiter’s, now successful and resourceful, are invited back for a three day pitch to re-learn (and re-invest??) in the city.
http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article/20170910/news/638671/flocking-back-to-the-d-detroit-homecoming-2017#utm_medium=email&utm_source=cdb-afternoon&utm_campaign=cdb-afternoon-20170911
Among other events this week, expats will take one of three immersion tours in three neighborhoods (outside downtown and Midtown) where serious revitalization efforts are underway. University District (see below) is one. I can see it out my office window. The excitement of a busload of expats with “real money” coming to our neighborhood, plus Brightmoor, and Dexter-Linwood is real. It’s worth the effort to show off this come-back city.
It is also worth the effort to remember the decades where the wounds in these neighborhood were incurred, remember the blight of fear of violence and of contempt for the city. These thoughts led me to bring back Detroit poet Jamaal May’s blunt “There are Birds Here.” Like every strong poem, the poet’s search for precise, flint-hard words can renew a reader’s imagination and vocabulary, that, along with work on our neighborhood across the street, also counts as rebirth.
Every poem does best when read aloud, with pauses.
Have a blest day.
john sj
Today’s Post “For Detroit” Jamaal May
There are birds here,
so many birds here
is what I was trying to say
when they said those birds were metaphors
for what is trapped
between buildings
and buildings. No.
The birds are here
to root around for bread
the girl’s hands tear
and toss like confetti. No,
I don’t mean the bread is torn like cotton,
I said confetti, and no
not the confetti
a tank can make of a building.
I mean the confetti
a boy can’t stop smiling about
and no his smile isn’t much
like a skeleton at all. And no
his neighborhood is not like a war zone.
I am trying to say
his neighborhood
is as tattered and feathered
as anything else,
as shadow pierced by sun
and light parted
by shadow-dance as anything else,
but they won’t stop saying
how lovely the ruins,
how ruined the lovely
children must be in that birdless city.
Jamaal May, “There Are Birds Here” from The Big Book of Exit Strategies. Copyright © 2016 by Jamaal May. Reprinted by permission of Alice James Books. Source: The Big Book of Exit Strategies (Alice James Books, 2016) http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26196185-the-big-book-of-exit-strategies
University District
- Privateinvestment: $3.4 million
- Homerenovations: 276
- Homes:1,252
- Homesales (2016): 71
- City-ownedcommercial properties: 1
Overview: This area, anchored by the University of Detroit Mercy and Marygrove College, has been a key target in the city’s redevelopment efforts outside the greater downtown area. Development interest has been robust, as The Platform LLC, Century Partners and Matt Hessler have projects afoot in the area. The Live6 Alliance, an effort by Detroit Mercy, Kresge and the Detroit Economic Growth Corp., launched two years ago to bring economic development to the Livernois-McNichols area, which includes the Fitzgerald neighborhood targeted by The Platform and Century Partners.
Source for data: TheNeighborhoods.org