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Detroit Evening Report: Indigenous Peoples’ Day; Hamtramck considers police drones and more

Tonight on the Detroit Evening Report, we cover a local event commemorating Indigenous Peoples’ Day; city officials in Hamtramck considering the use of police drones and more.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Belle Isle Prayer Walk

A solidarity prayer walk and potluck took place at Belle Isle for Indigenous Peoples’ Day on Monday. The day is meant to honor the history, culture and contributions of Indigenous communities. The Prayer Walk for the Water event started off in Ralph Wilson Gateway, with stops along the path to pray and reflect. Michigan is home to about 240,000 Native Americans, with 12 federally recognized tribes. 

Hamtramck considers drone use by police

The Hamtramck Police Department wants to get a drone to help solve crimes. Hamtramck Police Chief Jamiel Altaheri says the measure was brought before the city council, but was not approved initially. 

A poll was posted on the police department’s Facebook page, asking people if they thought a drone would be beneficial for the police department. About 300 people responded – 80% voting yes.

Altaheri says the measure will be reintroduced to the city council at its next meeting.

Ohio man arrested for Hamtramck threats

An Ohio man was arrested after allegedly making threats against immigrants in Hamtramck. The man told fellow churchgoers in Toledo that he planned to harm people in Hamtramck last Saturday.

Chief Altaheri says there were extra police on hand in the city during the Hamtramck Neighborhood Arts Festival and Night Bazaar activities in the city that day.

The Toledo Police Department informed the Hamtramck Police Department, who both monitored the situation along with the FBI. The man, identified as 69-year-old William Darocha, then drove to Michigan and was arrested in Taylor and is facing charges of Making Terroristic Threats.

Metro Detroit Out of the Darkness walk

The local chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention is hosting a community walk on Belle Isle this weekend. The Metro Detroit Out of the Darkness Walk aims to raise awareness about those impacted by suicide for a day of support.

The community walk takes place at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 19, at Belle Isle. On-site registration begins at 8 a.m.

New Detroit hosting racial equity conference

The racial justice organization New Detroit is hosting the “Just Lead: Advancing Racial Equity Moving Forward Together” conference on Thursday, Oct. 17 at The Icon in Detroit. The conference has themes of health care, Detroit parks, and philanthropy. Awards will also be given to leaders for advancing racial equity.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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Debbie Dingell, Heather Smiley facing off in Michigan’s 6th Congressional District

U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell is running for reelection in Michigan’s 6th Congressional District.

The Democratic incumbent currently serves on the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and House Committee on Natural Resources, and formerly served as a U.S. Representative for Michigan’s 12th Congressional District from 2015-2023. Prior to that, she worked in the auto industry for three decades, and served on the Wayne State University Board of Governors from 2007-2014.

Dingell says as someone who’s been in politics for nearly a decade, she wants to continue bringing diverse perspectives to the table to get things done.

“I want to be out there and listening and hearing what’s on your mind and making sure that your voices are heard,” she said. “I believe in the importance of building coalitions and trying to find the common ground at that table, and I also believe in solving problems.”

Listen: U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell on the economy, gun control and election security

Her Republican challenger, retired Ford employee Heather Smiley, says she hopes to bring a fresh perspective to Congress by curbing government spending, protecting voter integrity and preserving the borders.

“I’m not happy with the direction that the country is heading in,” Smiley said. “Our civil rights have been infringed upon. The economy is not doing well, and our national sovereignty is really at risk.”

Smiley says she is a first-generation American from a legal immigrant who was the first to attend college in her family. She says she worked multiple jobs and took out loans to pay for college, including working as a press operator and an automotive parts supplier.

“I can enable the government to function more efficiently, to improve and reduce costs, and I can restore the opportunities that we’ve historically had so that people can truly live the American dream, rather than worry about how they’re going to pay their bills or put food on the table for their family,” she said.

Listen: Republican Heather Smiley on bringing jobs to Michigan, voter integrity

Jobs and the economy

Dingell says the No. 1 issue on people’s minds is the economy, adding that she’s working with Congress to bring down everyday costs for working families.

“People are struggling to make ends meet,” she said. “I’m always at Kroger on Sunday mornings, and people come to meet me there now and they say, ‘Look at my grocery cart. I used to be able to buy a lot more.'”

Smiley says lots of people are losing their jobs, and she wants to prioritize bringing jobs back to Michigan.

“The companies are not willing to invest in their businesses, quite frankly, because a lot of the work is going overseas,” she said. “Mexico now looks like what Michigan used to look like. It’s a mecca for industry, both in terms of the automotive industry [and] all of the suppliers.”

However, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that U.S. employers added an estimated 254,000 jobs in September, and after rising for most of 2024, the unemployment rate dropped for a second straight month from 4.2% in August to 4.1% in September.

She also noted that government spending is on the rise, saying that she’d like to reduce spending using her skills as a Ford employee who managed budgets.

“At Ford Motor Company where I worked, just one example of a project that I initiated and led, I saved the company over $290 million, and year-over-year, I saved the company $10 million just by working smarter,” she said.

Smiley says her experience as someone who has worked her way from the bottom up makes her a better candidate for her district.

“I have a lifetime of experiences working in the proverbial trenches, and I can leverage and apply my common sense and direct knowledge of how things work, both domestically and using my international business experience,” she said.

Gun safety

While school shootings are on the rise in the U.S., Dingell says she believes in gun control laws that protect people.

“I think we need to support and make sure [gun legislation] is being implemented that has comprehensive background checks. People who shouldn’t have guns shouldn’t have access to them,” said Dingell.

Dingell says assault weapons should also be banned, and safe storage of firearms should be mandated.

“Our children need to be able to go to school and not worry if someone is going to shoot them, what would happen to them. We need to be addressing the mental health issues associated with that,” she said.

Dingell says along with the economy, child care and senior care are pressing issues.

Voter integrity

During her campaign, Smiley has alleged that voter integrity in the U.S. is being jeopardized by illegal immigrants who are being encouraged to sign up to vote.

CNN fact-checked this claim, saying that it is unlikely non-citizens are registering to vote.

“The penalties are high, and the payoff is low,” Rick Hasen, an election law expert at the UCLA School of Law, told CNN. “If you aren’t a citizen and you vote, and you’re caught, you can face deportation and criminal penalties. And your chances of affecting an election outcome are small. It’s very unlikely someone would purposely choose to vote as a noncitizen.”

While Dingell says comprehensive immigration is needed, she says numerous studies have debunked the claim that non-citizens are voting.

“We have very strong systems in this country, in each state, to keep non-American citizens from voting, and no one has found [evidence of that],” she said. “[There have been] independent studies on both sides [that show no] problem related to that,” she said.

Dingell also suggested that measures to address border security have been blocked by Republicans.

“Democrats have been pushing for a lot more investment in Homeland Security for hiring additional border patrol agents to investigate and disrupt the transnational criminal organizations and the drug traffickers and Republicans keep blocking it,” she said.

The general election is taking place on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024. For the latest election information, visit WDET’s Voter Guide at wdet.org/voterguide.

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Fiber artist Fatema Haque hosts embroidery workshop as part of new Bengali exhibit

Hamtramck Historical Museum soft launched an exhibit on the Bengali diaspora last month with a nakshi kantha hand embroidery workshop. It’s a type of quilt that’s embroidered by Bengali or Bangladeshi people in the Indian subcontinent.

Fiber artist Fatema Haque says that although the Bangladeshi community has been in metro Detroit for decades, this is the first time a full-fledged exhibit of this type will be featured at the museum.

“It doesn’t have a large presence of Bangladeshis, even though Bangladeshis have been in the metro Detroit area since, well, going back as far as 1971 when Bangladesh became a country. But even before that, when Bangladesh was part of Pakistan, and then before that, India,” she said.

Haque says the workshop was one way to show different types of art that’s representative of the Bangladeshi diaspora.

“And given that this craft is a huge part of family life as well as community life in Bangladesh, it’s something that’s prevalent in pretty much every household in a variety of ways, so we thought it would be a good way for people to learn about Bangladeshis and something that is such a integral part of their life,” she said.

Haque says the exhibit will feature stories of the Bangladeshi diaspora in metro Detroit, focusing on Hamtramck where the museum is located.

“We are hoping to represent both Bangladeshi culture in terms of religion, art, activism as well as entrepreneurship, and show the ways in which people are connected to this particular land,” she said.

She says that will include businesses and the mural on Carpenter between Hamtramck and Detroit.

Fatema Haque
Writer, educator, and fiber artist Fatema Haque.

Haque says anthropologist Rumana Rahman reached out to the museum to curate this exhibit, which is run by volunteers.

“I came up on her radar because I had a portrait exhibit of Bangladeshi Americans in the last year, and I did some oral history interviews. And so once I heard that she was working on this, I was so excited to get involved, and I joined the committee, and we’ve been working on it since January, actually.”

Haque says this is just the beginning.

“Our goal with this exhibit is that it’s not going to be an end all exhibit… it should be a living exhibit that people can continuously contribute to and keep growing, because our history is a living history,” she said.

Haque says she hopes people come to the exhibit to learn about neighboring communities.

“Get to know your neighbors and get to know other folks who live around you, so if you’re not Bangladeshi, it might be worth it because your neighbors are Bangladeshi, and you can learn something really cool about their land,” she said.

She says it’s also an opportunity to allow Bangladeshi Americans to see themselves represented in a meaningful way.

“There’s so many Bangladeshis who are in this community. And I’m wondering, like, how often do we see ourselves represented in places like museums, right? How often is our history documented? And so our hope is that people feel a stronger sense of belonging by seeing themselves in this space,” she said.

Haque says she hopes second and third generation Bangladeshi Americans also have a chance to explore Bangladeshi history, art or activism.

“I really hope that they also feel inspired and proud and gain a sense of self through this exhibit, like I can be proud to be Bangladeshi in this space,” she said.

The exhibit’s full launch is slated for November 2. Find more information at hamtramckhistory.com.

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Detroit Evening Report: Detroiters commemorate Oct. 7 attack on Israel; Jewish Federation office vandalized; more

On this episode of the Detroit Evening Report, we cover local events commemorating the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel; vandalism at the Jewish Federation of Detroit offices  and more.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Metro Detroiters commemorate Oct. 7

Members of the local Jewish, Muslim and Arab communities are marking the one year anniversary since the Hamas-led attack on Israel – killing 1,200 people and taking more than 200 hostages. 

Since then more than 41,000 Palestinians have been killed as a result of Israel’s military response, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, and many more have died as hostilities between Israel and Lebanon have escalated in recent weeks. Communities in metro Detroit have been deeply impacted by these conflicts, and found ways to mark the anniversary today.  

The Michigan Board of Rabbis is hosting a One Year Commemoration today from 7-8 p.m., with location details available upon registration. Several other events took place throughout the day to commemorate the anniversary, according to the Jewish Detroit Community Calendar. A candlelight vigil is also scheduled for 6:30 p.m. in Dearborn at Ford Woods Park hosted by Palestinian and Yemeni organizations. 

Additionally, the organization ISRAEL21c has compiled a list of online memorial events for those unable to attend a commemorative event in person.

Jewish Federation building vandalized

The Jewish Federation of Detroit offices in Bloomfield Township were vandalized early Monday morning. 

David Kurzmann, senior director of Community Affairs for the Federation, called the incident not just an attack on the organization but an attack on the community. 

“This is the organization that that really convenes the community that has the privilege of serving so, so many. And I think for everybody, this feels like a very personal attack on us today,” he said.

The building was tagged with antisemitic insults as well as the words “Free Palestine” and “Intifada,” a reference to the armed uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. 

Bloomfield Township police say they are investigating the incident along with federal authorities.  

Community members throughout metro Detroit have also reported finding antisemitic flyers on driveways in residential neighborhoods, including in West Bloomfield, Farmington Hills, Shelby Township, Northville and Waterford.

In a statement on Monday, Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard said investigators suspect the hateful, antisemitic flyers were coming from “outsiders.” The incidents remain under investigation.

-Reporting by Bre’Anna Tinsley, WDET. WDET’s Jenny Sherman contributed.

Detroit seeks feedback on historic preservation plan

The city of Detroit is hosting two Zoom meetings at 5 p.m. Oct. 17 and 21 to get feedback from residents about the Citywide Historic Preservation Plan. The Planning and Development Department is hiring a consultant to work with the city on this plan to create a historic district designation. For more information, email historicplan@detroitmi.gov.

State celebrates first year of free family planning program

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services says over 20,000 people signed up for the Plan First! Program in the program’s first year. The program covers a broad range of services, from office visits and access to contraceptives to natural family planning methods for those who want to prevent pregnancy and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. It works by allowing Michigan residents who do not qualify for traditional Medicaid to apply for a limited Medicaid benefit for family planning services. 

Registration open for Detroit Youth Rugby

Registration is now open for the Detroit Parks and Recreation Athletics Division’s Youth Rugby Program. Held in collaboration with the Detroit Rugby Football Club, he four-week program takes place from 6-7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays beginning Nov. 5 at the Adams Butzel Complex Gym, 10500 Lyndon St., Detroit. There’s a $10 fee to sign up. Visit dprdathletics.com for more information.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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The post Detroit Evening Report: Detroiters commemorate Oct. 7 attack on Israel; Jewish Federation office vandalized; more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Michigan Muslim voters say they feel misunderstood by Republicans and Democrats

There are nearly four million Muslims in the United States, including about 240,000 in Michigan. In the 2020 presidential election, American Muslims were a big part of why Joe Biden won Michigan by just 155,000 votes.

This year some say they feel politically homeless, not understood or welcomed by either Republicans or Democrats.

Hamza Ashfaq, a recent medical school graduate, says this presidential campaign has been challenging because neither candidate fully reflects his values or political priorities.

“Everybody’s going to play the lesser of the two evils vote. In the end, it’s, you know, not going to be good for us either way,” Ashfaq said.

Michigan was at the epicenter of the uncommitted national movement that protested President Biden during the Democratic primaries.

This idea that neither party reflects their moral values came up again and again in interviews with Muslims in Detroit.

Palestinian American Mahmoud Muheisen, 24, is a recent graduate of Wayne State University.

He has never voted in a U.S. election before — but feels obligated to vote this year.

“The people, they share my faith. They share my name. They share my blood. I think it would be inhumane to just dismiss it, especially as a Palestinian Muslim American,” he said.

Muheisen says he plans to vote for the Green Party’s candidate, Jill Stein.

Youssef Chouhoud is an associate professor of political science at Christopher Newport University who studies voting trends of American Muslims. He says Gaza is at the top of mind for many American Muslims.

“American Muslims care about the economy. American Muslims care about climate change, and they care about health care access and immigration policy. But certainly, one of, if not the top, if not — for some American Muslims, the only issue that they care about is the crisis in Gaza,” he said.

Chouhoud says this sense of political homelessness weighs heavily on American Muslims, “and something that is going to probably continue from now until they go into the voting booth.”

Farah Khan is the co-chair of Michigan’s Abandon Harris campaign.

The campaign is trying to encourage Muslims in Michigan to vote for a third-party candidate.

“Do not vote for these two despicable candidates who are running for presidency,” Khan said. “I don’t know what kind of world we live in now because these are the people we have to look up to for our leaders. It’s really sad.”

According to a national survey conducted for the Council on American Islamic Relations, about 30% of American Muslims nationwide support Kamala Harris. Another 30% back Stein. Eleven percent said they plan to vote for Donald Trump, and nearly 17% said they are still undecided.

Imam Mikail Stewart-Saadiq is former chair of the Imams Council of Michigan. He taught at the Al-Ikhlas Training Academy for 20 years.

The registered Democrat says he’s willing to give Harris a chance.

“She is not Trump, nor is she Biden. So in my opinion, you know, I would like to see what she can do,” he said.

Stewart-Saadiq says this is a moment to move forward and build on the political work of previous generations.

“And having to fight your way through politics and fight your way through political revolution, you know, of all those games, I’m not willing to spit in the face of my ancestors,” he said.

Detroit voter Munira Salim says she’s still undecided on who to vote for in the weeks before the election.

“When it comes to the pro-peace vote, when it comes to the Muslim vote and even when it comes to the Black vote, like, there’s no one representation,” she said.

Like Salim, many Muslims are waiting to see if there are any changes in the Biden-Harris administration’s Gaza policy before they cast their votes in November.

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Detroit Evening Report: Lebanese community mourns; Michigan tribes get funding for climate action + more

On this episode of the Detroit Evening Report, we cover a vigil held in Dearborn over the weekend to mourn those killed in Israeli strikes in South Lebanon; recent U.S. EPA funding awarded to four Michigan tribes to implement climate action plans and more.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

A community in mourning

Over 1,000 people from metro Detroit’s Lebanese community gathered outside the Henry Ford Centennial Library in Dearborn on Sunday for a candlelight vigil mourning civilians killed in recent Israeli strikes in South Lebanon. Dearborn is home to one of the largest Lebanese communities in the U.S. — many from South Lebanon where the conflict has escalated. Israel and Hezbollah have exchanged fire almost every day since the war in Gaza began. The fighting has displaced tens of thousands of people in Israel and Lebanon, and according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry, more than 700 people have been killed in Lebanon in the past week.

Israel says it will continue to strike Hezbollah until it is safe for Israelis displaced from border communities to return to their homes. Hezbollah has promised to keep firing rockets into Israel until there is a ceasefire in Gaza.

Tribes receive $38M for energy projects 

Four Michigan tribes have been awarded $38 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to implement climate action plans. The Climate Pollution Reduction Grants will support projects focused on reducing costs, improving infrastructure and cutting air pollution. These initiatives include solar installations, energy efficiency upgrades, electrification improvements, recycling programs and electric vehicle infrastructure — all aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions.  

Neighborhood Wellness Centers get funding boost

The state of Michigan has dedicated $17 million in this fiscal year’s budget to help support preventative health centers in Detroit and Flint.

The Neighborhood Wellness Centers were established in 2020 to offer free COVID testing, as well as free blood pressure, diabetes, and cholesterol screenings to residents in need.

Of the 22 wellness centers in Michigan, eight are located in Detroit. The Open Door Church of God in Christ on Seven Mile is one of them. Assistant Pastor Michael Dorsey says the centers offer a safe space for residents to seek medical attention. 

“We all have people in our family that have health issues and they may not trust going to the doctor, they may not have the resources or have a primary care physician, but by attending the Wellness Center, you can now receive the proper screening and attention free of charge that can put you in a better position,” Dorsey said.

-Reporting by Bre’Anna Tinsley, WDET  

Panel discussion to highlight Asian stigmas 

APIA Vote Michigan is hosting a virtual community conversation on civic engagement at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5. The event, titled “Courageous Conversations,” will feature a panel of guests to discuss stigmas within the Asian community and how to break barriers to increase civic participation.  

Hamtramck to host Night Bazaar

The Hamtramck Downtown Development Authority and Discover Hamtramck are hosting a new inaugural event, Hamtramck Night Bazaar, from 4-9 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5 at Pope Park, featuring a food truck, henna, and local art. 

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

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Detroit Evening Report: New Hamtramck Historical Museum exhibit to focus on Bengali diaspora

The Hamtramck Historical Museum is getting a new exhibit based on the Bengali diaspora, focusing on communities in Hamtramck. 

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The museum had a soft launch on Saturday to get people excited about a full exhibit. 

Rumana Rahman is an anthropologist who serves on the committee for the new exhibition. She says the museum can capture more Bengali representation in a city with a large Bangladeshi community. 

“We want to really capture the diversity of our Bangladeshi heritage, our linguistic diversity, or textile diversity,” said Rahman. “So, yeah, I’m just really excited when I kind of feel like this is sort of the beginning. We’re just kind of scratching the surface.”

Rahman says the exhibit will feature rickshaw art, textile art, and sports like cricket. It will also incorporate different spiritual traditions of Bangladesh from the Buddhist, Muslim and Hindu communities.  

The exhibit’s launch is slated for Oct. 29.

Other headlines for Monday, Sept. 23, 2024:

  • Salina Intermedia School in Dearborn is hosting “Pollution Has No Boundaries: Where Do We Go From Here?” — a conversation about climate change with journalists, community activists and artists — from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 30. 
  • Northwest Detroiters are invited to a community roundtable at Simanek Park from 6-7 p.m. Sept. 26 to share feedback on the city’s park design and improvement plans.
  • The Detroit Police Department is looking for individuals ages 15-24 to join the Youth Advisory Panel by the Sept. 30 deadline. Participants will serve as resources for the Board of Police Commissioners, help with civilian oversight and get educational, civic and networking opportunities. Youth should be in high school or college.
  • The Detroit Public Library main branch is hosting a free youth public safety town hall from 4-6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 to discuss students’ concerns and thoughts on violence at home, in schools and traveling between home and school.
  • The city of Detroit is hosting a Healthy Home Resource Day from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Sept. 28 to share information about HOPE application assistance, water affordability plans, foreclosure prevention and more. The resource fair will take place at the Northwest Activity Center, 18100 Meyers St., Detroit.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

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Detroit Evening Report: Hamtramck police chief leading safety training for Frontier Academy parents

Frontier International Academy is hosting a safety training session for parents this week, following ongoing concerns from community members about road safety.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Guest speakers will be Hamtramck Police Chief Jamiel Altaheri and Wayne County Undersheriff Mike Jaafar. Many residents have expressed anxiety after multiple incidents of children being hit by cars in Hamtramck.

In July, a 3-year-old girl died after being hit by a Hamtramck school bus. That same day, another child was struck by a car in a separate incident, CBS Detroit reports. A third child was struck in August, suffering only minor injuries.

The training will take place at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 19, at Frontier International Academy, 13200 Conant St., Detroit. 

Other headlines for Monday, Sept. 16, 2024:

  • Hamtramck residents will vote on a $2.75 million millage renewal this November. The funds go toward a 10-year plan for operating costs for the Hamtramck Public School District.
  • The Kalasho Education & Youth Services held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for its new MIND Garden on Friday in Warren. The organization has served the Chaldean community — specifically immigrant and refugee communities — in mental health, education, and legal services for the past 23 years.
  • Anthropologist and Legacy Keepers Movement Founder Zarinah El-Amin is hosting a free masterclass for older adults and their family members who want to learn how to write their life story.
  • The Detroit + Dearborn Community Block Party is set to take place on Miller Road and Tireman Avenue from 12 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, featuring free food, activities, games and vendor resource tables.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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Detroit Evening Report: Kamala Harris, Jill Stein tied with American Muslim voters, poll says


The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) has released results of a poll of American Muslim voters.

Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and the Green Party’s Jill Stein are tied at around 29%, with 16% of Muslim voters stating they are undecided and 11% planning to vote for former President Donald Trump.

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CAIR conducted the election survey two days after the Democratic National Convention ended last month. The organization said 1,500 people responded to the survey out of a random sample of 40,000 Muslim voters across the nation.

The survey results show that Stein has more support in Arizona, Wisconsin and Michigan — while Harris is favored in Georgia and Pennsylvania.

There are an estimated 2.5 million registered Muslim voters in the United States.

More headlines for Sept. 9, 2024:

  • American Muslim Diversity Association breaks ground mosque expansion in Sterling Heights
  • D’Artillery hosting global artisan pop-up experiences in Hamtramck
  • ArabCon kicks off this week at the Ford Performing Arts Center in Dearborn

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

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DER Weekends: Detroit students follow the path of the Buffalo Soldiers in Yosemite National Park

On the latest episode of the Detroit Evening Report Weekends, Sascha Raiyn spends some time with Garrett Dempsey of Detroit Outdoors.

Detroit Outdoors is a collaboration between the Sierra Club, the city of Detroit and the YMCA, focused on exposing Detroit youth to the outdoors.

This summer, the organization took a group of students to Yosemite National Park to camp, hike and rock climb. But the trip was centered around the history of the Buffalo Soldiers in the National Parks, and the Detroit native who is the park service’s foremost expert on that history, Shelton Johnson.

Garrett Dempsey is the program director for Detroit Outdoors. He spoke to WDET’s Sascha Raiyn about the trip and the organization’s work to get Black and brown youth into the great outdoors.

Listen to the episode using the media player above.

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Detroit Evening Report: U-M Board of Regents candidate sues Michigan Democratic Party over convention results

The Michigan Democratic Party is facing a lawsuit over the race for its University of Michigan Board of Regents nomination.

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The race was decided at the party’s Aug. 24 nominating convention in Lansing.

According to official party results, civil rights attorney Huwaida Arraf lost her bid for the party’s nomination for the U of M Board of Regents.

But Arraf said there were irregularities she’d like explained. She said her lawsuit is because party leaders haven’t provided election data she’s been asking for.

“If there’s something [that] happened that we don’t understand, then just tell us,” Arraf told reporters during a press call Thursday.

Arraf’s claims include that more people voted in the race than were credentialed and that the party barred her campaign from observing the vote tabulation process during the August convention.

One source of confusion was the party’s weighted voting system in which “each county’s (or portion thereof) delegates within a multi-county Congressional District Convention, caucus, or meeting, or at the State Convention, have a voting strength proportional to the number of Democratic voters from that county (or portion) at the last General Election relative to the total number of Democratic voters in the District or the state, regardless of how many delegates are present at the convention, caucus, or meeting.”

A press release sent by Arraf’s campaign earlier this week included screenshots that the campaign said show email exchanges with party chair Lavora Barnes listing out raw vote totals and weight equivalent.

In her lawsuit, Arraf is asking Michigan’s 30th Circuit Court in Ingham County to bar the race results from being finalized to the general election ballot until “a full and transparent investigation or audit of the University of Michigan Regents vote-counting process” takes place.

In a statement, a Michigan Democratic Party spokesperson said, “We are waiting to review the complaint filed with the Ingham County Clerk and look forward to following the proper legal process.”

Arraf had entered the race later than her two opponents, whom were already serving on the board and seeking renomination. She came in with support of pro-Palestinian activists.

While talking to reporters, Arraf acknowledged she very well may have lost the race. But she accused the party of sending the wrong message to her supporters by not being transparent.

“Encouraging young people, encouraging minorities, encouraging historically disenfranchised people to get involved in the voting process, what we hear over and over and over again is, ‘What does it matter? My vote doesn’t count anyway.’ And this is exactly the message that they’re getting now,” Arraf said.

According to court records, Ingham County Judge James Jamo has sent a first hearing in the case for Friday at 9 a.m.

Reporting by Colin Jackson, MPRN

Other headlines for Friday, Sept. 6, 2024:

  •  The city of Detroit is now accepting applications from senior citizen homeowners who wish to apply for a discount on their Solid Waste Fee for their home.
  • This Sunday will be the last day to check out the Michigan Science Center’s “Above and Beyond” exhibition offering a 360-degree view of Earth in Orbit.
  • The Detroit Board of Police Commissioners is seeking applications for the BOPC Youth Advisory Panel. Applications are due Sept. 30.

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Many American Muslims concerned about US Gaza policy in next bid for president

The presidential election is a few months away, and American Muslim voters are weighing out their options for the next president.

Youssef Chouhoud, an associate professor of political science at Christopher Newport University in Virginia, studies trends involving American Muslim voters. He says this year many American Muslims are concerned about Gaza.

“Certainly one of if not the top, if not for some American Muslims, the only issue that they care about is the crisis in Gaza, and so that holds particularly heavy weight this election cycle,” Chouhoud said.

He says American Muslims are nestled within the American fabric, concerned about the economy, climate change, health care and immigration policies.

After 9/11, Chouhoud says, American Muslims were against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. He says after 2010, many focused on domestic issues.

But he says that changed after the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel — during which Hamas killed 1,200 people — and the invasion of Gaza that followed, where the latest death toll stands at more than 40,000 Palestinians killed.

Chouhoud says many American Muslims view themselves as part of the extended Muslim nation, or the ummah.

“One of the beliefs in Islam is that anything that affects one part of the Muslim ummah affects you as well,” he said.

Chouhoud says many American Muslims also have close connections to Gaza.

“Everybody in the American Muslim context, is probably only one degree removed from somebody in Gaza,” he said.

Chouhoud says American Muslims are stuck between a rock and a hard place when it comes to voting for the next president.

“They don’t, by and large, support a Trump presidency, for the reason that during the Trump administration, and you know, the explicit policies that Trump wanted to and has enacted have negatively affected American Muslims.”

He says many American Muslims say they do not feel like they belong to either Republican or Democratic parties.

“The sense of homelessness, I think, that American Muslims feel politically, is something that weighs heavy on them, and something that you know is going to probably continue from now until they go into the voting booth,” he said.

Chouhoud says things are likely to remain up in the air until the November elections.

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Donate today »

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Detroit Evening Report: Trump visits Detroit, cinnamon health risk and more


This episode of the Detroit Evening Report includes Donald Trump’s most recent campaign visit in metro Detroit, a health safety alert on cinnamon and more stories you should know.

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Trump and Vance campaign in metro Detroit this week

Former President Donald Trump was in Michigan today to address a conference of the U.S. National Guard Association. It’s part of a series of events planned in the battleground state this week. Trump’s appearance comes as he and his running mate JD Vance criticized Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Tim Walz over his service in the Army National Guard.

The visit is also an effort to counter the momentum generated by Vice President Kamala Harris’s historic nomination to head the Democratic presidential ticket. Vance is set to deliver a speech in Michigan about the economy tomorrow and Trump will do the same at a steel facility in the state on Thursday.

WDET’s Quinn Klinefelter contributed to this story.

Arab American museum receives $100K grant to produce doc on drone warfare

The Arab American Museum in Dearborn received a $100,000 Joyce Award grant to produce a theatrical series about the implications of drone warfare. Writer, director and performer Andrea Assaf will collaborate with the museum to create work that “confronts the militarized use of drone technology, the ethics of remote control warfare and the human cost of war.” “DRONE” will be a multimedia piece with live theater, museum and digital design — informed by community conversations with Arab Americans, veterans and anti-war activists in Dearborn.

The 2024 Joyce Awards uplift collaborations between artists of color and community organizations in the region. Assaf is one of five winners this year.

Health alert issued on cinnamon due to high levels of lead

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) says the list of contaminated cinnamon products has increased since July. These cinnamon products have high levels of lead. MDHHS encourages consumers to stop eating or selling the products and throw them away.

Some of the brands of cinnamon include El Chilar, Marcum, SWAD, Shahzada and La Frontera. For a full list, visit fda.gov.

Youth coalition focuses on reproductive rights

The Michigan Youth Reproductive Justice Coalition is hosting a statewide initiative to organize youth around reproductive rights. The group is hosting a Zoom event on September 12 from 5:30-7 p.m. to connect organizers and build power on and off college campuses. People who are interested in joining can fill out a form through the Michigan Student Power Alliance 2024 interest form.

Detroit’s health department will host its 3rd annual block party next month, offering free health screenings and resources to residents. The program kicks off on Sept. 7 with a safe sleep walk and rally at 11 a.m. and then a block party from 12-4 p.m. at 100 Mack Avenue at John R Rd. in Detroit.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

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