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Detroit Evening Report: Remembering Metro Detroit Youth Day founder Ed Deeb

Longtime Detroit businessman, youth advocate and organizer of Metro Detroit Youth Day Ed Deeb has died. He organized the event as a response to deadly confrontations between young people and store owners in the summer of 1980.

In a 2014 interview with WDET’s Pat Batcheller, Deeb says then-Mayor Coleman Young called him and other business leaders into a meeting to address the violence.  

”And he pointed his finger to me and said, he said, ‘Ed, What are you guys going to do next year to prevent this from happening again?’ And I was shocked. He as pointing at me in front of all these people. And I said, ‘Mr. Mayor, are you talking to me or everybody in the room?’ He said, ‘ Well I’m talking to everybody, but I want you to carry the ball’.”

Since then, Metro Detroit Youth Day has become an annual event, drawing thousands of kids to Belle Isle every summer. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources honored Ed Deeb in 2018 by naming a road on the island after him. Deeb died Tuesday at home. He was 89.  

Additional headlines for Thursday, September 4, 2025

Applications open for Neighborhood Beautification program

Detroit also announced the opening of applications for round 6 of the Neighborhood Beautification program. The program provides grants ranging from $500 to $15,000 to block clubs, neighborhood associations, nonprofits, and faith-based organizations to create community gardens, improve public spaces, and launch neighborhood programming.

Film outreach event

City of Detroit’s Media Service Department will be hosting a Film Detroit community outreach event on September 10.

It’s an opportunity to for creatives to get their content broadcast on Detroit’s cable channels, navigate the city’s film permitting process, and network with fellow filmmakers. The event is open to all ages, independent filmmakers, and nonprofit or community groups.

Organizers note that the event is not intended for for-profit businesses looking to promote or sell products. The event will run from 4p.m. to 7p.m. at the A.B. Ford Community Center.  

45 years of Black Reading Month

September is Black Reading Month, a tradition started in Detroit in 1980 by activists wanting to celebrate and support Black authors, Black-owned bookstores, and Black stories.

This year marks the 45th anniversary.

The Charles H Wright Museum is hosting talks from authors and artists on Black history. Detroit Book City in Southfield, a Black-owned bookstore, is hosting “read-in” events throughout the month showcasing new books by Black authors. Or catch the Black Reading Month Bookfair on September 26 from 5p.m. to 9p.m. at Mama Imani Humphrey Hall in the Detroit Food Commons at 8324 Woodward Avenue.  

Listen to the latest episode of the “Detroit Evening Report” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

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The post Detroit Evening Report: Remembering Metro Detroit Youth Day founder Ed Deeb appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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