News Stories

All the News That’s Fit to Search

The Detroit Jewish News digital archive comes to the Bentley

By Robert Havey

On Monday, November 5, 2018, the Bentley Historical Library unveiled a new platform for the Detroit Jewish News Digital Archive, a free, searchable database containing more than 100 years of digital copies of the Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Detroit Jewish News.

University of Michigan President Mark Schlissel performed the ceremonial first search, with a quote from Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, who marched from Selma to Montgomery with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and remarked, “I felt my legs were praying.”

“The Jewish News and Jewish Chronicle have served as the premier voice of its Detroit community for a century,” said Bentley Director Terrence McDonald. “”Although the Detroit Jewish community was never the largest in America, its influence in the region, state, and nation has been very significant. Its history is an important part of the ethnic mosaic that is twentieth century Michigan. As part of our continuing digitization efforts, we are excited and pleased to preserve and maintain public access to this wonderful archive.”

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U-M President Mark Schlissel performs the first official search in the new digital archive with the quote, “I felt my legs were praying.”

The digital archive was completed in partnership with MLibrary, which developed the software platform and maintains the infrastructure for supporting and hosting the content.

The Detroit Jewish News Digital Archive will contain every issue of the Detroit Jewish Chronicle (1916-1951) and the Detroit Jewish News (1942-present). Researchers will be able to browse by date or use a full-text search. Those using the archive will be able to access it both through the University of Michigan and through the DJN website as before. The Bentley will add future issues of the News to the archive and will also capture content on the DJN website.

Arthur Horwitz, Publisher and Executive Editor of the Detroit Jewish News and Chair of the Detroit Jewish News Foundation, says the archive will preserve the shared history of Michigan’s Jewish community.

“In an era of alternative facts and fake news,” Horwitz said, “the archive provides myriad ‘snapshots in time’ of events and activities that, when tied together, tell accurate stories about individuals, their families, their businesses, their connections to the Jewish and general communities and—whether it was the price of groceries at Dexter Davison Market or news headlines from Israel or Washington, D.C.—provide this information in the context of the era in which they occurred.”

Horwitz began planning for a way to preserve and protect back issues of the News in 2002, when a fire destroyed the DJN’s Southfield offices. No one was hurt, and offsite backups of business files made the next issue only a day late, but the bound volumes of the News stored in the office suffered some smoke and water damage. When readers found out about the fire, Horwitz was inundated with questions about what happened to the newspaper archive. “People throughout the community expressed concern about how well we were safeguarding their history, the community’s history.”

In 2011, Horwitz helped launch the Detroit Jewish News Foundation, which created the William Davidson Digital Archive of Jewish Detroit History in 2013. At a gala on May 3, 2018, it was announced that this archive will be revamped and moved to the Bentley’s servers.

“The digital archive assures the story of our community, and the individuals and families who continue to shape it, is always at our fingertips,” said Horwitz.

To access the digitized content, please click here.