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Rochester Hills Mayor Responds To Madonna: 'We're Proud Of Who We Are'

ROCHESTER HILLS (WWJ) - The mayor of Rochester Hills is firing back in an open letter to Madonna who recently had some unflattering things to say about the city.

The aging pop princess told Howard Stern in an interview last week that she didn't want to go back to Rochester Hills, where she attended high school, because she couldn't be around "basic, provincial-thinking people."

While Mayor Bryan Barnett says Madonna is certainly welcome to voice her viewpoint, he told WWJ's Zahra Huber that the people of Rochester Hills are anything but simple and narrow-minded. [Read the letter below].

"Our school districts are some of the top-performing in the state," Barnett said. "We have tremendous economic, racial and religious diversity. We have one of the largest mosques in metro Detroit; we have the largest Albanian Catholic church in the world outside of Albania."

Despite the singer's obvious distaste for the city. "She is enshrined on our wall of honor at our museum, and reminded her that she sits alongside some other incredible woman who have had an impact in our community and throughout the world," Barnett said. "We've appreciated her achievements and felt it appropriate and we would hope that she would appreciate ours."

Barnett is inviting the superstar to come back and see the city.

"We don't need her approval and we're not looking for it," said Barnett, "but I'm pretty confident if she came back we would earn it."

Regardless, he said, life will go on in the northern Oakland County suburb.

"Madonna's opinion of Rochester Hills — you know, obviously she's harbored this for a long time — has had no impact on our success as a community, and I would think her opinion will no impact on us moving forward," said Barnett.

"But I wasn't gonna let her misguided comments sit out there without at least a formal response and a recognition of really our residents and the fact that we're proud of who we are as a community...We're very proud of who we are, and if you're gonna come at us, we're not going to take that laying down."

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ROCHESTER HILLS, Mich. -
An Open Letter to Madonna:

"I read with great interest your recent comments about growing up in Rochester Hills and your description of our residents as 'basic, provincial thinking people.' As the Mayor of Rochester Hills, I feel compelled to respond.

Admittedly, I don't know what experiences led you to that opinion, but let me assure you, our community is anything but basic or narrow minded. In fact, we are and have been home to some of the brightest minds shaping our world. Our school district is one of the top performing in the state and boasts two Blue Ribbon Schools, the most in Michigan. Our Universities are among the fastest growing in the Midwest and are rich with cultural and ethnic diversity.

We design and build more robots than any other city in North America, and Rochester Hills residents and businesses have been granted over 900 patents, nearly one a day, over the last three years. Not a typical achievement you would associate with 'simple or basic' people.

We are growing in many ways including in our economic, racial, and religious diversity. We are home to one of the largest Mosques in Metro Detroit and the largest Albanian Catholic church in the world outside of Albania. We have a growing senior population with a vibrant college town feel. In fact, these are just some of the factors Money Magazine used to select Rochester Hills as one of the top ten best places to live in America.

We are, or have been, home to quite a few amazing people who are known more for innovative thinking than provincial - Olympic gold medalists, NASCAR Champions, visionaries in the fields of medicine and education, and even a top selling global singer/songwriter.

That's right. Despite your distaste for us, we actually have enshrined you on our Community Wall of Fame at the Van Hoosen Museum. Your portrait sits alongside Bertha Van Hoosen, one of the first women to graduate from the University of Michigan in 1888 and one of the world's leading surgeons for nearly 60 years. A female trailblazer in the field of medicine at the University your daughter now attends.

Your picture hangs just a few feet from Helen Southgate Williams. A renowned author of children's literature who was ultimately appointed to the International Board of Books, an agency of the United Nations and one of the highest recognitions possible in the field. I assume that would be of some interest to a fellow children's author like yourself.

Two strong women, ahead of their time, and in all of my research, I could not find the terms, "basic or provincial minded" to describe them or their accomplishments.

Madonna, you have achieved unbelievable success and while we appreciate your talent and achievement, we expect you to appreciate ours.

Undoubtedly, we have changed in the 40 years since you cheered at Adams High School, but in many ways we have stayed the same. Our neighborhoods have long been filled with innovative, free-thinking leaders not afraid to make a difference. By generous, charitable people who care more about doing what they believe is right, than by what they read in the media. We are many things, Madonna, but basic and provincial minded we are not!

I invite you back to Rochester Hills to see who we are and what we believe in. While we certainly don't need your stamp of approval, I am quite confident we would earn it."

Bryan K. Barnett, Mayor
City of Rochester Hills

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