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The Jewish Chronicle

Brilliant Brooklyn beckons

No longer a bridge too far, Brooklyn is on the tourist map and worth a detour.

October 30, 2008 10:03
The Brooklyn Bridge, one of New York’s iconic sights

By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

5 min read

Sitting in a mikveh house with a rabbi discussing the finer points of Orthodox matrimonial law may not be an obvious thing to do on a shopping trip to New York, but as of this year, it is an interesting option.

The Lubavitch - who else - have eagerly embraced the establishment of a Jewish heritage trail in the city. Their own contribution is a guided tour of the Chasidic community of Brooklyn's Crown Heights, location for their own world headquarters and home to many other strictly Orthodox groups.

And very fascinating it is to sit down and talk religious philosophy with charismatic rabbis Yisroel ben Kaplan and Berel Epstein, two rather cool dudes who find no aspect of their culture taboo. They include mikveh rituals as a must-see, show-and-tell along with a peek into a slightly chaotic neighbourhood synagogue; the house of the late lamented Rebbe (whom they believe was the Messiah), a visit to the workshop of highly-skilled Torah scribes who repair faded letters on ancient scrolls as well as creating new ones, and a nice kosher shwarma or pastrami lunch to finish off.

Whether or not half a day getting a rare glimpse into what in Britain is a closed community appeals, it's good to see Brooklyn on a heritage map.