Become a Member
Life

A lost world captured on film

Boxes of colour slides of London’s old Jewish East End taken in the mid-1970s had lived inside a tin box in a shed for more than 40 years. In a few weeks, these never before seen images of a world that has now largely disappeared will go on display

September 27, 2019 14:19
A Hessel Street poulterer

An extreme heatwave hit Israel in May, and a forest fire near Modiin forced Manchester-born Shloimy Alman and his wife Linda to evacuate their home.

Fleeing for safety, Shloimy grabbed just three items: passports, family photo albums and boxes of colour slides of London’s old Jewish East End that he’d taken in the mid-1970s.

The slides had lived inside a tin box in Alman’s shed for more than 40 years. In a few weeks time, these never before seen images of a world that has now largely disappeared are going to be displayed in Sandy’s Row Synagogue.

Alman explains, “In my early twenties, living in Manchester and attending a Jewish Youth Workers’ conference in Stepney, I arranged to meet the Yiddish poet, Avraham Stencl, for a tour of London’s Jewish East End. My father, Moishe had previously contributed many articles to Stencl’s monthly Yiddish magazine, Loshn un Lebn.”

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.

Editor’s picks