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Book Review: Jewish New York

Jonathan Margolis enjoys two books about US Jews

April 17, 2018 15:03
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2 min read

After years of visiting, and briefly living, in New York, last month I finally found a deli that isn’t just a restaurant but somewhere, as in the UK, you can buy Jewish nosh to take away. But when, in Shelsky’s of Brooklyn, I saw spicy shrimp roll and lobster salad alongside the chopped liver, I realised Jewish New York is a different kettle of gefilte fish from London.

Jewish New York ( Deborah Dash Moore, NYUP, £24.99) is a substantial and enlightening social history, taking us from the first Jews arriving from the Dutch colonies in 1654 to the city that became home to 1.1 million Jews by the First World War, to the return of suburbanised Jews in recent years — as financiers and creatives — to the very Lower East Side their grandparents struggled to leave.

It tells how Jews released from the constraints of shtetls and ghettoes were keen to secularise (hence Shelsky’s treif options) and how, with the arrival of a new wave of religious Jews from the former Soviet Union, the overall balance swung back a little towards the frum.

The 17th-century New York — well, New Amsterdam — Jews, such as Jacob Barsimon, Solomon Pietersen and Asser and Miriam Levy, should by rights be a kind of alternative Pilgrim Fathers, but they are largely forgotten. And they faced a hostile reception from the head of the Dutch West India Company, Peter Stuyvesant, effectively the growing city’s mayor, whose views on diversity extended to describing the Jews as “a deceitful race… obstinate and immovable, and lacking business integrity.”