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The Jewish Chronicle

Of feasts, fasts, and far-off Finsbury Park

August 21, 2014 12:23
On track: trams and trolley-buses on London’s Seven Sisters Road in 1952

By

Lawrence Cohen,

Lawrence Cohen

6 min read

For some it's Rehov Ben Yehuda, for others the Nevsky Prospekt or the Unter den Linden.

But for me, born 1947, the issue of a late-returning soldier and a never-say-die spinster, delivered in the Royal Northern Hospital, succoured in rented rooms above an ironmonger's shop in Green Lanes, wheeled in my pram through Finsbury Park to bear witness to the first crocuses of spring, initiated some few years later into the cult of football at Highbury, the stretch of the Seven Sisters Road between Holloway Road and Manor House is the highway that links all the meaningful locations in my early life.

Growing up as an only child in early 1950s Harringay, on the same latitude as Stamford Hill, but to all intents and purposes, a galaxy away, I inhabit a world of horse-drawn milk carts, bomb sites and pea-souper fogs, where stout aunts pull on my cheeks as a sign of affection leaving my eyes watering with pain. I am able to work out for myself that Kanine a Horror are words of endearment rather than a curse on a rabid dog, but often adults say things which leave me confused and speechless.

"Lawrence, tell us about your feasts and fasts." Forty-one pairs of English and Cypriot eyes turn on the only Jewish child in the class at South Harringay Junior School. At the age of seven I am having difficulty working out what I am supposed to say. Miss Diprose, sensitive to my bewilderment, attempts to tease an answer out of me: "I mean, do you have a fast and then a feast," she smiles encouragingly, "or is it the other way round?"