A Sukkah Is Burning: Remembering Williamsburg’s Hasidic Transformation

PHILIP FISHMAN grew up in the Brooklyn Jewish neighborhood of Williamsburg during the 1950s, when the community experienced a large influx of Hasidic Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe and the area evolved from a multi-ethnic Jewishly heterodox community similar to Jewish neighborhoods in other parts of New York City into a tightly knit re-invention of

Categories: Sukkot

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(as of June 22, 2018 7:22 am GMT+0000 - Details)

Added on: June 22, 2018 - More: Comments & Reviews


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PHILIP FISHMAN grew up in the Brooklyn Jewish neighborhood of Williamsburg during the 1950s, when the community experienced a large influx of Hasidic Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe and the area evolved from a multi-ethnic Jewishly heterodox community similar to Jewish neighborhoods in other parts of New York City into a tightly knit re-invention of an ultra-pious East European shtetl. The culture and values of the new arrivals often conflicted sharply with the older community. The fault lines of this kulturkampf were the context of his childhood-and these memoirs vividly describe the personal, familial, and communal tensions associated with this social transformation. Williamsburg’s metamorphosis into an exclusively haredi enclave was the first of its kind in the United States, but this neighborhood’s profound makeover, with the associated community discord, was soon echoed in many other American locales and is occurring in many Israeli communities. The post-war transformation of Williamsburg foreshadowed a dramatic and ongoing transformation of American Orthodoxy and-more broadly- American Jewish life in the 21st century.

Marilyn Schweitzer says:

I was a neighbor I was the girl who lived in the building at the time of the fire in the succah.It was a few weeks before my wedding. Everything in the apartment was burned (my wedding gown was not there)I could not get married from my apartment; an elderly woman on the other side of the building went to her daughter and gave us her apartment, My father had a grocery store nearby on Lee Avenue and we had to live nearby. I clearly remember all the people in the building that were mentioned.I…

anonymous says:

compelling and profound This is a beautiful book that manages to touch us with vivid, heartwarming and sometimes painful moments of childhood and adolescence, while at the same time telling the more complicated social realities of the adult world around him. Dr. Fishman is able to share memories from the perspective of a boy, and the perspective of a historian, and the reader is touched by the profoundness of both. The stories and the people are complex, and reveal the intertwining of poverty and preciousness,…

Viseu de Sus says:

Nostalgic The book is nostalgic for old Williamsburg, and is packed with information, but it does have a tinge of the “Fabbisiner’s Revenge” motif. For example, the parts about his uncles shafting his father and mother were not necessary for a portrait of Jewish life in Williamsburg. His portrayal of the White Shul in Far Rockaway being dead is also inaccurate. It is by far the most vibrant shul in the area.

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