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tours |
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A
Jewish Tour of the Lower East Side
In its
turn-of-the-century heyday, the Lower East Side was home to
a flourishing Jewish community of Germans, Eastern Europeans,
Russians and Greeks. They lived in cramped tenements and peddled
pushcarts or toiled in the garment industry for a living—when
they weren’t agitating for social reform, or establishing
synagogues, community centers, Yiddish theaters and newspapers.
These days, the neighborhood has a different flavor. New waves
of Chinese or Latino immigrants have set up their own shops,
bodegas and religious sites, converting defunct synagogues
into churches and Buddhist temples. And though still an immigrant
hub, the area is also decidedly hip, with pricey boutiques,
swanky nightspots, rising rents, and even a celebrity-proprietor:
the quirky, vegan musician Moby has set up his own tea shop
here. But beneath the L.E.S.'s everchanging
identity, remnants of a gritty, tumultuous, and Jewish past
remain.
BY KATE APPLETON
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Now wedged between Chinese restaurants, fish markets, and
hair salons, the resilient Eldridge Street Synagogue
was designed and built more than a century ago by Jewish Eastern
European immigrants. The synagogue opened in 1887, becoming
the spiritual home for the first Eastern European Orthodox
Jewish congregation in America. After years of makeshift gatherings
in tenements, bakeries and storefronts, New York City Jews
flocked to Eldridge Street; crowds were so great that policeman
patrolled the area on horseback during the high holy days
when as many as 1,000 people might attend services. Today,
the congregation is still active, celebrating the Sabbath
and performing religious services in the basement bes midrash.
The façade and interior of the synagogue reflect an eclectic
mix of Moorish, Romanesque, and Gothic influences: 70-foot
vaulted ceilings, stained glass windows, intricate carvings,
and trompe l’oeil murals. In accordance with the old European
tradition, the bimah (a platform from which the Torah
is read) sits in the center of the sanctuary. Docents provide
informal tours to handfuls of visitors who are welcome to
wander, snap photos, or scan the tiny selection of postcards
and topical books.
Eldridge Street Synagogue
12 Eldridge St, 212-219-0903, 212-219-0888
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So, wondering what those teeming tenements actually looked
like? A guided tour is your only way into the Lower East
Side Tenement Museum, a five-floor landmark built in 1863
whose apartments have been furnished to interpret the lives
of former residents. Tour groups cluster in the narrow, dim,
crumbling, and yet surprisingly ornate tenement entryway before
heading upstairs to visit the apartments. Each apartment tour
relates the tale of a different family. On one tour, the lives
of garment workers are played outfrom the birth of a
shop owner's son to a shiva call for a family mourning a garment
presser felled by tuberculosis. On another, learn how the
Gumpertz and Baldizzi families scraped by during the Great
Depressions of 1873 and 1929. Hint: If you have kids, opt
for the Confino Family tour where children are free to touch
things, try on clothes, and pester the “costumed interpreter”
who plays Victoria Confino, a teenage Sephardic-Jew from Greece.
Tour tickets are sold at the gift shop, which also carries
black-and-white historic postcards, journals, kids toys, hip
souvenirs, and a slew of books on New York, cultural studies,
urban studies, Judaica, travel, and cooking.
Lower East Side Tenement
Museum, 97 Orchard St., 212-431-0233, tenement.org.
Purchase tickets at the Museum gift shop on 90 Orchard
St.
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The only Romaniote (Greek
Jewish) synagogue left in the Western Hemisphere, Kehila
Kedosha Janina struggles to keep alive the traditions and
liturgy of its dwindling congregation. Distinct from Ashkenazim
and Sephardim, Hellenized Jews were once scattered throughout
the Mediterranean, absorbing and contributing to both Greek
and Ottoman Turkish culture. A band of Jewish immigrants from
the Greek village of Janina established the synagogue in 1927.
Recently, their descendents have recorded prayers and excerpts
from weekly services and have converted the balcony—traditionally
reserved for women—into a simple, informative museum. Maps,
posters, photographs, brochures and a brief video trace the
history of the Romaniotes. Docents are on-hand to lead casual
tours, share stories and recipes, and even ply visitors with
the stash of cookies and soda kept in the basement. Don’t forget
to poke around the sanctuary as well. The elaborate olive wood
and metal tiks encasing the torahs are uniquely Romaniote as
is the placement of the seats that run parallel along the sides
of the bimah.
Kehila Kedosha Janina, 280 Broome St. at Allen St., 212-431-1619,
kkjsm.org |
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Locals and tourists
alike stream into big, bustling Katz’s Delicatessen,
the oldest deli in New York (est. 1888) and the only one where
the pastrami and corned beef are still hand-cut. Take a ticket
upon entering and choose whether to wait for table service or
to brave the lines, place your order with a wisecracking counterman,
and watch him at work. A sign hangs from the ceiling, pointing
towards the table where Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal sat during
the “I’ll have what she’s having” scene from When Harry Met
Sally. Photos of celebrities and politicians plaster the
walls; neon signs urge “Send a salami to your boy in the army”
and boast “No connection with any other store.” Specialties
include soft salami, liverwurst, knockwurst, knishes, frankfurters,
and matzo ball soup. A word of warning: this may be the bargain
district, but the sandwiches aren’t cheap ($9.15 for a salami
sub?) and they aren’t kosher either.
Katz’s Delicatessen,
205 Houston St. at Ludlow St., 212-254-2246, katzdeli.com
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Dried fruits and nuts,
chocolates and cheeses line the shelves of the pristine specialty
food shop Russ & Daughters, run by the Russes since 1914.
Historic photographs above the counters suggest little inside
the shop has changed. Fish is still the biggest draw—from the
classic bagel and lox to nova, smoked salmon, homemade pickled
herring, and Caspian Sea caviar.
Russ & Daughters, 179 E. Houston St., 212-475-4880, russanddaughters.com
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The oldest synagogue building in the city had been shut down
and systematically vandalized for over a decade when Spanish
sculptor Angel Orensanz swooped in, purchasing the property
in 1986 and converting it into an art studio. Now known as
the Angel Orensanz Foundation, the synagogue was designed
by Berlin-born architect Alexander Saelzer and intended to
resemble Cologne Cathedral. The 54-foot ceilinged structure
could hold up to 1500 worshippers and was the largest synagogue
in the nation upon its 1849 opening. The Foundation continues
to host shabbas services twice a month—in addition to its
vast cultural programs—and is a popular spot for weddings
and bar mitzvahs.
Angel Orensanz Foundation, 172 Norfolk St., between
Stanton and Houston Sts., 212-529-7194, orensanz.org
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Family-owned and operated for five
generations, Streit’s Matzo Company is the last neighborhood
matzo factory left. Step inside their kosher shop and peer through
windows into the oven-filled space where all the matzos are
made—lightly salted, egg & onion, whole wheat and more. Ask
around and chances are a family member will give you the tour.
Streit’s Matzo Company, 148-150 Rivington St., at the
corner of Suffolk St., 212-475-7000, streitsmatzos.com |
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Take a detour along a quiet stretch
of East Broadway, home to a handful of turn-of-the-century Jewish
landmarks as well as a small, active Orthodox community. The
imposing Forward Building was once the headquarters of
The Jewish Daily Forward, a Yiddish-language paper that
promoted social reform while striving to expose its readers
to American culture and customs. Down the block lies the Educational
Alliance, a community center established in 1889 to provide
immigrants with language and art classes, a free library, and
help “Americanizing.” Keep heading north and you’ll hit Shteibl
Row, a series of former tenements converted into shuls where
worshippers still gather. The nearby Henry Street Settlement,
founded by social worker Lillian Wald in 1893, offers numerous
educational and social services, while also contributing to
the work of the Abrons Arts Center, a collection of theaters,
art studios, and dance spaces found across the street.
Forward Building, 175 E. Broadway
Educational Alliance, 197 E. Broadway, 212-780-2300
Shteibl Row, E. Broadway, between Clinton and Montgomery
Sts.
Henry Street Settlement, 265 Henry St., 212-766-9200,
henrystreet.org
Abrons Arts Center
466 Grand St., 212-598-0400 |
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You’ve made it this far along East
Broadway, another block or two and you’ll have the Bialystoker
Synagogue under your belt as well. Built in 1826, the Federal-style
building originally housed a Methodist Church and served as
a stop on the Underground Railroad. A door along the balcony
exposes a roughly 200-year old ladder leading to an attic where
Canada-bound slaves hid during the Civil War. In 1905 a congregation
of Polish Jews from, that’s right, Bialystok, converted the
building into a synagogue. The stunning, three-story Ark was
transported from Italy that same year and recently gilded in
gold. Paintings of zodiac symbols corresponding to the Jewish
months of the year span the sanctuary ceiling. Bialystoker offers
frequent services and boasts a modern-day membership of 450.
Bialystoker Synagogue, 7-11 Willett St., 212-475-0165,
bialystoker.org
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Note that many of these stops are
closed on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath, and that some of the
featured synagogues have limited visiting hours. Visitors are
advised to call and schedule an appointment in advance. |
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Traditional
Alternatives |
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Gertel’s
Bakery
53 Hestor St., 212-982-3250
Trays parked outside the tiny doorway affirm the faded sign
overhead: “baking done on premises.” While the staff is heavily
Hispanic, the goodies remain decidedly Jewish and Eastern European:
raspberry, chocolate, apricot and cinnamon raisin rugelach,
challah bread, poppy seed cake, bowties and cookies with apricot
paste. |
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Essex
Street Market
120 Essex St. at Delancey St., 212-388-0449, essexstreetmarket.com,
schapiro-wine.com.
Hoping to rid the streets of pushcart peddlers, Mayor Fiorello
H. La Guardia set up this indoor market in 1939. Batista Grocery,
Luis’s Meat Market and the bulk of today’s food, tchotcke and
clothing stands cater to Latino tastes. A notable exception:
Schapiro’s Wines, a LES fixture since 1899, sells kosher wines
on weekdays. |
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Beth Hamedras
Hagadol
60 Norfolk St., 212-374-4100
Home of America’s oldest Orthodox Jewish Russian congregation,
the synagogue remains a center of religious study and interpretation
of Jewish law. |
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First Roumanian-American
Congregation
89/91 Rivington St., 212-673-2835
This strikingly red brick synagogue, originally a Romanesque
church, made its name in cantorial music. |
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Published on August 18, 2004
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| The New
L.E.S. Scene |
teany
90 Rivington St., between Orchard and Ludlow Sts., 212-475-9190,
teany.com.
Techno-pop star Moby co-opened this tea room and cafe where
the breakfast-to-late-night menu features "teany bagels" with
melted Cheddar and faux Canadian bacon, tomatillo-squash soup,
and vegan vanilla-bean strawberry shortcake. |
Schiller's Liquor
Bar
131 Rivington St., at Norfolk St. 212-260-4555, schillersny.com
Bistro and brasserie king Keith McNally brings steak-frites,
cloudy mirrors, and yards of brass railings to the LES. |
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'inoteca
98 Rivington St., 212-614-0473.
Rustic wood tables, walls lined with wine bottles, and plenty
to nibblefried olives, mini-meatballs flecked with orange
zest, and some of the city's best panini and tramezzini.
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Il Laboratorio del
Gelato
95 Orchard St., 212-343-9922, laboratoriodelgelato.com
Hidden among the discount-clothing shops and next door to the
Lower East Side Tenement Museum is this gourmet-ice-cream parlor,
serving up a rotating array of 100 irresistible gelatos and
sorbets |
wd-50
50 Clinton St., between Stanton and Rivington Sts. 212-477-2900,
wd-50.com
Wylie Dufresne's menu is an aggressive display of food as high
art, including flattened squares of raw oyster, delicate tuilles
constructed from chorizo, and oblong portions of dessert cake
made from parsnips. |
The Delancey
168 Delancey St., at Clinton St. 212-254-9920.
The club colonization of the LES continues with this three-floor,
three bar, three DJ booth club. There's a rooftop complete with
a fish pond and buzz-worthy DJs onhand. |
Sin-é
150 Attorney St., between Houston and Stanton Sts., 212-388-0077,
sin-e.com.
Sin-é has quickly established itself on the indie-rock
ladder and makes a great, relaxed place to discover new bands.
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