A Time for Building: The Third Migration, 1880-1920Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992 - 306 pages "In this volume, [the author] focuses on how the eastern European Jewish migration, which set the tone for American Jewry in the final decades of the nineteenth century, confronted the issue of accommodation and group survival. A distinctive political and general culture, which amalgamated traditional Jewish and new American values, was established by the immigrant generation. That Yiddish-speaking transitional culture, which prevailed in the ethnic enclaves of the cities, was considerably modified once Jews left these core communities and after World War I, the cultural energy of the immigrant generation waned"--Series editor's foreword. |
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Page 24
... remained a proletariat of shops . ” 36 Although factory owners preferred Christian workers partly because of prejudice against Jews , there were undoubtedly other reasons as well , espe- cially since Jewish factory owners also tended to ...
... remained a proletariat of shops . ” 36 Although factory owners preferred Christian workers partly because of prejudice against Jews , there were undoubtedly other reasons as well , espe- cially since Jewish factory owners also tended to ...
Page 83
... remained with their mothers and siblings suffered from neglect and the need to help supplement their families ' incomes.49 Although the great majority of Jewish men remained with their wives and children , the trauma of migration and ...
... remained with their mothers and siblings suffered from neglect and the need to help supplement their families ' incomes.49 Although the great majority of Jewish men remained with their wives and children , the trauma of migration and ...
Page 87
... remained literally alien to the adults of the East Side . English , German , and even Russian were spoken in the various citizen education courses , but Yiddish , the actual language of the ghetto , was not . Even at the alliance's ...
... remained literally alien to the adults of the East Side . English , German , and even Russian were spoken in the various citizen education courses , but Yiddish , the actual language of the ghetto , was not . Even at the alliance's ...
Contents
Prologue | 1 |
Chapter | 12 |
о Chapter Two The Immigration Experience | 38 |
Copyright | |
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American Jewish Congress American Jewish History anti-Semitism arrived Association became become Boston Brandeis Cahan century Chicago Cleveland congregations Congress continued culture December developed early eastern Europe eastern European eastern European Jews economic established ethnic experience German Jewish German Jews ghetto Hebrew helped Henry House hundred important increased industry institutions interests Jacob Jewish community Jewish immigrants Jewry Judaism kehillah labor labor movement landsmanshaftn leaders less living Louis Marshall Lower East Side majority March mass Migration mobility moved movement organizations Orthodox particularly party percent Philadelphia political population Publication Quoted Rabbi radical Reform relatively religious remained represented Russian schools secular September settlement social Socialist Society South Street strike Studies synagogues thousand tion towns traditional union United University Press West women workers World Yiddish York City young Zionist