In an excerpt from 'Meant To Be', the founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center and its Museum of Tolerance remembers growing up on the Lower East Side.
It has been more than 50 years since I left New York City’s Lower
East Side. But that immigrant neighborhood of crowded tenements,
synagogues, kosher delis, and Yiddish theaters has never left me. The
people and places I first encountered on its bustling streets did not
just form a backdrop to my childhood; they shaped my view of the world
and my place in it. Every decision I’ve made, every project I’ve
undertaken, can be traced back to those endearing characters on Cannon,
Columbia, Grand, Delancey, Essex, and Henry streets.
There was our family dentist, Dr. Celnicker, who cut costs by making
temporary fillings from yesterday’s newspapers. “Moishele,” he said to
me one day as I looked past my scuffed saddle shoes and out the window
to Clinton Street from his reclining dental chair. “Do you want me to
use the sports section, or would you prefer the movie section?”
“I wouldn’t mind Joe DiMaggio’s box score!” I answered.
Across the street, the Syd and Howe Candy Store sold chocolate syrup
that made the best egg creams in the neighborhood. Every Friday, cars
lined up on Houston Street, trunks opened wide, waiting to be filled
with two-gallon glass bottles. One afternoon as I was sipping an egg
cream at the soda fountain, a Chassid barged in waving a bottle
overhead. “It’s just milk and chocolate—it’s kosher, right?”
“Absolutely,” replied Joe the Fountain Man. “Just don’t drink it with a fleishig [meat] kugel.”
Harry the Pickle Man was a fixture of the neighborhood. My buddies
Willie Lehrer, Sheldon Miner, and Seymour Brier and I would sometimes
meet at his stall between Sherriff and Columbia streets, and tussle for
the best positions around Harry’s stout wooden barrel. Convinced that
the bottom of the barrel yielded the most flavorful pickles, every woman
had the same request for Harry, better known by his Yiddish name,
Hershele:
“Please Hershele, zei a zoy gut [be so kind] and give me nor fin hintin [only from the bottom].”
As I watched Hershele submerge each glass jar—and the sleeves of his
heavy wool coat—into the dilled brine, I decided it must be the wool
that gave his pickles their unique flavor.
Some of the great Jewish sages of our generation lived on the Lower
East Side. Strolling down East Broadway, you might overhear your
neighbor offering, “A gutten tag, Rebbe” (Have a good
day, rabbi) to Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, the world-renowned Lithuanian
rabbi and scholar. Or you might see a young mother waiting outside the
famous Boyaner Rebbe’s shul to beseech him to say a special prayer for
her sick child.
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Source: Tablet Magazine
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