Eastern European Jews and Blacks
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Eastern European Jews came to New York for a few reasons. One reason was due to the treatment that they received back in Eastern Europe. “In 1891 thousands of privileged Jews were expelled without warning from Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Kiev. Thousands more were deprived of their livelihoods as innkeepers and restaurateurs in 1897 when the liquor traffic became a government monopoly. Finally, coercion culminated in violence. The spontaneous outbreaks of 1881, the massacre at Kishinev in 1903, the pogroms that followed, and the revolution of 1905 obliterated hope.” (pg. 24 The Promised City: New Yorks Jews) Laws had created to prohibit Jews from doing many things simply because they were Jews. “In the 1880s tyranny was codified in the May Laws, which prohibited Jews from owning or renting land in outside towns and cities and discouraged them from living in villages.” The Jews left their Eastern European home to escape the harsh treatment that they received and the unreasonable laws created against them.
Due to the laws that were created against Jews, many were left poverty stricken. “The crisis in the Lives of Jews was accentuated rather than disguised by the hum and bustle of trader, artisan, factory worker, and day laborerTwo- and three-room huts stuffed to bursting with lean, cadaverous caricatures of humanity,” housed from seven to thirty people.” (Pg.30 The Promised City: New Yorks Jews) This sort of living condition and even worse influenced the migration of Eastern European Jews to New York.
The reasons why the Eastern European Jews migrated to New York are similar to that of the Southern Blacks. Some Southern Blacks fled the South to escape from social prosecution due to racism. “Capitulation to racism that characterized the southern attitude toward the Negro from the late 1880s through the early twentieth century. Vast numbers of Jim Crow laws were passed in these years as the forces which held virulent southern racism in check suddenly crumbled.”(pg. 21 Harlem: The Making of a Ghetto) The southern blacks also wanted “expanded opportunity.”(Pg.22 Harlem: The Making of a Ghetto) In that sense the reasons why the Southern Blacks and the Jews were similar however the Southern Blacks who migrated were no the ones who were exposed to slavery.