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Richard Rabinowitz

Oral history interview conducted by Sarita Daftary-Steel

December 08, 2014

Call number: 2015.011.17

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0:00 - Parents’ lives during the 1930s and 1940s

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6:17 - Buying home on Bradford Street and the neighborhood in the 1950s

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16:35 - Jewish identity and relations with other ethnic groups

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20:17 - East New York geography, PS 213, and educational aspirations

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26:47 - Libraries, George Gershwin Junior High School, YM and YWHA

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31:37 - New Lots Avenue commercial district and Jewish religious education

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34:47 - Brooklyn Dodgers, Communist uncle, and integration

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42:37 - George Gershwin Junior High School integration, ethnic neighborhoods

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47:45 - Block busting, White flight, and social mobility

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58:43 - Public housing, neighborhood development, growing up in the 1950s

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69:51 - Broadway and researching plays with Black characters

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75:16 - Integration of East New York and Fortunoff

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84:00 - Rapid switch from Jewish to Black families on the block

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88:04 - Destruction of the Jewish community

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93:58 - What led to White flight

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101:41 - Effect of racism on social policy

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109:39 - Close knit community in East New York

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119:03 - Brownsville and the Jewish community

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122:38 - Segregation of New York City and Black community leadership

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Interview Description

Oral History Interview with Richard Rabinowitz
Richard Rabinowitz was born in the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn in 1945. His father was a Jewish American and his mother was a Jewish immigrant who emigrated from Poland in 1928. His family purchased a home on Bradford Street, between Hegeman Avenue and Linden Boulevard, in 1948, and they remained there until 1966 or 1967. He attended PS 213, George Gershwin Junior High School, and Stuyvesant High School. He moved to Massachusetts and attended Harvard University before returning to Brooklyn in the 1980s. Rabinowitz is a public historian and founder of the American History Workshop. He lives in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn with his wife.

In the interview, Richard Rabinowitz discusses his parents' lives in the 1930s and 1940s, his childhood growing up in the Jewish community of the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn in the 1950s, local businesses and schools, White flight, race relations, and integration. The interview was conducted by Sarita Daftary-Steel at Rabinowitz's home in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn.

The collection consists of twenty oral history interviews (with nineteen narrators) conducted by Sarita Daftary-Steel with residents (past and present) of the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn. The interviews were conducted between January 2014 and February 2015. The project was designed to capture the experiences of East New York residents who lived in the neighborhood during the period when families of color (African American, West Indian, and Puerto Rican) moved in and White families moved out, and the resulting decline of services and quality of life that followed. This process began as early as the 1950s and continued through the rest of the twentieth century. Sarita Daftary-Steel is a community organizer who worked for United Community Centers from 2003 to 2013, most of those years as the East New York Farms! Project Director.

Citation

Rabinowitz, Richard, Oral history interview conducted by Sarita Daftary-Steel, December 08, 2014, Sarita Daftary-Steel collection of East New York oral histories, 2015.011.17; Brooklyn Historical Society.

People

  • Brooklyn Dodgers (Baseball team)
  • George Gershwin J.H.S. 166 (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)
  • P.S. 213 (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)
  • Rabinowitz, Richard

Topics

  • Housing
  • Jewish neighborhoods
  • Jews
  • Public schools
  • Race relations
  • Real estate business
  • School integration
  • Urban policy

Places

  • Bradford Street (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)
  • Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
  • Brownsville (New York, N.Y.)
  • East New York (New York, N.Y.)

Finding Aid

Sarita Daftary-Steel collection of East New York oral histories