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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Crown Heights Jews vs. their fashionable hipster neighbors

Rabbi Joe Speilman was head of Jewish Community Council. with his wife on their front stoop. 1276 President St

Religious Jews upset at new neighbors dress and bar hopping

It’s the hipsters vs. the Hasids in Crown Heights.

Religious Jews are upset at their new, young neighbors for everything from women wearing shorts; bar hopping and sunbathing.

An anonymous Crown Heights landlord set off an e-firestorm this week when he posted

on popular Jewish site collive.com Sunday, calling to stop “these yuppies (who) bring pritzus (immodesty) to our neighborhood.”

“It’s a clash of different cultures,” said blogger Shmarya Rosenberg who reposted the missive on FailedMessiah.com.

The landlord took a shot at fellow Hasids who rent to young people who have increasingly moved into the neighborhood’Jewish enclave near Kingston Ave.

: “Young, upwardly mobile professionals may seem to be pleasant tenants who bring in reliable income, but they also introduce a very different way of life: new nightclubs and bars, sun tanning on rooftops, bike lanes and an increasing amount of immodesty on our streets.”

The corner of Kingston Avenue and Eastern Parkway is home base of the international Chabad-Lubavtich movement which follows the teaching of spiritual leader Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson.

Tznius, or modesty, is a top tenent where women are required to wear skirts below the knee and cover their arms above the elbow. Also men and women aren’t allowed to touch each other unless they are married.

“We like to live by a certain set of rules,” said Rabbi Joseph Spielman. “It is an area where we don’t want our children seeing these things.

“Anyone who treasures this neighborhood should know what to do. They should know not to harm the ambience of the area,” Spielman added.

Crown Heights has become a 20-something fave attracting young professionals and artists priced out of other neighborhoods like Williamsburg and Park Slope.

But the newcomers said there is no crash course on how to deal with their Lubavitch neighbors strict moral codes when they move into their apartments.

“I wear shorts in the winter time with leggings underneath them,” said Andrea Brito Nunez, 24, who came to Sterling Place near Kingston Avenue in September. “I don’t want to offend anyone. It is their neighborhood more than mine. But everyone should be able to dress how they want to dress.”

4 comments:

  1. OMG!!!! How stupid can the Chabadnicks be? They shouldnt be renting to good people who have jobs and will make the neighborhood safer. They need to rent to criminals and welfare people so this way they can keep Crown Heights the ghetto it is and always should be! A real shanda I tell you!

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  2. I live here and love the diversity and the prices of property values are only rising especially with the new NETS stadium almost done

    We love diversity and the person the interviewed is a pure phyco wierdo from yesteryear!!!!

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  3. this spielman guy should hide in a basemnt forever,

    he is part of the gamg that tried to destroy our comunity.

    and was subsequently voted out.

    this guy should not be alowed telling pepole what is good or not good.

    he gave 4 aprtment buildungs awy to holess shelters 2 of which were in the heart of crown heights.

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  4. Who the Hell would want to live in Crown Heights ,I grew up in Crown Heights ,it is a mouse & roach infested area with an extremely high crime rate outside of the 5 block radius of kingston ave.It is a garbage dump& any so called hipster that moves in ,is out of desperation & they do not stay their for long.As far as tznius,modesty they should worry about themselves ,because in C.H. a good amount of girls & women do not dress in a modest way ,they look like they are ready to go clubing 24 hours a day with the tightest & tackiest outfits available.

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