AGUDA ACHIM

A Century of Friendship and Shared Memories of Jewish Life in the Catskills

Benjamin Halpern

Citation

Halpern, Benjamin. “Agudas Achim: A Century of Friendship and Shared Memories of Jewish Life in the Catskills.” New York Folklore, vol. 39:1-2, 2013. pp. 3-11.

Summary

In January 1909, Max Schwartz, a Jewish immigrant from Russia, brought his family to Livingston Manor. He opened a butcher shop on Main Street,and his family thus became Livingston Manor’s first Jewish residents. In April of that same year, my grandparents, Mottel and Manya Sorkin, along with their infant daughter Leya, also settled in the village and opened a tailor shop. Other families soon followed. Livingston Manor was now on the way to becoming a multiethnic community, but not without some bumps in the road.

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