Bridging Three Worlds;
Hungarian-Jewish Americans,
1848 – 1914
By Robert Pearlman
The University of Massachusetts
Press, Amherst, 1991
Contents
In
Hungary
A Very Short History of Hungary
Jews and Magyars
The Quid pro Quo Arrangement
Religion, Languages, and Folklore
Two Jewries
Migrating
and Settling
The ‘48ers
Three Families
The Big Migration
Urban Colonies
Small Town Diaspora
Three
Worlds
The Magyar Connection
The Jewish Bond
The American Door
Flickers and Reflections
When
I began researching my Jewish roots I knew there was a lot I did not know. My
Jewish grandfather died before I was born so I had no exposure the culture or
religion. When Robert Friedman started doing the research for me traced my
Gartner family back to Hungary I knew nothing about that country either.
I
sent off an email to Robert, asking him to recommend something I could read so
I could learn what life was like for the Gartners. One of the books he suggested
was Bridging Three Worlds.
First
the book gave me a short history of Hungary, where my great grandfather, Leopold
Gartner and his family lived beginning about 1864. Then it painted a picture of
the immigration process as it would have been about 1874 when Leopold came to
New York City. The book taught me about Jewish settlements in Manhattan’s Lower
East Side and the major occupations of those Hungarian-Jewish neighborhoods. Not
having any family stories about this part of my family this book helped flesh
out the details. I’m very glad to have this book.
Background knowledge makes you appreciate what our ancestors experienced and accomplished in thier quest for a better tomorrow..
ReplyDeleteYes, Charlie, you are exactly right.
DeleteI'm always on the lookout for books that will help me understand ancestral movements and lives. This sounds like an excellent source for background on my Hungarian/Jewish ancestors. Thanks for recommending it! Also, have you read the "The Bread Givers" by Anzia Yezierska? It's a fictionalized version of the life and times, melodramatic but engrossing because the everyday details are so vivid.
ReplyDeleteMarion, 'The Bread Givers' sounds like a book I'd like to read. Thanks for sharing that and thanks for stopping by & leaving a comment.
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