Shabbos in the city that never sleeps
I produced this series of images for Flemish-language newspaper De Morgen’s weekly magazine, to accompany a story by journalist Margot Vanderstraeten who had spent time with young Modern Orthodox Jewish families from Antwerp who were now living in New York City. The only hitch: None of the subjects she interviewed wanted to be photographed.
The result: a parallel visual reportage to accompany Margot’s article, for which I researched opportunities to photograph in NYC’s Modern Orthodox community that would illustrate some of her key themes and questions, seeking to show how this current generation of young, global professionals combines strict religious traditions with life in the modern world. Under the time constraints of our deadline, I was able to visit synagogues and places of learning, dressmakers and sheitel machers, a singles mixer and a hip new kosher bar/restaurant in SoHo. I was able to attend the rehearsal for a beautiful cantor and choir performance, and talked at length with a female scholar about the role of women in Modern Orthodox religious services. A helpful French family showed me their Shabbat meal set-up. Only, on Sunday, when I would be allowed to photograph it.
This is but a brief glimpse into parts of NYC that aren’t often noticed by those outside of this community. Over the course of ten days, I visited the Bronx, the Five Towns on Long Island, parts of Brooklyn, and, repeatedly, the Upper West Side. The push and pull of how much to engage with the outside, secular world is an ongoing balancing act for each individual and family, within the context of their larger community.
While the subjects of the story who had left Antwerp to make their homes in NYC were open to the idea of participating in an extended media piece, their families – the older generation left behind in Belgium – as it turned out, were not. This reflects the younger generation’s dual identity of growing up in, but leaving behind, a European community that is very insular and suspicious of the outside world, for obvious and understandable reasons. The article focuses on the liberating experience of discovering a much more open, proud and assertive Jewish culture in the U.S., and the implications that this has for the Jewish Orthodox communities in Europe, with so many young professionals migrating to Israel and the United States.