Click here to visit Shefa Mehadrin's website
Click here to view JS's website
Home
Add Kosherpages to your favourites
Make Kosherpages your home page

Advertisement
 

Advertisement
 

Advertisement
 
Kosherpages
Updates

Kosherpages Updates

March 05 Kosherpages launches 

December 05 - KP goes national.

June 06 - KP launches business networking events

January 07 - 1st B2B tradeshow

January 08 - 1st Kosher Lifestyle Show

August 08 - Parent & child networking event at the Odeon Manchester

September 08
- Launch of new film review section

September 08 - KP announces The Fed as chosen charity for this year

November 08 - Launch of new Medical Blog By Dr. Martin Harris

March 09 - Kosher Lifestyle Show Manchester

March 09 - Launch of The Kosher Brochure

May 10 - New Owners of KosherPages

June 10 - New look KosherPages

July 10 - KosherPages expands to include Jewish communities nation wide

July 10 - Pick of the Week is introduced to KosherPages - A joke, a quote, a Dvar Torah and more

August 10 - KosherPages now has a Facebook group - come and join us!

November 10 - Your health matters is added to KosherPages

November 10 - New addition to KosherPages - Kosher Fitness column

January 11 - KosherPages introduces "Your Pix" to Pick of the Week

July 11 - Safety First section is added to KosherPages

November 11 - The KosherPages Facebook group reaches 1,000 members

November 11 - KosherPages introduces the monthly competition

March 12 - KosherPages introduces new style "Shabbos Times & More" email. Click here to subscribe.

 

 

 

A great Jewish Bronx tale

Tuesday, 19th July 2011

 

The South Bronx, in 1950 was the home of a large and thriving community, predominantly Jewish.  In the 1950s the Bronx offered synagogues, mikvas (ritual baths), kosher bakeries, and kosher butchers - all the comforts one would expect from an observant Orthodox Jewish community. 

The baby boom of the post war years happily resulted in many new young parents.  As a matter of course, the South Bronx had its own baby equipment store, Sickser's. 

Sickser's was located on the corner of Westchester and Fox, and specialized in "everything for the baby" as its slogan ran. 

The inventory began with cribs, baby carriages, playpens, high chairs, changing tables, and toys.  It went way beyond these to everything a baby could want or need.  Mr Sickser, assisted by his son-in-law Lou Kirshner, ran a profitable business out of the needs of the rapidly expanding child population. 

The language of the store was primarily Yiddish, but Sickser's was a place where not only Jewish families but also many non-Jewish ones could acquire the necessary for their newly arrived bundles of joy. 

Business was particularly busy one spring day, so much so that Mr Sickser and his son-in-law could not handle the unexpected throng of customers.  Desperate for help, Mr Sickser ran out of the store and stopped the first youth he spotted on the street.  "Young man," he panted, "how would you like to make a little extra money? I need some help in the store.  You want to work a little?"

The tall, lanky black boy flashed a toothy smile back.   "Yes, sir, I'd like some work."
"Well then, let's get started."

The boy followed his new employer into the store.   Mr Sickser was immediately impressed with the boy's good manners and demeanor. 

As the days went by and he came again and again to lend his help, Mr Sickser and Lou both became increasingly impressed with the youth's diligence, punctuality, and readiness to learn.  Eventually Mr Sickser made him a regular employee at the store.  It was gratifying to find an employee with an almost soldier-like willingness to perform even the most menial of tasks, and to perform them well. 

From the age of thirteen until his sophomore year in college, this young man put in from twelve to fifteen hours a week, at 50 to 75 cents an hour.  Mostly, he performed general labor: assembling merchandise, unloading trucks and preparing items for shipments.  He seemed, in his quiet way, to appreciate not only the steady employment but also the friendly atmosphere Mr Sickser's store offered. 

Mr Sickser and Lou learned in time about their helper's Jamaican origins, and he in turn picked up a good deal of Yiddish. 

In time the young man was able to converse fairly well with his employers, and more importantly, with a number of the Jewish customers whose English was not fluent.  At the age of seventeen, the young man, while still working part-time at Sickser's, began his first semester at City College of New York.  He fit in just fine with his, for the most part Jewish classmates; hardly surprising, considering that he already knew their ways and their language. 

But the heavy studying in the engineering and, later, geology courses he chose proved quite challenging.  The young man would later recall that Sickser's offered the one stable point in his life those days. 

In 1993, in his position as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, two years after he guided the American victory over Iraq in the Gulf War, General Colin Powell visited the Holy Land   Upon meeting Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir in Jerusalem, he greeted the Israeli with the words

"Mir ken reden Yiddish" (we can speak Yiddish). 

As Shamir, stunned, tried to pull himself together, the to-be Secretary of State continued chatting in his second-favourite language.  Colin Powell never forgot his early days working at Sickser's.
 

Advertisement
 

Advertisement
 

Advertisement