Borough Park, Brooklyn

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Borough Park
Boro Park
Neighborhood of Brooklyn
Nickname(s): "Baby boom capital" of New York City
14th Avenue
14th Avenue
Country  United States
State  New York
City New York City
Borough Brooklyn
Languages[1]
List
Area
 • Total 2.071 sq mi (5.36 km2)
Population (2010)
 • Total 154,210
 • Density 74,000/sq mi (29,000/km2)
Demographics 2013[2]
 • White 69.35%
 • Black 4.30%
 • Hispanic (of any race) 4.90%
 • Asian 13.89%
 • Other 7.56%
ZIP codes 11204, 11218–11220
Median household income $37,438[3]

Borough Park (also spelled Boro Park) is a neighborhood in the southwestern part of the borough of Brooklyn, in New York City in the United States; Borough Park covers an extensive grid of streets between Bensonhurst to the south, Bay Ridge to the southwest, Sunset Park to the west, Kensington to the northeast, Flatbush to the east, and Midwood to the southeast.

Borough Park is home to one of the largest Orthodox Jewish communities outside of Israel, with one of the largest concentrations of Jews in the United States, and Orthodox traditions rivaling many insular communities.[4] As the average number of children in Hasidic and Hareidi families is 6.72, Borough Park is experiencing sharp growth in population.[5] It is an economically diverse neighborhood.[6]

History

Early development and railroads

Originally, it was Blythebourne, a small hamlet composed of cottages built and developed in 1887 by Electus Litchfield,[note 1] and then expanded with more housing by developer William Reynolds.[7][8] It was served by the Brooklyn, Bath and Coney Island, a steam railroad that is today's elevated BMT West End Line; the line ran from Greenwood Cemetery to Coney Island when it was built in the 1860s. This line was put on an elevated structure in 1917.[9]

The Sea Beach Railroad was another steam railroad. This railroad was named after the Sea Beach Palace Hotel, its southern terminal in 1879. In 1913, it was electrified and placed in an open cut.[9]

In 1902, State Senator William H. Reynolds bought the land northeast of Blythebourne. The new area was then named Borough Park. Blythebourne was absorbed into Borough Park by the 1920s.[10]

Jewish settlement

Borough Park in winter

The area is predominantly Jewish. Jewish immigrants began populating Borough Park at the turn of the 20th century, beginning in 1904–05.[11] Through the 1930s, 13th Avenue was lined with pushcart vendors[12] and pickle sellers.[13] In the late 1930s the city opened a public market on 42nd Street to force an end to the pushcart trade. Thirteenth Avenue gentrified into an avenue of specialty shops interspersed with regular merchandise stores, and the avenue itself turned into a place "to see and be seen".[14]

In the 1980s, the neighborhood changed demographically from one of Italian, Irish, and Modern Orthodox Jewish to Hasidic Jewish families. In response, new shops and restaurants opened on 13th Avenue to serve the expanding Haredi community. In 1987, two of the most popular stores debuted: Eichler's Judaica bookstore and Kosher Castle Dairy Cafeteria. New stores also opened selling imported goods and computer technology.[15] At the end of the 1990s, businesses began selling electronics and Jewish books, music and videos to overseas customers via the Internet.[11] The area continued developing into a very large Jewish enclave around that time period.[4]

"Baby Boom Capital" nickname

In a 2000 Census study, it was reported that an estimated 76,600 Jews lived in Borough Park.[16] Since that time, Borough Park has grown significantly, and has earned the title of "baby boom capital" of New York City because of its high birth rate. The population in 2011 was 140,000. The neighborhood recorded 4,523 births in 2004,[17] the highest in the city. The closest Brooklyn neighborhood in terms of population growth was Williamsburg, home to many Satmar Hasidim, which reported 3,839 births. Borough Park's birth rate, 24.4 per 1,000 residents, has translated into major growth in the neighborhood.

Many of these births occur at Maimonides Medical Center, a prominent hospital in the Borough Park area. The Maimonides Infants & Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn is fully accredited as a “children’s hospital within a hospital”; it is just one of only three such facilities in New York City.[18] Here, at The Stella and Joseph Payson Birthing Center, Maimonides handles more births than any other hospital in New York State.[19]

Hasidic families often require larger homes, and this has fueled construction and renovation projects across the neighborhood. The vast majority of these projects involve larger bedrooms and kitchens. Since 1990, the Building Department has issued more permits for private construction projects - new homes and additions - in the Borough Park area than in any other residential neighborhood in Brooklyn."[6] These construction projects were aided with a new law in 1992, which established Borough Park as a special zoning district where residents could build on 65% of their lot. This reduced the size of setbacks and backyards tremendously.

Business development

Former factory, redeveloped for offices
13th Avenue in Borough Park

Local stores and businesses are currently gaining economically. Thirteenth Avenue, a commercial strip roughly one mile in length from 39th street to about 55th street, is packed with storefronts supplying Jewish households. Many Hasidic Jews shop loyally at these stores, coming from all parts of the city, other states, and even other countries to buy kosher items. Businesses have benefited from the growing Jewish population, the increasing density of the neighborhood, and the use of entrepreneurial spirit on the Internet.[20]

The community has achieved global recognition, especially among Israeli expatriates and tourists. In 1987, The Park House Hotel opened its doors between 12th and 13th Avenues on 48th Street as the first kosher Hotel in Borough Park. In 1999, a kosher hotel called "The Avenue Plaza Hotel" opened on 13th Avenue, becoming the first hotel to appear in the neighborhood in more than a decade. These hotels are popular attractions for visitors to New York City, and they are among the few hotels that can accommodate the needs of many Hasidim.

Banks include HSBC (formerly Republic National Bank formerly Bank Leumi), Washington Mutual (formerly Dime Bancorp, and now part of JPMorgan Chase), and Citibank, all with local branches for decades. A booming economy has brought in others including Apple, North Fork now Capital One, Sovereign Bank (formerly Independence Community, now part of Santander), JP Morgan Chase, Berkshire, Liberty Pointe, Astoria, TD Bank, formerly Commerce Bank, Dime Savings Bank of Williamsburgh, Metropolitan National Bank, Valley National Bank, and Bank of America.

Education

IS 223, The Montauk School

The New York City Department of Education operates Borough Park's public schools; NYCDOE's District 20 covers Borough Park.[21] P.S./I.S. 180 Homewood School, a zoned public K-8 school, receives many bused-in students from other neighborhoods, including Bay Ridge and Bensonhurst. Many elementary schools have had mixed results from this student drain. For example, in 2004 Joyce Purnick of The New York Times stated that Public School 164 in Borough Park "...is at only 89 percent of capacity because many children in the community attend yeshivas. Classes are small, the hallways quiet, the principal and assistant principal know every student by name."[22] Subsequently, the percentage of children reading at or above the grade level has increased to 55% in 2004 from 40% in 1998 in an otherwise unchanged school.

Most Borough Park neighborhood parents send children to Jewish private schools (called yeshivot).[23] In fact, virtually all the large population of school-children born into Borough Park's Hasidic families attend local yeshivas for boys and Beis Yaakov-type schools for girls. This has diminished the student population of local schools, such as Montauk Intermediate School. The New York City Department of Education hoped to take advantage of the empty space and construct a small school, called the Kingsborough Early College School, inside Montauk.[24] The Hasidic community was not pleased by the prospect of a new public school because it would bring "a bad element" (a supposed euphemism for immodestly attired girls), and protested the decision. The Community Educational Council heard these complaints and decided against expanding its public school system.

Police

66th Precinct

The Hasidic community has developed a network of residents to handle emergencies in the neighborhood. Hatzolah is a volunteer ambulance group composed of emergency medical technicians and paramedics.[25] Brooklyn South Safety Patrol Shomrim is a citizens watch group that is sanctioned by the New York City Police Department (NYPD) community affairs division. They respond to security related calls in the area, and are called upon by the NYPD to assist in searches for missing persons. The Hasidic community has been able to form ties with the local authorities. The neighborhood is under the 66th Precinct of the NYPD.[26]

Religion

Munkacs World Headquarters

Borough Park is home to many Hasidic groups, the largest being the Hasidic Bobov sect; the Belz, Ger, Satmar, Stolin, Vizhnitz, Munkacz, Spinka, Klausenburg, Skver, and Puppa communities also reside here, among others. There is a minority of Hareidi non-Hasidic Lithuanian Jews (typically called Litvish or Yeshivish), with a smaller number of Modern Orthodox Jews. There is also a large population of Yemenite Jews, many of whom immigrated in the early 1920s.

In Brooklyn, about 37% of Jews consider themselves Orthodox,[27] and Borough Park is often referred to as the "heartland" or "home" for New York's Orthodox Jewish population[citation needed]. The neighborhood became largely Orthodox in the last 40 years, making a transformation sometimes referred to as "suburb to shtetl."[28]

During much of the early 1900s, the Jewish population in Borough Park, and Brooklyn as a whole, was part of a much more liberal-leaning voting block. However, many of these early Jewish families moved to the suburbs or other places around the city while more conservative Hasidic Jews (many of them survivors of the Holocaust and immigrant families from Eastern Europe) joined their neighborhoods. As a result, the overwhelming majority of the Hasidic population in Borough Park and Brooklyn introduced a more traditional Jewish religious lifestyle. A 2002 study by the UJA Federation-New York revealed that only 2% of Borough Park's Jews identified themselves as Reform Jews and nearly three-fourths identified themselves as Orthodox Jews.[29]

Religious observances

Grand Rabbi Pinchos Dovid Horowitz, The Bostoner Rebbe of New York and Chuster Rebbe of Borough Park

The Hasidic population adheres strongly to halakha (Jewish law) and the Shulkhan Arukh (halakhic code), following many Judaic laws in their daily lives. Saturday is the Shabbos (Yiddish pronunciation of Hebrew shabbat, Jewish Sabbath), a day of rest, which is strictly observed by most members of the community. In some areas, a siren is sounded on Friday before sundown to indicate the arrival of the Shabbos. Culturally and religiously, the Jewish population of the neighborhood is considered one of the most Orthodox in the world, as "[m]any families do not own televisions or attend movies. The children attend yeshivas instead of public schools. Adolescent girls do not leave the house without making certain that their knees and elbows are covered, and at weddings and funerals alike, women and men sit separately to avoid physical contact, as required by religious law."[30] Additionally, most stores in Borough Park sell or prepare only kosher food made under rabbinical supervision. There was a large controversy surrounding the erection of an eruv in Borough Park, because of differing interpretations of the application of Jewish law. An eruv was built in 1999-2000 and encompasses about 225 blocks in Borough Park. Its use is still the subject of controversy.

Bobov

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Borough Park is home to the headquarters of Hasidic Judaism's large Bobov community, numbering several thousand families (exact number unknown),[31] It is one of Brooklyn's largest Hasidic communities and has followers in Canada, England, Belgium and Israel.

In 2005, the Bobover Rebbe, Rabbi Naftali Zvi Halberstam, died. A quarrel ensued over who should succeed him. The dispute was resolved by an arbitration panel known as a beth din, which decided that Rabbi Ben Zion Aryeh Leibish Halberstam, the former Rebbe's half-brother, retains all Bobov institutions. The faction that split created their own institutions and is headed by the former Rebbe's second son in law, Rabbi Mordechai Dovid Unger; the name of their institution is Bobov-45. In August 2014, the Beth Din prohibited the Bobov-45 group from using the name Bobov without an accompanying name, as in Bobov-45.

Transportation

The B8, B9, B11, B16, B35 New York City Bus routes serve the area, as well as the private B110 bus route to the predominantly Jewish neighborhood of Williamsburg. The New York City Subway's BMT West End Line, serving the D trains, is at 55th Street, 50th Street, and Fort Hamilton Parkway. The IND Culver Line, serving the F trains, runs along McDonald Avenue, the eastern border of Borough Park. The BMT Sea Beach Line on the N services also serves the neighborhood at Fort Hamilton Parkway.[32]

Notable residents

Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax

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Notes

  1. His grandson, Electus D. Litchfield, continued as an architect and real estate developer.

References

  1. "Census data". Greenpoint Languages Spoken
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  4. 4.0 4.1 Barnes, Julian. "A Debate Over Strictures For Sabbath Observance." The New York Times. New York, N.Y. June 2, 2000. pg. B.1
  5. Shick, Marvin "A Census of Jewish Day Schools in The United States."
  6. 6.0 6.1 Sontag, Deborah. "Orthodox Neighborhood Reshapes Itself." The New York Times. January 7, 1998. pg. A1.
  7. Oscar Israelowitz, Borough Park, Centennial Edition 1898-1998, (Israelowitz Publishing)
  8. Kenneth T. Jackson and John B. Manbeck, The Neighborhoods of Brooklyn, (Yale University Press) 1998.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Borough Park, Forgotten NY
  10. Map and Photos of Borough Park
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  18. http://www.maimonidesmed.org/Main/ClinicalServices/Pediatrics_Infants_Childrens_Hospital_85.aspx
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  21. "District 20." Insideschools.org. Retrieved on November 15, 2008.
  22. Purnick, Joyce. "Schools Find New Test, For Themselves.", The New York Times. April 5, 2004. pg. B.1
  23. "Ps/Is 180 Homewood School." Insideschools.org. Retrieved on November 15, 2008.
  24. Gootman, Elissa. "Plans for a Public School Upset Brooklyn Hasidim." The New York Times. February 3, 2006. pg. B3(Local)
  25. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20E1EFC395D0C778CDDAD0894D1494D81
  26. NYPD Precinct 66
  27. Heilman, Samuel C. "The Young and the Restless.", [Op-Ed] The New York Times. April 9, 2006. pg. 4.13.
  28. "The Devout Raise a City Within a City And Prosper" The New York Times, September 15, 1995
  29. Newman, Andy. "In Orthodox Borough Park, Last Holdouts Get Strange Looks; Reform Jews, Adrift in a Sea of Black Hats.", The New York Times. May 13, 2005. pg. B1(Local)
  30. Confessore, Nicholas, Farmer, Ann. "In Borough Park, the Unusual Taste of Fear.", The New York Times. May 10, 2006. pg. B.3
  31. Newman, Andy. "A Battle for Succession Takes No Holiday.", The New York Times, March 26, 2005 p. B4 col 01 (19 col in)
  32. http://web.mta.info/nyct/maps/busbkln.pdf
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