
A few weeks ago, the Los Angeles Times ran
an article about the death of Eddie Goldstein,
“the last Jewish man of Boyle Heights.” Goldstein, who died on January
5 at
79, was born in Boyle Heights and stayed there all his life, becoming a sort of final link with Boyle Heights of the
1920s and
30s, when it was the Jewish neighborhood in L.A.
During those years, Boyle Heights was home to some
50,
000 Jews. The neighborhood, directly east of downtown, had kosher butchers and
delis, including the original Canter’s, an L.A. institution. There were synagogues for the religious, workers and Yiddish societies for the secular, movie theaters, bookie joints, a pool hall, and the Ebony Room bar, a haunt of the community’s most infamous son, Mickey Cohen.
By the time I lived in L.A. in the mid-
1970s, Boyle Heights was already heavily Latino. I’d never heard of it until I set out to write a novel about a Jewish woman growing up in L.A. in the
20s and
30s. I started doing research, and it was clear that my character could live in only one place: Boyle Heights.
Boyle Heights wasn’t just a Jewish neighborhood, however. While Jews were the largest group, there were also large Japanese- and Mexican-American populations. In fact, some
50 ethnicities lived there. Not that people in those days looked at the diverse community and saw an only-in-America success story. On the contrary, in the late
1930s the federal Home Owners’ Loan Corp.
redlined Boyle Heights, stating that it was filled with
“subversive racial elements.” (That, too, was just right for my character, since she becomes a progressive attorney.)
But, according to oral history interviews with Jews who grew up in Boyle Heights in the
20s and
30s, there was remarkable harmony among the ethnic groups. People spoke about their accidental utopian experiment with love and pride.
And although, with Eddie Goldstein’s death, there are no longer any Jews living in Boyle Heights, the diverse legacy hasn’t been forgotten. The
Boyle Heights Historical Society is a multi-ethnic group. The
Breed Street Shul Project, created by Jewish Historical Society of Southern California, is restoring a grand Boyle Heights synagogue; one of two buildings is now open and hosts classes and gatherings for the Latino community as well as Jewish events.
Then there’s David Kipen, a book critic and former director of reading initiatives for the
NEA, some of whose family once lived in Boyle Heights. Kipen runs
Libros Schmibros, a lending library-used bookstore on Mariachi Plaza. A bookstore of any kind these days — but especially one that offers books for $
1 — is clearly a utopian venture … and one that would appeal to the
“subversive elements” who once lived in Boyle Heights.
Visit the official website for The Tin Horse
here.