Antelope Valley Press

Matzo to gumbo: Museum explores Southern Jewish life

- By STACEY PLAISANCE Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — A new museum under constructi­on in New Orleans will explore the journey of immigrant Jews and subsequent generation­s to the American South who brought with them a religious way of life they struggled to maintain while seeking acceptance in the home of the Bible Belt.

With multimedia interactiv­e exhibits and a collection of more than 7,000 artifacts, the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience will illustrate the ways Southern and Jewish cultures influenced each another’s families, businesses, religions, politics and food habits as Jewish staples like potato latkes and matzo ball soup were met with Southern grits and gumbo.

There will be also be exhibits on harder-hitting issues, such as race relations, Jewish slave ownership and anti-Semitism.

In the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, most Jewish immigrants lived in the Northeast, but thousands settled across the South, said Kenneth Hoffman, the museum’s executive director.

“This can tell us about the history of the South in a way that we haven’t looked at it before,” Hoffman said. “It can tell us about diversity and the importance of diversity for strengthen­ing not only our Southern communitie­s but

America in general.”

A museum highlight is a colorful patchwork quilt that a group of Jewish women in Canton, Mississipp­i, made in 1885 to raise funds to build a synagogue there.

The gallery with the quilt will have an interactiv­e station where visitors can sit down at a table and use a touchscree­n to create, electronic­ally, their own quilt square and add it to a quilt of other digital squares made by fellow visitors.

“It speaks to the coming together of many different pieces, many different colors, many different fabrics to create something brand new and beautiful,” Hoffman said.

Once open, museum visitors will be able to watch a video introducti­on in a theater gallery and view elaborate Jewish spice boxes, prayer books and tzedakah boxes often found in Jewish homes that are used for collecting coins for charity.

Organizers say the museum

is designed to be a source of pride for the Jewish community, but it’s also intended to be a welcoming and informativ­e space for the general public.

“This is a lesson on the American experience, what

happens when strangers come to a strange land, where we work together to build communitie­s … accept people that are different than ourselves,” said Jay Tanenbaum, the museum’s chairman, whose great-grand

father emigrated from Poland to the tiny town of Dumas, Arkansas, eventually running a cotton gin there and establishi­ng roots for four generation­s.

Tanenbaum says his family’s history is one repeated “thousands of times over” across the South, as Jewish families like his worked hard to adapt and built strong, loving bonds within their communitie­s.

He said he’s hoping that sharing these stories will help curb violence against Jews. In the years leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic, acts of violence against American Jews was on the rise, with 2019 seeing the most violence in four decades, according to the Anti-Defamation League. That year included deadly attacks on a California synagogue, a Jewish grocery store in New Jersey and a rabbi’s New York home.

“If we put together a museum and have lots of visitors who are not Jewish who come to understand the similariti­es and the way we all work together and the loving relationsh­ips, we think that is maybe the best thing we can do to promote the safety and security of Jewish communitie­s and Jewish individual­s,” Tanenbaum said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This is a rendering provided by the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience of an area of the new museum in New Orleans. The museum under constructi­on will explore the journey of immigrant Jews and subsequent generation­s to the American South who brought with them a religious way of life they struggled to maintain while seeking acceptance in the home of the Bible Belt.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This is a rendering provided by the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience of an area of the new museum in New Orleans. The museum under constructi­on will explore the journey of immigrant Jews and subsequent generation­s to the American South who brought with them a religious way of life they struggled to maintain while seeking acceptance in the home of the Bible Belt.

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