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Old Posted Oct 5, 2016, 12:39 PM
Crawford Crawford is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Brooklyn, NYC/Polanco, DF
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Quote:
Originally Posted by eschaton View Post
There used to be a much larger secular Jewish community in many other Pittsburgh neighborhoods which has since dispersed.
My sense is that the secular Jewish suburb, the stereotypical Jewish experience in modern-day America, is kind of disintegrating. The U.S. Jewish community is getting much more Orthodox, while Conservative and especially Reform Jews have a high degree of intermarriage, and people no longer feel obligated to live in specific neighborhood typology.

The old "rules" around WASP, Catholic, and Jewish suburbs (at least in the older parts of the U.S.) have weakened considerably. People group more around income and lifestyle than by religion and ethnicity.

Of course, this doesn't mean that Jewish neighborhoods are disappearing. Jewish religious neighborhoods are booming. But the postwar secular-type suburb seems to be dying out. The Jewish community overall is becoming much more religious, and there will probably be a shift in the typical Jewish experience in the U.S.
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