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Lakewood, NJ: Towns Restrict Door-to-Door Solicitation Amid ‘Hasidic’ Influx


doJames Jackson wasn’t interested in selling his home but thanked the black-suited man for his interest anyway.

That’s when the man put his hand on Jackson’s shoulder and told him he might want to reconsider. Many of his neighbors in the New Jersey shore town of Toms River, the man said, already planned to sell to Jewish buyers like those he represented.

“He asked me why I would want to live in a Hasidic neighborhood if I wasn’t Hasidic,” Jackson recalled. “He asked if I would really be happy, if it would be in my family’s best interests.”

A housing crunch in Lakewood, home to one of the nation’s largest populations of Hasidic Jews, has triggered what residents of neighboring communities say are overly aggressive, all-hours solicitations from agents looking to find homes for the rapidly growing Jewish community.

The complaints have prompted towns, including Toms River, to update their “no-knock” rules and related laws, adding real estate inquiries to measures that already limit when soliciting can occur and allow residents to bar solicitations.

But Jewish leaders and others say the no-knock laws unfairly target Orthodox Jews and those seeking to help them find houses. Many current residents came to the community to study at one of the largest yeshivas in the world and eventually settled down.

The 2010 census found the town had nearly 93,000 residents, about 32,000 more than a decade earlier. And town officials believe there are closer to 120,000 residents now.

“The growth in Lakewood is a sign of the great quality of life which is attracting all these people,” said Avi Schnall, the state director of Agudath Israel, a national grassroots advocacy and social service organization representing Orthodox Jews.

“However, the challenge is being able to keep up with the influx,” Schnall added. “This has driven people to take residents in nearby towns, where houses are more available and affordable.”

Schnall calls the recent no-knock changes “troubling.” He also believes there is a campaign to prevent members of the Orthodox community from moving in. And he thinks the real estate agents are being used as the scapegoats, claims that leaders in neighboring towns say are unfounded.

Samuel Heilman, a sociology professor at Queens College in New York City and a leading authority on Orthodox Judaism, says he doubts that such laws are anti-Semitic in their origins. But he notes that the measures may now be invoked more aggressively by people trying to keep Orthodox Jews out of their neighborhoods, for fear the area will become a Hasidic community.

“The problem is structural: Hasidim live in Hasidic communities predominantly. They can only move as groups,” said Heilman. “That leads to counter-moves by other groups who do not want their community to be inundated by them.”

Municipal leaders stress that their laws are not aimed at keeping out any groups, but rather to protect residents.

“Our ‘no knock’ law goes back many years. It’s not just in response to what has been happening now,” Toms River Mayor Thomas Kelaher said. “We are trying to protect those people from conduct that’s outrageous, harassing, intimidating or unwelcome.”

Jackson said he was working outside his home last fall when he was unexpectedly approached by the man in the black suit. The encounter was initially cordial but turned darker, he said.

“He was trying to intimidate me, but not in a physical way,” Jackson said. “He was playing mind games, and he was really good at it.”

Toms River is also in the process of creating “cease and desist” zones, where door-to-door real estate soliciting would be banned in designated areas that have been inordinately and repeatedly solicited. The ordinance is modeled on one in New York state that held up in court despite objections from realty groups. The New York rule allows residents to petition for their neighborhood to be included on the list of areas where solicitation is not allowed.

Realty groups say they their main concern is to find common ground.

“Our local communities are incredibly important to both our members and our association,” said Mary Ann Wissel, chief executive officer of the Ocean County Board of Realtors. She said the group was working with real estate agents and local officials to ensure that any no-knock registry laws are both “respectful to homeowners as well as fair to the lawful business practices of our members.”

David Eckman, a Hasidic real estate investor, acknowledged that most of his visits to gauge people’s interest in selling their homes are unsolicited, but he said he has never tried to intimidate or mislead anyone.

“People need homes, and I’m trying to help them find those homes,” Eckman said. “They just want a nice place in a nice community, like everyone else.”

Eckman said anyone using fear tactics, be it directly or implied, should be barred.

“If they do that, they make us all look bad,” Eckman said. “There are enough negative stereotypes out there about Jewish people, and doing things like that just makes people think they are true.”

(AP)



13 Responses

  1. Here’s my simple solution. If you put a sign on your property saying that you don’t want to sell, sort of like the “You fill in the blank Strong” campaigns that are going on now, then NO ONE should EVER buy that house! These people are eventually willing to take the crazy amount of money offered by the Frum crowd for these homes. Don’t give them that opportunity. You can’t have it both ways.

  2. This is all about real estate agents trying to make money .The ones that are knocking on doors and making a chillul hashem don’t care about finding homes for people ,they want money and have the nerve to attempt convincing a homeowner who’s been living in peace and quite for 30 years to sell his home.imagine people knocking on your door 3-4 times a week trying to buy your home.i would definitely Appeal for the no knocking law

  3. Turn the story around:

    How would Jewish homeowners in Lakewood, Boro Park or Flatbush react to real estate agents and individuals knocking on their doors at all hours with offers to buy their houses for their Asian, Black or Hispanic communities?

  4. Think of how you feel when you have to answer the door, and the person there is dressed in a nice suit, and starts to speak to you, and it takes you a few minutes before you ask (are you a 7th day adventist?). These people are entitled to feel the same way. I don’t think they would complain if they have to throw out a piece of mail, but to have to answer the door and then be accosted by someone trying to convince you to sell the home you’ve lived in for years – I’m not sure I blame them for being upset.

  5. Apart from the chillul Hashem, telling people that if they don’t sell their home they won’t be welcome in their neighborhood anymore does sound like a form of intimidation. If more housing is needed they should build more.

  6. nu – nu, just build more townhouses and shtetlach anywhere.
    just keep in mind we are on the way to Yerushalayim, bivias Go’el BB”A.

  7. The indiginous population is justified in the actions they have taken. It is not antisemitsm , and the Jews who use that card are a disgrace and danger to our whole community.

  8. What the agent allegedly did is called block busting. It is 100% illegal and also disgusting as well as a huge chillul hashem. As far as I know, there seems to be one agent reportedly doing this, giving all other frum agents a bad name as well as causing tremendous resentment toward frum yidden and possibly a dangerous situation. I’m not trying to imply that there’s no anti semitism out there, unfortunately there is plenty, however there is also a legitimate outcry by those who are “threatened” by this individual. What they should do is get his name, and if possible record his actions and than report him to the Real Estate Commission. He would lose his license.. Obviously this can only be done by one who is approached if that really happens….

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