Search
Close this search box.

Chassidim to move out of Brooklyn


The cost of living in Brooklyn has become so outrageous for some Hasidic families that a Williamsburg rabbi has carved a path of enlightenment – all the way to Scranton, in far western New York State. As many as 100 families are expected to flee the borough of churches for the serenity of Scranton, in Erie County south of Buffalo, where rabbis Isaac and Altar Rosenbaum are opening a 900-seat private school. “We are a very large group in Brooklyn and everything has become very expensive here – house payments, taxes, bills, everything,” said Isaac Rosenbaum, 39. “It’s too much.”

Fifteen families from the Nitra and Nadvornah sects have already signed contracts on new homes, the most costly going for around $229,000, said a broker.

Real estate broker Terri Backus said a housing boom in The Hill section of Scranton and a drive by Mayor Chris Doherty to usher in new business has lured the families – some with eight children and counting.

“They do have large families, and to buy a large house in Brooklyn from what I understand is very tough,” said Backus. “But in The Hill section the typical homes are older, larger and more affordable.”

The exodus from Williamsburg and Borough Park started in June after Backus took out ads in a local Jewish paper and on a popular Hasidic phone line.

Those ads averaged 40 calls a day, she said.

The rabbis, who sermonize from the temple Mamer Mordachi on Bedford Ave., were the first to respond. After a Scranton developer bowed out, the rabbis purchased the shuttered intermediate school for $400,000, Isaac Rosenbaum said.

Since then, Brooklyn families have continued to tour the town of 76,400, which is in the midst of a building boom.

Rabbi Isaac Rosenbaum said he believes he can lure several hundred more families – enough to fill the entire school.

Rivky Gross, 23, said she and husband Abraham, 21, have already picked out their dream home – a four-unit apartment building with a ground floor storefront.

That building will cost her $130,000, said Backus.

“If I know there’s going to be a Jewish settlement and they’ll have everything we need, that’s all I need to go there,” said Rivky Gross, who currently rents an apartment in Williamsburg. “A lot of people are looking.”

Luzi Friedman, whose family lives in Williamsburg, moved to Scranton last August. He plans to open a shoe store with the money he’s saved on cheap lunches and cheaper parking.

“I actually have a friend who moved in yesterday from Brooklyn – another city guy,” said Friedman, 32. “There are plenty of Jews here, but I’m the first so far to walk around with a shtrimel [hat].”

NYDN



5 Responses

  1. If I’m not mistaken, when you go far enough WEST, you actually LEAVE New York state? I wonder if the state of Pennsylvania minds that the Rebbe and his chassidim are relocating Scranton, from Pennsylvania to New York?

    Please, people… if you’re going to write an article, at least pretend to know some facts. You know, sophisticated stuff, like Geography. Maybe spelling and grammar would be nice, too, occasionally? I’ve heard that these new-fangled computer-things often have spell-checking capabilities! (In other words, “Yeshivish” should NOT mean careless or ignorant.)

  2. I think it’s a great idea! And in answer to the last comment, please check your map again. There are 2 cities( maybe more) named Scranton. One in PA as you correctly pointed out, and the other near Buffalo NY as the article correctly stated. Please check your facts before making accusations. That’s something else we Yeshivish should not be known for.

  3. To KMS,
    If you noticed on the bottom, the article was straight from the New York Daily News. If you have any issues with it, take it up with The News.

Leave a Reply


Popular Posts