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On August 20, 1991, police officers try to calm two Orthodox Jews during a confrontation with black residents of Crown Heights in Brooklyn, New York. Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images.
Observation

August 26, 2021

Podcast: Elliot Kaufman on the Crown Heights Riot, 30 Years Later

By Elliot Kaufman, Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

Thirty years ago, Jews were violently attacked over three days in Brooklyn. This week's podcast revisits what happened, and whether it could recur.

This Week’s Guest: Elliot Kaufman

Thirty years ago, in August 1991, riots broke out in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Crown Heights, a neighborhood shared by African Americans and Jews, the latter of whom were mostly members of the ḥasidic Chabad-Lubavitch movement. During the riot, which was sparked by a car accident that killed one young black child and injured another, local black residents attacked Jews on the streets, burned their businesses, and killed one of them, often while chanting anti-Semitic slogans. For three days, local authorities looked on passively.

The episode is a sad one in the history of American Jewish-black relations. This week’s podcast guest believes that if Jews and blacks are to enjoy a fruitful and mutually beneficial relationship in the future, as they have in the past, understanding how and why events like the Crown Heights riot came about is essential. Elliot Kaufman did just that in a recent essay for the Wall Street Journal. A Canadian who is too young to remember riot, Kaufman—in the piece and in this conversation with Mosaic‘s editor, Jonathan Silver—forensically reconstructs what happened in Crown Heights, puts together what it meant at the time, looks at what it teaches us today, and suggests pitfalls that can be avoided so that the two communities can avoid such bitter antagonism.

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