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The last Jewish shop on Brick Lane

Amy Schreibman Walter speaks to Leo Epstein and grandson Michael of Epra Fabrics

September 27, 2019 14:05
Leo and Michael Epstein outside their shop

Sixty-three years ago, Leo Epstein opened his shmatta shop on bustling Brick Lane.

An infamous thoroughfare not even a mile long, stretching from Whitechapel High Street to Bethnal Green, Brick Lane was once the beating heart of the shmatta trade in the East End. It was also the arterial hub of the Jewish ghetto.

Today, the street is, as it always has been, a vibrant, populated place. Yet the demographic is decidedly different these days: Most of the Jewish community is long gone, decades ago having moved away from the inner city and into the leafy suburbs.

The only Jewish retailer remaining on Brick Lane is Epstein, purveyor of dress fabrics; a congenial octogenarian. The Epstein family live in Hendon, in north west London; they traverse from one end of London to the other in order to reach the shop. But they wouldn’t have it any other way.