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A lost world captured on film

Boxes of colour slides of London’s old Jewish East End taken in the mid-1970s had lived inside a tin box in a shed for more than 40 years. In a few weeks, these never before seen images of a world that has now largely disappeared will go on display

September 27, 2019 14:19
A Hessel Street poulterer

An extreme heatwave hit Israel in May, and a forest fire near Modiin forced Manchester-born Shloimy Alman and his wife Linda to evacuate their home.

Fleeing for safety, Shloimy grabbed just three items: passports, family photo albums and boxes of colour slides of London’s old Jewish East End that he’d taken in the mid-1970s.

The slides had lived inside a tin box in Alman’s shed for more than 40 years. In a few weeks time, these never before seen images of a world that has now largely disappeared are going to be displayed in Sandy’s Row Synagogue.

Alman explains, “In my early twenties, living in Manchester and attending a Jewish Youth Workers’ conference in Stepney, I arranged to meet the Yiddish poet, Avraham Stencl, for a tour of London’s Jewish East End. My father, Moishe had previously contributed many articles to Stencl’s monthly Yiddish magazine, Loshn un Lebn.”