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From Mafia man to Orthodox Jew

Louis Ferrante on how reading the Torah in prison inspired him to abandon a life as a violent mobster.

March 5, 2009 16:49
Ferrante today, an Orthodox Jew who keeps kosher and lays tefillin. “Going to prison was the best thing that happened to me,” he says

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

5 min read

He was a New York gangster, a “goodfella” who spent his life dodging the law. But Louis Ferrante — aka Big Lou — is pleased he wound up in a maximum security prison.

Because that is how he found Judaism.

The 39-year-old Italian-American, whose thick accent irresistibly brings to mind Tony Soprano, was a member of the Gambino organisation, working for one of America’s most ruthless crime families. He was heavily involved in racketeering and fraud, activities that from time to time required brutal violence.

But after eight-and-a half years in jail, he swapped meatballs for matzo balls and nowadays would rather keep what he calls “the Shabbos” than the Mafia code.