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Julie Cohen: 'We were the only Jewish kids in town'

Growing up in small town Maine, novelist Julie Cohen and her brother were the only Jewish kids. But they were related to all the Catholics.

July 13, 2017 11:49
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2 min read

Rumford is a small town in western Maine, USA, surrounded by mountains and built around a mill that eats vast pine logs and spits out paper. On humid days, or when a storm is coming in, the smoke from the mill settles in the valley and the whole town takes on the yellow smell of boiled eggs.

It’s a working-class town, and when I was growing up in it, there were five churches within a quarter of a mile of my house, catering for Catholics, Methodists, Episcopalians, Baptists and Evangelical Christians.

There was no synagogue. We were the only Jews in town.

When my great-grandparents settled in Rumford and built their scrap metal business, there were as many as 30 Jewish families in town. There used to be a synagogue when my father was growing up. I’ve seen a photograph of Dad and three other Jewish boys in front of the Temple Israel, situated directly across from the Episcopal church. But the year before I was born, the synagogue closed.