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Michael Freedland

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Michael Freedland,

Michael Freedland

Opinion

How I found my heim from heim

Stoke Newington is no longer the shtetl of the past, notes Michael Freedland

February 9, 2014 08:46
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2 min read

You could say I come from landed gentry. My grandfather hailed from old stock, from a place where the family had lived for generations. But in more recent years, they became true colonials. They found new homes as settlers in another world, where the streets were paved with...shmatters.

After at least 200 years of traceable residence in Dunilovich, in what is now Belarus , they came to the promised land and found solace in Stoke Newington.

There is reason to believe that the family lived for 80 years in Stoke Newington. You could also say that the then younger members of the clan spent 80 years trying to get out of it. On the other hand, there’s an argument that when my daughter moved there l5 years ago, followed by my son a few years later, they were staking a claim to the old homestead and, to my amazement and even more to that of my late wife Sara, enjoying every minute of it.

I couldn’t understand it. Nor could she. But now, here comes an admission from a man who is learning how to cook. I am also learning how to eat – my words. I myself have joined the trek back, finding a pied-a-terre not more than a couple of miles from where my grandfather Barnet Mindel had his menswear shop, the one where my father worked and met and married the boss’s daughter, who became my mother.