Listen Live
Donate
 on air
Schedule

KCRW

Read & Explore

  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Events

Listen

  • Live Radio
  • Music
  • Podcasts
  • Full Schedule

Information

  • About
  • Careers
  • Help / FAQ
  • Newsletters
  • Contact

Support

  • Become a Member
  • Become a VIP
  • Ways to Give
  • Shop
  • Member Perks

Become a Member

Donate to KCRW to support this cultural hub for music discovery, in-depth journalism, community storytelling, and free events. You'll become a KCRW Member and get a year of exclusive benefits.

DonateGive Monthly

Copyright 2025 KCRW. All rights reserved.

Report a Bug|Privacy Policy|Terms of Service|
Cookie Policy
|FCC Public Files

Back to Greater LA

Greater LA

For Jewish immigrants, Boyle Heights was a place for community building and a slice of the American dream

“In Boyle Heights, they built Yiddish schools, they built a Yiddish language press, they used Yiddish to organize workers and political parties. So it was both a source of cultural autonomy and a source of community cohesion,” says Caroline Luce from the Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies at UCLA.

  • rss
  • Share
KCRW placeholderBy George Sanchez • Jun 2, 2021 • 8m Listen

In the first decade of the 1900s, Eastern European immigrants who headed west faced restrictive housing covenants that barred many Jews from relocating in certain areas. In Los Angeles by the 1920s, about 90% of housing stock was governed by restrictive racial housing covenants. But Boyle Heights was one of the few neighborhoods that did not have the covenants.

Caroline Luce, associate director of the Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies at UCLA, says that Jewish immigrants coming from Eastern Europe sought Boyle Heights as a place to live. “They wanted an opportunity to buy a home, they wanted the space to create the institutions that were familiar to them, to build out their organizing, and to find a place of safety and security,” Luce says.

She adds, “I like to describe that it wasn’t just exclusion, but also aspirations for a place to call home, for community building, and for a slice of that American dream that also drew Jews to Boyle Heights.”

At the time, a very large percentage of that Jewish community spoke Yiddish, a vernacular language that blends Hebrew, German, and Slovick linguistic structures and vocabularies.

“In Los Angeles, as early as 1905 [or] 1908, Yiddish-speaking Jews are getting together and thinking about the ways that they can build out that language and culture infrastructure here in LA,” Luce says. “There’s a meeting in 1908 where they all get together to talk about forming what they called a national radical club that would sort of be home to their radical beliefs and radical pursuit of Yiddish.”

They were animated by a belief that the Jewish future could be focused on Yiddish language and culture, as opposed to being centered on synagogues or Eastern Europe. Luce says, “In Boyle Heights, they built Yiddish schools, they built a Yiddish language press, they used Yiddish to organize workers and political parties. So it was both a source of cultural autonomy and a source of community cohesion.”

  • KCRW placeholder

    George Sanchez

    Professor; author; director for the Center for Democracy and Diversity, USC

  • KCRW placeholder

    Christian Bordal

    Managing Producer, Greater LA

  • KCRW placeholder

    Jenna Kagel

    Radio producer

  • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

    Kathryn Barnes

    Producer, Reporter

  • KCRW placeholder

    Caroline Luce

    Associate director, Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies, UCLA

    CultureRace & EthnicityHousing & DevelopmentLos Angeles
Back to Greater LA