Birth of a Community: Jews and the Gold Rush

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Birth of a Community: Jews and the Gold Rush
Directed by Bill Chayes
Release dates
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  • 1994 (1994)
Country United States
Language English

Birth of a Community: Jews and the Gold Rush is a 1994 documentary directed by Bill Chayes.[1] The film traces the history of Jews and the experiences that tempted this group and others to the American West Coast by the prospect of being financially established by mining gold.

Synopsis

Groups of various national and ethnic origins arrived seeking their fortune; this documentary focuses on the Jewish presence in California during the Gold Rush. This feature traces the arrival of Jews in the ‘rough and tumble’ West and follows how they settled and grew with the towns and establishing communities, which have grown to become more valuable than gold in a sense.

The city most ‘49ers arrived at on their way to seek gold was San Francisco, this was due to an earlier find of gold at Sutter’s Mill located in Northern California. By 1850 almost 100,000 miners descended upon the area, which had, been an insignificant remote outpost up until then. The people that came, traveled by horse-drawn covered wagons and steam and wind powered ships. Fleeing unstable governments, seeking religious freedom and fortune, some Jews journeyed all the way from Europe to the Pacific Coast.

The untamed West’s way of life into which these Jews settled down into is accurately portrayed by historical photographs and actual diary excerpts from the time period. These documents of the past give viewers a glance into the unruly bars and casinos of yesteryear, in a time when lawlessness was rampant in a culture of few limitations.

Despite being surrounded by mass disorder, Jews in the community took the opportunity to prosper. Instead of discovering gold in mines, businessmen such as Levi Strauss were extremely successful through the sale of canvas trousers to prospectors headed to the gold fields.

However, for Jews determined to follow an observant way of life, the liberal climate of California’s growing cities grew to be very frustrating. August Helbing founded the Eureka Benevolent Society so that Jews would have an appropriate manner in which they could occupy themselves during the evening hours. Before the creation of the society the only option for these Jews was to spend time in the rear of their places of business; as they would not frequent betting halls or theatrical plays.

After a short time, signs of the Jewish religion were showing up all over the city of San Francisco. The first Jewish congregation established in the city of San Francisco celebrated Rosh Hashanah in 1849. Shortly afterwards a kosher butcher, local mohel service and a cemetery were established.

As the cities and towns of California developed even further; area Jews lived with the reality of the ominous presence of intolerance. Various minority ethnic and racial groups living in the state were barred from bearing witness in Court, which served as an impediment to their rights under the law. This and other injustices caused the Golden State to tackle matters of discrimination much sooner than other regions in the United States, thus serving as a refuge for numerous Jews.

From these widespread and uncertain Gold Rush beginnings, Northern California’s unique Jewish community has continued to flourish. The legacy of these early Jewish ‘49ers is now part of the cultural fabric of the American West.

Starting out with much questionability from various parts of the world and ending up in the middle of California’s Gold Rush, the Golden State’s distinctive population of Jews up north has unceasingly thrived. The heritage of the pioneering gold rushers is an integral component of the enriching structure of the West Coast of the United States.

Notes

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References

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External links