Jews' Temporary Shelter

The Jews' Temporary Shelter is a charity in London which helps homeless Jews.[1][2]

Russian refugees in the Leman Street shelter, drawn by Ellen Gertrude Cohen for the Illustrated London News in 1891

Around 1879, a Polish immigrant baker, Samuel Cohen, began to shelter Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe in his bakery in Whitechapel's Church Lane.[3] The accommodation was improvised with sacks of flour being used as bedding and, in 1885, a sanitory inspector closed it.[3] A public meeting was held at the Jewish Working Men’s Club and a group of wealthy Jews led by Hermann Landau, established the Poor Jews' Temporary Shelter.[4] The first location was in Great Garden Street but a more permanent shelter was established in Leman Street on 11 April 1886.[3][5]

References

  1. Jews' Temporary Shelter, Charity Commission
  2. Vivian David Lipman, "Jews' Temporary Shelter", Encyclopaedia Judaica
  3. Klaus Weber (2013), Tobias Brinkmann (ed.), "The Jews' Temporary Shelter in London, 1885–1939", Points of Passage: Jewish Migrants from Eastern Europe in Scandinavia, Germany, and Britain 1880-1914, Berghahn Books, pp. 85–104, ISBN 9781782380306
  4. Prue Baker, Philip Walker (ed.), "House of a Thousand Destinies", Jewish East End of London
  5. Aubrey Newman (2005), "The Poor Jews' Temporary Shelter: An Episode in Migration Studies", Jewish Historical Studies, 40 (40): 141–155, JSTOR 24027029
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