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Amsterdam |
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Amsterdam-Jewish area-Jews history-Nieuwmarkt |
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Jewish area-Jewish history-Nieuwmarkt
Jewish area-Zuiderkerk-Diamond history
Jewish area- Rembrandt
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Let’s attack ;-) another interesting area of Amsterdam: the heart of the former Jewish district. Amsterdam’s pragmatic tolerance in religious matters made it a magnet for the Sephardic Jews who fled persecution in Spain and Portugal from the beginning of the 17th century, and soon after, the Ashkenazi Jews, fleeing intolerance in Eastern Europe. While many of the Sephardic Jews were prosperous traders, the Ashkenazi refugees, often penniless, found it harder to gain a foothold in commercial life. But the Jews had no full citizenship and were not admitted in the corporations.
They could freely practise their religion, but at
the condition to stay discreet and not interfere with the Dutch laws. That’s
why they want mostly in textile and diamonds where there was no corporation.
Rembrandt, who was not a Jew but a non-conformist decided to settle down in this
Jewish quarter. He lived for more than 20 years in his atelier-house in the
Jodenbreestraat. A lot of Jews living around him became his friend and certain
even served as model for his sketches and biblical inspired paintings. Until the
19th century, when their position began to improve, most Amsterdam
Jews lived in the eastern part of the old city, where grand synagogues and the
homes of the wealthy merchants contrasted with the cramped apartment dwellings
of poorer working people Let’s start our walk from
the NIEUWMARKT. This square and the streets surrounding it were the scene in the
mid 80’s of one of the set piece clashed between Amsterdam’s standing army
of socially conscious protesters and the municipality over planes for the Metro.
The local residents resisted large-scaling levelling of inner city housing in
the name of development. We heard that story elsewhere since quite often,
isn’t it? I sympathize, like most visitors I presume, with the protesters.
Inner Amsterdam is livelier and safer than the centres of most big cities
precisely because it has not been turned into a ghetto of office blocks. Bibliography Holland, by Adam Hopkins (Faber and Faber, 1988), Penguin Guide to Amsterdam (ed.Vincent Westzaan, Penguin 1990), Guide du Routard 1998 (ed.Hachette), -Dwalen door Amsterdam en reizen door de Benelux, ( ed. Lekturama 1984), “The Embarrassment of Riches”, by Simon Schama (Collins 1987), “De Jodenbuurt over de eeuwen” by J.Hofkens (Lannoo 1995). |
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