New York, NY – For Brooklyn’s Orthodox, Election Passes Quietly

    13

    Polling site in Brooklyn, NY on Nov 6 2012. Photo: EliWohl/VINNewsNew York, NY – Election night in America is one of the biggest television events of the year, but you wouldn’t know it on Division Avenue in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where the radio sputtered out ballot returns in every other Orthodox household.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Few of the Orthodox residents there stayed awake to hear the twilight speech of reelected President Barack Obama, and most Orthodox Jews in this community stayed away from the voting booths. Despite that, in Kings County, where one in four residents is Jewish, Obama won a stunning 81% of the vote.

    “Most of the people here don’t like Obama,” says Wolf Weiss, a rare supporter of the president in his community.

    “But people here know their vote just doesn’t matter.”

    And in a neighborhood completely bare of campaign signs, Sam Lipschitz lamented having to take down his Romney-Ryan fanfare earlier in the morning after.

    Lipschitz, 25, became active in politics for the first time in his life for this election cycle: afraid of Obama’s position on Egypt after the revolution, he founded the “Orthodox Jews for Mitt Romney 2012” group on Facebook, which had 300 members at its peak. The group’s membership has since dropped to 92.

    Reacting to strong Jewish voter turnout for the president nationwide, Lipschitz was dismissive.

    “It means that 70% of Jews here don’t care about Israel,” he says. “And this is why I’ve finally become active.”

    In Korn’s Bakery, the daily morning rush churned as usual, with little chatter over the poll results its customers insist was pre-ordained. The news driving the day was still the local trauma: Superstorm Sandy’s devastation of Jewish communities across the city.

    “I didn’t vote because I didn’t have time,” says Abraham Waldman, owner of Korn’s Bakery. “I was cleaning my house after a seven foot wave destroyed everything.”

    Waldman says the collection of garbage he has accrued – from furniture to precious photos – couldn’t fit into his entire bakery, floor to ceiling.

    “All I want is gas,” one of his customers exclaimed.

    And yet despite the devastation, and the dropping temperatures plaguing thousands of displaced New Yorkers, voter turnout here was resilient yesterday, with over half of registered voters in the city turning out to cast ballots.

    So perhaps their reasons for declining their right to vote were more political than tropical.

    “I’m quite concerned that the folks on Division Avenue are disillusioned, because the system we have isn’t broken— they’re just unhappy with the results,” says Rick Anderson, a Brooklyn resident for over two decades.

    “I think Jews here who voted for Obama are obviously able to look at the bigger picture,” he said.

    For Anderson, that bigger picture refers less to Israel than to the American economy.

    And yet the residents pacing up and down Division Avenue don’t disagree. Ironically, after months of both campaigns’ attempts to target small business owners across the country, they just don’t believe the president – whoever he may be – has much to do with their successes or failures.

    “The same people are going to come in here every day and buy my danishes,” says Waldman.

    “We all vote on the local level. But to us, the president is far removed.”

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    13 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    SherryTheNoahide
    SherryTheNoahide
    11 years ago

    Election passes quietly for the orthodox?!

    They should’ve been reading VIN! People were having heart-attacks on here! LOL

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    11 years ago

    “most Orthodox Jews in this community stayed away from the voting booths. Despite that, in Kings County, where one in four residents is Jewish, Obama won a stunning 81% of the vote.”

    He should have said, “because of that”, not “despite that.”

    Babishka
    Member
    Babishka
    11 years ago

    I voted for Obama. Most other Jews did too, including most Orthodox, according to Arutz Sheva. The President is committed to protecting Israel in spite of the silly lies that were being said about him.

    monalisa
    monalisa
    11 years ago

    Glad you are amused by “people having heart attacks” Sherry. So happy our distress keeps that warm & fuzzy feeling in you all. Perhaps instead of laughing at those of us who wanted REAL change, you could calmly, kindly & clearly try to reassure us, not with ad hominem attacks but with real information.

    But wait….you don’t have anything to support your euphoria except your blind cult-like support of a failed president who didn’t fulfill any of his 2008 campaign promises. Why do you think it will be different now? Bush is still alive, so he’s still up for blame. Convenient scapegoats are all your boy has.

    J-R-S
    J-R-S
    11 years ago

    “But people here know their vote just doesn’t matter.”

    “We all vote on the local level. But to us, the president is far removed.”

    >

    Sad that the people who talk or think this way aren’t even remotely aware how disturbingly small-minded, or self- absorbed, it sounds. Of course, the president generally doesn’t affect the minutest events of our daily life. That’s a fine bit of perspective for all the melodramtic shlemiels who say “If [this or that guy] is elected, it’s going to be tragic…”

    BUT to not vote, because the president won’t affect your local eruv, or alternate-side parking on yom-tov, or extra- garbage pick-up on erev Pesach…. L’maan Hashem, have we become a nation of imbeciles? Or merely people who don’t care about anything outside their daled-amos?

    shlomogabai
    shlomogabai
    11 years ago

    Great point sherry! Look the media is extremely polarized. Both sides have valid arguments and fabricated points (fact: nobody is as bad as the biased against him claims, nor as good as the biased for him claim. Us people, just are watching our favorite channel, station etc, get soooo worked up over their blabbering. and that’s what molds us into conservative, liberal, dem, repub, etc.

    It’s time to stop reading the news (political), or else heart attacks,, (that was a point well made in one sentence).

    J-R-S
    J-R-S
    11 years ago

    There it is again, that same clueless, all-I know-is what-happens-to-me-personally mentality: Some people—those who’re more aware of the whole world around them, beyond 18th Ave. or Hooper St.—-would actually be a bit self-conscious complaining that their belongings that were damaged/lost in a storm would more than fill a bakery!

    All sympathy to Mr. Waldman, and anyone else who suffered damage or loss in the storm—but his words are what they call tone-deaf. There are people with children living in shelters, who could not even conceive of owning 6000 sq. ft worth of “furniture & precious photos”.
    “Even” frum people.

    shalomke
    shalomke
    11 years ago

    ” Despite that, in Kings County, where one in four residents is Jewish, Obama won a stunning 81% of the vote.”
    Not stunning at all. 1/4 is equal to 25% , and I can safely assume, that the 19% who voted Romney were mostly Jewish votes. The remaining 6% probably stayed home.

    SF2K1
    SF2K1
    11 years ago

    70% of Jews voted for Obama because 70% of Jews know he has been better for Israel than Bush ever was.