The Yiddish Book Center's

Wexler Oral History Project

A growing collection of in-depth interviews with people of all ages and backgrounds, whose stories about the legacy and changing nature of Yiddish language and culture offer a rich and complex chronicle of Jewish identity.

A Confusing Experience of Being Jewish within the Assimilationist Atmosphere of the 1950s in the U.S.

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Dorothy Goldstone, a writer and Yiddish Book Center volunteer, recounts the sense of confusion and persecution she experienced growing up in a Jewish home in a Christian area during the assimilation-focused 1950s, hardships that were only exacerbated during the holidays.

This is an excerpt from an oral history with Dorothy Goldstone.

This excerpt is in English.

Dorothy Goldstone was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1948.