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Related: About this forum(JEWISH GROUP) A photo of my bubbe when Jewish stores still had Yiddish signs

My grandmother Gertrude (left) with her friend, Rose Courtesy of Jennifer A. Stern
Not long ago, I got curious about a box of old family photographs sitting on a shelf in my house. After flipping through a dozen or so pictures of aunts, uncles and cousins, I came across something remarkable: a photo of my paternal grandmother as a very young woman, standing with a friend in front of a store bearing a sign in Yiddish.
All four of my grandparents were born in the Pale of Settlement and were native Yiddish speakers. They emigrated to New York between 1913 and 1923. Throughout their childhood, my parents heard Yiddish constantly, both at home and in the streets of Brooklyn and the Lower East Side. But this photograph is the only physical link Im aware of to our Yiddish-speaking past.
As a Yiddish student myself, I was enthralled, of course. I quickly realized that the photograph isnt just fascinating for me and my family. Its a piece of Jewish history. But I knew almost nothing about it. Where were the two girls standing? When was it taken? I could see that the Yiddish sign said: M. Nimetz Y. Goldberg, followed by the letters mil but that didnt tell me much. Theres nothing written on the back of the photo no date or inscription.
I felt compelled to find out as much as I could. And thanks to help from friends, I can now tell much of the story behind the picture.
The best clue to the date was my grandmothers age. According to the few family documents we have, Gertrude Goldfarb (later Stern) was born in Pruzhany, in todays Belarus, in 1911. She and her friend, who we think was named Rose, look around 20 or 21 in the photo. So it probably dates from ca. 1931-32.
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(JEWISH GROUP) A photo of my bubbe when Jewish stores still had Yiddish signs (Original Post)
Behind the Aegis
Monday
OP
Thank you for your wonderful ancient photo and story, my dear Behind the Aegis!
CaliforniaPeggy
Monday
#1
CaliforniaPeggy
(153,730 posts)1. Thank you for your wonderful ancient photo and story, my dear Behind the Aegis!
How thrilled you must have been to discover all the details! This photo is a treasure.
I'm glad I stumbled across it.
elleng
(139,377 posts)2. Reminds me of
'There was a little girl
who had a little curl
right in the middle of her forehead,
and when she was good
she was very very good
but when she was bad she was horrid.'
(None of these, of course.)
luvallpeeps
(1,193 posts)3. They're beautiful.
I love the curls in the front.