Kutz Foundation Support Provides Boost

The Jewish Historical Society of Delaware is pleased to announce a grant from the Milton and Hattie Kutz Foundation for the Coxe House renovation project.  News of the grant was welcomed by officers and board of directors of the JHSD.

JHSD archivist, Gail Pietrzyk, reported, “With the COVID-19 restrictions, we are not able to pick up our mail as often as we would  like.  It was a terrific boost to everyone to find such generous support from our members and the Jewish community in our mailbox.”  Additional donations for the Coxe House and for the JHSD were also received.

The JHSD Board has been working on many of the preparations that are needed for this change. The by-laws of the 501(c)3 organization have been updated, a policy and procedure manual is under review and updated membership and financial management systems are taking shape.

“We have not only outgrown our space,” said archivist Pietrzyk, “we’ve outgrown our shoestring, bare-bones operation and the board has been amazing.  They have worked very hard to help us reach this goal and prepare for the future. The generosity of the community and the dedication of everyone who has worked for this is so encouraging.  I love the stories I find in the JHSD collections. So many of the organizations in the Jewish community started with someone who had an idea to serve the community and the determination and passion to get others involved.  And those stories are not found only in the past. I see it happening today, for our work, and I am so happy to be a part of it.”

Work on the renovation project are moving forward and bids from contractors will be opened next month.

Spring 2020 Newsletter

JHSD News

The Coxe House project continues apace. The architects have submitted detailed plans for the renovations, which include making the ground floor accessible for all visitors, controlling temperature and humidity for proper storage of archival materials, and even a installing a small freight elevator for moving materials up and down between floors (the staircases of this building are steep, narrow and angular!).

OPENING SOON
Co-President Dr. Gerry Resnick and all of the board of the JHSD are looking forward to welcoming you to our future home at the Delaware Center for Jewish
History in the Coxe House.

We will hold a grand opening when the building is move-in ready and when Wilmington is COVID-19 restriction-free. A good possibility, if all goes according to plan, is spring 2021 after Shavuot and before Memorial Day.
With the new location comes added operating costs. The Board has reexamined membership categories and simplified the dues structure. Dues
will increase slightly in 2021, with the exception of student membership, which will be free of charge.
Jewish organizations and businesses are especially encouraged to support the JHSD’s mission by becoming institutional sponsors.
Finally, in light of recent events, members of JHSD’s Board of Directors would like to express our support for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color residents of the City of Wilmington, and Delaware as a whole, as they press for equality, economic justice and social reforms. In the spirit of Tikkun Olam, we pledge the following: to undertake our work with introspection, to recognize the history of structural and systemic racism in the United States, and to acknowledge and respect the diversity of the communities Jewish Delawareans call home.

Read the JHSD Spring 2020 newsletter

 

Happy Fourth of July

The Gordon family at the JCC campground in the 1960s.

In celebration of Independence Day, the Jewish Historical Society of Delaware is pleased to share these recordings of patriotic songs with you. The singer is Sarah Szczepanski Citron (1900–1993), who immigrated to the US from Poland in 1921. She married Abe Citron and raised two children in Atlanta, and when Abe died in 1966, moved to Wilmington, Delaware, to live with her daughter and son-in-law, Helen C. and Mendel Gordon.  These songs were recorded by Naomi Goldstein in the 1980s.

Visit our digital collections for more recordings of Sarah Citron.

Thanks to Paula Gordon and Helen Gordon for sharing these delightful recordings and photos with the Jewish Historical Society of Delaware.

Telling our Stories – Oral History in Delaware’s Jewish Community

Telling Our Stories: Oral History in Delaware's Jewish Community

In summer 2019, as part of the University of Delaware Summer Scholar program, Dalia Handelman interviewed nine members of Delaware’s Jewish Community. This past fall semester, the [name of] program/class of the [name of] department sent another seven students out to interview long-time residents of Wilmington. The response of the students and community members alike was overwhelmingly positive.

In our Annual Meeting presentation, Dr. Roger Horowitz will describe the oral history program and JHSD’s cooperation with the University of Delaware. We’ll meet some of the student interviewers and hear excerpts of their work. Attendees will learn how they, too, can participate in this initiative.

This event has been postponed. We hope you will join us when we reschedule the program.

Seating is limited. Reservations are recommended. Visit www.jhsdelaware.org or call 302.655.6232
Light refreshments will follow the presentation. Open to the Public | Free Admission

Chaiken Receives University of Delaware’s Highest Honor

Frank and Yetta Chaiken. Photo by Jack Buxbaum.

By RENEE SHATZ

Editor’s Note: Renee Shatz is the executive director of the University of Delaware Hillel.

In 1939, Yetta Chaiken was an impressionable freshman at the University of Delaware. There, the former Yetta Zutz received a fast education in what it meant to be a minority student.

She faced quotas on admission to select schools and classes and learned not to set her sights on certain careers.

Few sororities would allow her to pledge. The only “fraternal” option for Jewish collegiates were a few Jewish houses founded essentially as self-protection societies. Some Jewish students on campus were subjected to a particularly cruel form of hazing – having swastikas painted on their foreheads with silver nitrate.

“Our nation and our community of Wilmington did not welcome any minority group,” recalled Chaiken, adding that Jewish men and women were particularly targeted for acts of prejudice. “All of America was an anti-Semitic environment.”

Ironically, a Protestant minister who taught history at the University inspired Chaiken to take pride in her Jewish identity. Professor Alben Barkley praised the contributions of Jews to Western civilization during a course on the Ancient World. Barkley’s class motivated her to pursue both a degree in history and a life-long commitment to Jewish continuity.

“In this anti-Semitic climate, Professor Barkley’s comments had a tremendous impact on me,” said Chaiken, adding that “The more I learned (about Jewish history), the more I studied, the more fascinated I became.”

Recently, the University of Delaware honored Chaiken for her dedication to Delaware’s Jewish community, to the University and its Jewish studies programming. More than 150 community members joined Chaiken’s friends and family to watch her receive the Medal of Distinction – U of D’s highest honor. University President David P. Roselle presented the award at MBNA America Hall in Newark in tribute to her personal contributions to campus life and in recognition of the gift made by Chaiken and her late husband, Frank that launched the school’s Jewish studies program.

The Frank and Yetta Chaiken Center for Jewish Studies opened its doors in 1994. Since its founding, 45 students have graduated and another dozen are currently taking four to five classes a semester in fields including history, literature, sociology and Hebrew language. They also enjoy lecturers from prominent Jewish figures such as novelists Marge Piercy or Philip Roth.

Center Director Sara Horowitz stresses that you don’t have to be Jewish to participate. “Jewish studies aren’t just for Jews – The Center is a very important part of the academic picture now,” she explained.

The Chaiken family’s generosity also helped finance construction of the Holocaust Museum in Washington and create an art fund at the Jewish Community Center.

Chaiken is the daughter of Russian immigrants who met in America. Like many first-generation Americans, she is committed to education, particularly history. The Wilmington native taught history in the city’s Warner and Mount Pleasant Junior High Schools and conducted the very first women’s junior high school history course in the State of Delaware.

She has worked with the Delaware Historical Society to teach history to children with reading problems and has conducted oral histories of Delaware’s early Jewish residents. These accounts are now preserved in the University of Delaware Library.

Chaiken has volunteered her time to a number of community organizations including the Jewish Voice which she served as a former Editorial Committee Chair, Kutz Home, JCC and the League of Women Voters. However, her greatest energies are directed to the University of Delaware.

She credits the school with shaping her Jewish identity and will recount her experiences in her soon to be published memoirs. “Although I went to Hebrew School as a young girl, my roots took hold during my time here,” she said.

Chaiken also was honored by the University’s Hillel as one of three recipients of its Jewish Life on Campus Award. Sharing in this honor was Bennett Epstein, a longtime board member and Pearl C. Kristol. Kristol and her late husband, Abe provided the funds for Hillel’s current site on West Delaware Avenue.

“All of our award recipients live their lives according to Jewish principles,” said Lelaine Nemser vice president of the Hillel board of directors. “They are indeed inspiring role models to all those around them,” he concluded.

Originally published in The Jewish Voice, April 30, 1999, p. 1.