Bread Givers

Bread Givers is a 1925 three-volume novel by Jewish-American author Anzia Yezierska; the story of a young girl growing up in an immigrant Jewish household in the Lower East Side of New York City. Her parents are from Poland in the Russian Empire.

Synopsis

"Bread Givers" a three-volume novel of a Jewish-American female coming-of-age story set in the 1920s written by Anzia Yezierska. 10-year-old Sara Smolinsky is the protagonist and narrator of Bread Givers. Sara lives in a tenement with her Jewish orthodox father, Reb, her mother, Shenah, and her three older sisters Bessie, Fania, and Mashah in the Lower East Side of New York City. The Smolinsky’s are destitute, Sara’s Orthodox father, Reb, devotes his time to the study of the Torah and Jewish sacred texts and refuses to help to provide for the family’s income. Sara’s mother rents out the front room of their tenement to boarders after convincing her husband Reb to move his sacred texts under her bed in order to have money to pay for rent.[1]

The Smolinsky’s struggle to pay their rent to the landlord, resulting in a confrontation between the collector lady, from the landlord, and Reb. The collector lady demands Reb in a slew of insults to pay for the rent of the past two months while he is singing a religious hymn. Reb explains he does not have the money and in anger the collector lady slams the Torah shut causing the book to fall at her feet. Insulted, Reb becomes angry and slaps her twice causing her to seek the police to arrest and put him on trial. Reb’s short absence triggers Sara to sell herling on Hester St. as a form of income. When Reb returns home free of charges, the community on Hester St. admires him for hitting the collector lady.[2]

Each of sara’s three older sisters falls in love and Reb rejects each of their suitors. Reb decides to arrange marriages for each of his three older daughters despite them already being in love. Reb uses the arranged marriages for his own financial gain, even though, his daughters are unhappy. Sara witnesses the damage her father causes on her sisters by intervening in all of their relationships and makes a promise to herself to marry someone of her own choosing. A promise that later solidifies her decision in not letting her father control her decisions.

Reb’s financial gain from Bessie's marriage causes him to quickly search for a business bargain. In the "Ghetto News" Reb reads an ad stating that a grocery store was for sale for $400 in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Reb decides to purchase the store without his wife's opinion despite her pleading to go with him to make the deal. Once the transaction of the bargain is completed Reb, his wife, and Sara find out how most of the stock in the grocery store was fake and that they were swindled by the previous owner. Sara and her mother works in the store, but must confront with Reb’s lack of business sense. Reb chases customers away from the store with his preaching and scolding. Eventually, Sara becomes frustrated with Reb’s stubbornness and she decides to move back to New York City alone where she decides to become a teacher.

Sara creates a rigid daily schedule resulting in her decision to ignore her family. Sara makes an effort to be a part of the social circles around her, but fails to be accepted by her American peers. Rejected she decides to focus on her studies. Coincidentally Max Goldstein, a business partner of Fania’s husband, begins to pursue Sara.[3] Sara enjoys her time with Max, but realizes they are not suited for one another because he does not understand Sara’s need to complete her college education. Sara breaks up with Max and decides to focus solely on her studies.

Sara soon graduates college with a teaching degree and as a recipient of $1,000 that she won in an essay contest. Feeling successful, Sara returns home to find her mother fatally ill. After her mother's death, her father remarries but learns that his new wife, widow Mrs. Feinstein, is after his late wife's lodge money. Sara and her sisters, become furious viewing the quick marriage as a dishonor to their mother, and vow to not see their father. Sara begins teaching, but receives a letter from her father’s new wife about financial help. Reb’s daughters refuse to support him or his new wife.

Mrs. Feinstein angered that Sara refuses to give her money writes a letter to the principal of the school, Hugo Seelig, where Sara is teaching in an attempt to discredit her. Hugo sympathizes with Sara and they begin to date. During a dinner Hugo and Sara find out they are country men: Jewish Polish American. Another night when Sara is on her way to have dinner with Hugo she finds her father extremely ill, lying in the gutter and selling chewing gum. Concerned, Sara walks her father home and begins to care for him by asking time off from teaching. Sara realizes that her father does need a wife to care for him and convinces her sisters to help support their father and his new wife. Reb later reveals to Sara that he is unhappy. Conflicted Sara asks her father to come live with her and Hugo. Reb is concerned about whether he can live with Sara stating, promise to keep sacred all that is sacred to him.[4] The three-volume novel ends with Sara and Hugo walking home agreeing in Reb moving in with them.

Setting

The novel is set in the 1920s in Lower East Side of New York City, specifically, in Hester St.. The story takes place in three distinct settings: the tenements on New York's Lower East Side in Hester St. where readers assume the Smolinsky family settled when they first arrived to America, the town of Elizabeth, New Jersey where her father Reb purchased the grocery store, and Sara's college (not named but outside the Jewish immigrant setting).

Sara describes the community in Hester St. as Jewish immigrants who settled with or near family and neighbors in the tenements of New York's Lower East Side, replicating their European communities. Thus, building a Jewish enclave within the Lower East Side of New York.[5]

Sara depicts Elizabeth, New Jersey, differently as a more rural community based on an agricultural economy. The family is seen to interact with an American farmer or presumed Americanized immigrant laborers. Sara and her mother miss the close support of the community of women from the New York City tenements.[6]

Sara becomes entirely isolated from her original culture after she leaves for college. Sara portrays her experience as unable to connect with students her age, only those older than her such as the principal of her school and staff.[7]

Charity in Bread Givers

Reb is portrayed as belonging to many different societies and charities. Reb is often accused to have donated plenty of financial aid to an extent where it effects the families income. During the 1920's in news publications many ads were published encouraging jewish immigrants with ties to their native home to donate and help jewish workers in Europe receive a stable income. In the "Women's Wear Daily" an ad called Jews Donating Textile Shops to Kin Abroad encourages Jewish-American immigrants to donate money or textiles to support the cause of enabling home-town folk to earn a living all year round. The add references different societies such as Proskurov, and the Society for the Promotion of Agricultural and Technical Trades Among the Jews and Eastern Europe.[8]

News Publication Reviews

In The New York Times Book Review September 13, 1925 article “Turbulent Folkways of the Ghetto in a New Novel”, critic from Doubleday, Page & Co. claims "Bread Givers" is a narrative about struggle in defeat and achievement within a community of Old World and New World standards. Bread Givers demonstrates the cultural differences within a Jewish-American household, traditional vs idealism.[9]

In the "Chicago Daily Tribune" September 19, 1925 article "Bread Givers Paints Vivid Scene" by Fanny Butcher claims "Bread Givers" narrates the life of poverty in the struggle for success and education calling it a Cinderella story. Describing "Bread Givers" as emotionally impacting and revealing of a traditional strict father and a young assimilating daughter yearning for success.[10]

References

  1. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books. p. 14.
  2. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books. p. 18.
  3. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books. p. 187.
  4. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books. p. 295.
  5. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. Persea Books. p. 24.
  6. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. Persea Books. p. 130.
  7. Yezierska, Anzia (1975). Bread Givers. Persea Books. p. 179.
  8. "Jews Donating Textile Shops To Kin Abroad". Women's Wear Daily. Societies. 4 October 1929.
  9. "Turbulent Folkways of the Ghetto in a New Novel". ProQuest Database: The New York Times Book Review. Doubleday, Page & Co. 13 September 1925.
  10. Butcher, Fanny (19 September 1925). ""Bread Givers" Paints Vivid Ghetto". Chicago Daily Tribune. ProQuest Historical Newspapers.
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