Jewish Immigrants and Crime

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Jewish-American organized crime largely originated from the immigration of Jews from Eastern Europe during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Jewish-American gangsters were involved in many areas of crime, including racketeering, bootlegging, prostitution and narcotics. This organized crime was a matter of obvious concern to the community, because Jewish gangster-ism was seen as irreconcilable with the ethics of Judaism and fed anti-Semitic prejudice against Jews. Jewish organized crime was in no way representative of the majority of Jewish immigration and its offspring. Nevertheless, it was exploited by anti-Semites and anti-immigration forces as arguments to bolster their prejudices. However, it did have a large presence on the Lower East Side.


Jewish organized crime was a reflection of the ethnic succession among gangsters, which has tended to follow the immigrant waves in the United States: English, German, Irish, Jewish and then Italian.


Meyer Lansky
Meyer Lansky, member of the Jewish mafia, 1958

In the early 1900s, Jewish-American organized crime arose among slum kids who developed into well organized gangs in a wide variety of criminal enterprises boosted by Prohibition. For both second-generation Jewish and Italian immigrants, the lure of crime could compete quite successfully with mainstream opportunities. There was a Jewish "crime wave" in early 20th-century New York. About a sixth of the city's felony arrests were Jews. Many young Jewish criminals gravitated toward the "rackets," where they met up with the children of Irish, Italian, and other immigrants. [1]


Jewish-American organized crime derived from dislocation and poverty, the sort of thing that fosters criminality among any other ethnicity in a similar situation. Few of the Jewish gangsters were actually religiously observant. [2]


Much like Irish-Americans and other ethnicities (with exception to Italian-American criminal organizations), Jewish-American presence in organized crime gradually faded after World War II. Jewish-American individuals remained associated with organized crime figures, but the criminal organizations and gangs which once rivaled the Italian and Irish-American mobsters during the first half of the 20th century have long since disappeared. As Jews improved their conditions, the Jewish thug and racketeer either disappeared or merged into a more assimilated American crime environment. American Jews quietly buried the public memory of the gangster past; unlike the Mafia, famous Jewish American gangsters like Meyer Lansky, Dutch Schultz and Bugsy Siegel founded no crime families.


References

  1. The Second Generation from the Last Great Wave of Immigration: Setting the Record Straight, by Nancy Foner, Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York & Richard Alba, State University of New York at Albany, October 2006
  2. But They Were Good to Their People, American Jewish Historical Society