Full description not available
G**H
Pre-ICE Raid Postville
Postville: A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America This book describes the author's family move from the sophistication of life in San Francisco to Iowa in 1993. The author's acceptance of a position as professor of journalism at the University of Iowa necessitated not only a change of location, but also of world view and life style, as witnessed by his shock in reading a newspaper review of the better sea food retaurants in the Cedar Rapids area and finding Red Lobster and Long John Silver listed.I purchased the book because like so many, I was horrified at the multi-million dollar raid performed by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) at the Postville Agriprocessor's meat packing plant in May 2008. The raid netted some 400 workers, principally of Guatemalan and Mexican descent, working at the plant that day. I wanted to know the history of the town and the plant that brought these people to this small Iowa town, to a factory operated by Hasidic (ultra-orthodox) Jews. At the time of the raid, the plant provided nearly 60% of the kosher beef, lamb and poultry in the US.In an often humorous, but always serious and evenhanded way, Bloom tells the tale of the dying town that was ressurected by the opening of the kosher operations at the abandoned meat packing plant there. The creation of more than 400 jobs, even though the jobs did not attract workers from Iowa, was still an economic miracle for Postville, but as Bloom explains, the blessing was also a curse, as it meant the the Hasidic Jews had accomlished that which the town and state had not. It also meant that the Jews were the wealthy people in town who effectively called the shots on much of town life. Finally, there were the cultural and religious differences that had never quite been over come.Bloom's tells this story of culture clash from several perspectives, and the people, real people (although some are re-named from their actual names) are living, breathing people, not stereotypes. One one level, Bloomn's book is a history of ecomic and culture clash in a small, rural town. On another level, possibly not intended, the book is a tale of globalization, and the shifting role of the US in a global economy. The tensions and clashes in the book seem to parallel or foretell the rise of globalism and and its clashes with rising nationalism and nativism.The book is a valuable and comfortable read on its own. As we learn more and more of the social and economic paralysis now besetting Postville (not to mention the cost to tax payers for the raid itself), I believe Bloom's book will be a valuable tool in defining a basline and illuminaitng the very intangible sociological elements of the town's existence.
J**F
Clashes of cultures on many levels
Growing up decades ago in Northeast Iowa gave me a perspective of what the town of Postville was like before the Jews purchased the meat packing plant. Reading this book took me back to the innocence of my youth and it reflected the naivete of most small towns. The true clash of cultures is when people think that OTHER people should change to accept those around them. Some people in Postville were willing to accept the outsiders. They welcomed the newcomers with great hope that the Jews would integrate into the well-established culture of Postville. Other Postvillians were more skeptical. After arriving, the Orthodox Jews maintained their culture without commingling with the locals. The expectations of the locals hoping to welcome the outsiders proved to be a blow to their hopes. And in that, a clash between the welcoming locals and skeptical locals ensued.In some ways, the author describes a clash of cultures on a personal level. A big-city Jew (albeit secular) moves to small-city Iowa and seeks to connect with the locals. His own personal struggle mirrors many of the aspects of both the Postville locals and the New York Jews. In his exploration of the town of Postville, he overcomes the clash of his own personal culture. Yet, he carries forth many aspects of his personal culture within himself.
L**R
It's not journalism, but read it anyway.
No, it's not "good journalism," it's biased and even angering as the previous reviewers have stated. The author doesn't speak to as many Hassidic sources as he does to townspeople. Part of the way through the book, he takes a side completely and stops speaking to the Hassidim entirely. He doesn't break down many myths about either side but particularly he doesn't understand how the Hassidim treat women, which is disappointing given his natural position as potential ambassador between the two groups. It's clear that he does not practice what he preaches (that is, remaining objective and having two sources back up each fact that he uses). So, the first 200 pages of "analysis" are a little bit disappointing and predictable, speaking in vague terms about mild anti-semitism.What makes this book truly worth reading is what happens about 200 pages in. Bloom stops reporting on the situation and starts reporting more correctly on several specific topics, namely: the business practices of the Hassidim in Postville, certain incidents in the local area, and - most fascinatingly - about the criminal actions of and obstruction of justice by a small handful of Hassidim in Northeast Iowa.It's absolutely worth reading Bloom's tepid analysis for 200 pages to get to these 130 pages of rather engrossing stories.
R**Y
Reads Like A Novel - engaging and informative
This book was about the culture clash in the small town of Postville, IA (population 1500) between the white, Christian locals and the Hasidic Jews who moved in the late 80s and turned an old slaughterhouse into a kosher slaughterhouse. The author is a Reform Jew so he brought an interesting perspective to the conflict as someone sort of in the middle of the two extremes living in Postville.I really liked this book, it reads like a novel. The only thing that bothered me was the author throwing in Yiddish or Hebrew words without telling me what they meant. The plant in Postville was raided in May 2008 and almost 400 undocumented immigrants, mostly from Somalia and Latin America were removed and the NYT reported that the plant is defaulting on a $35M loan. A sequel may be in order.
S**4
it is important to remember that the behavior of the ...
it is important to remember that the behavior of the Hasitic Jews clashed with the LOCALS in Iowa Much of their behavior would have gone unnoticed in New York.This cloister treats all non Jews as outsiders and they are very difficult for other Jews to deal with also. it was a little choppy but very interesting.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago