About This Item


  • Call NumberBJHP_0295
  • SummarySeder dinner at the Levine family. From right to left: seated: Myrna (Samuel) Levine; her children Gail and Bonnie Levine; her husband Manuel Levine; standing in back: Lil (Liliane) Levine, sister of Manuel; unknown woman, seated; older couple in center: Jacob and Sarah (Kopchansky) Levine, parents of Manuel; standing: Sam and Abbe Levine (with hat) brothers of Manuel; seated: Steven and Philip Levine (sons of Abbe); Doris Levine, wife of Murray (brother of Manuel); children: Rita and Judy seated on lap of George Gamm (husband of Lilian).
  • Date1953
  • Physical Description1 image file : digital, TIFF, black-and-white
  • Creator[unknown]
  • CollectionBrooklyn Jewish History Project
  • Cite AsBrooklyn Jewish History Project, Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History
  • Formatstill image
  • Genreblack-and-white photographs
  • NoteTitle supplied by cataloger. Digitized photograph donated by Gail Levine on March 16, 2021. Collected through the Brooklyn Jewish History Project of Brooklyn Public Library. This project is funded by the David Berg Foundation.
  • SubjectPortraits, Group ; Seder ; Passover
  • PlaceBrooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
  • RightsThis work is covered by a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 license. Users are free to share and adapt the work for non-commercial purposes as long as appropriate credit is given to the source and new material created with this work is shared under the same conditions.
  • TitleThe Levine family. Family gather around seder dinner table.
  • Biographical NoteGail Levine-Fried grew up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Her parents, Myrna (nee Minnie Samuel, and Manuel Levine married at the Kingston Avenue Synagogue on August 19, 1941. Gail was born in 1943 and her sister Bonnie in 1946. Manuel’s family emigrated from Poland to America around 1900. Myrna’s family, also from Poland, settled in Canada and Myrna became a United States citizen in 1953. Manuel worked for 25 years managing the sporting goods department at Sears, Roebuck and Company in Flatbush. He felt his Jewish identity hindered his advancement at Sears. The family became members of the Union Temple Synagogue of Brooklyn and Gail was involved from a young age in the community. It was there that she was confirmed, married Bob Fried in 1991, and became bat mitzvah in 2004.