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  • Mr Rudzinski, a holocaust survivor living in Stamford Hill who is very open about what life was like when he was captured by the Nazi’s as a young boy in Germany.
    05-Rudzinski_3688.jpg
  • A 13 year-old Orthodox Jewish boy sits waiting for his Bar Mitzvah to begin in a Parces hall, Stamford Hill. The Bar Mitzvah signals the coming of age for a young Jewish boy, they become responsible to observe the commandments of the Torah. It coincides with physical puberty and they begin to participate in all areas of Jewish life. A Bar mitzvah ceremony is a big occasion, the young boy reads a section from the Torah to his family and friends and a mitzvah meal is consumed.
    07-weiss_9053.jpg
  • A member of the Neturei Karta demonstrates how he was punched to a community police officer as they were stopped trying to burn the Israeli flag in Stamford Hill, London during the festival of Purim. The Neturiei Karta oppose Zionism and believe that Jews are forbidden to have their own state until the coming of the Messiah.
    07-purim_0132.jpg
  • Tashlikh is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah). In Stamford Hill the nearest flowing water is river Lea, Hackney, London.
    05-tachlich_3796.jpg
  • A 13 year-old Orthodox Jewish boy sits waiting for his Bar Mitzvah to begin in a Parces hall, Stamford Hill. The Bar Mitzvah signals the coming of age for a young Jewish boy, they become responsible to observe the commandments of the Torah. It coincides with physical puberty and they begin to participate in all areas of Jewish life. A Bar mitzvah ceremony is a big occasion, the young boy reads a section from the Torah to his family and friends and a mitzvah meal is consumed.
    07-weiss_9053.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0254.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0248.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0235.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0233.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0219.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0253.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0249.jpg
  • A Sabbath prayer meeting being held outside a Stamford Hill home by ultra orthodox Hassidic Jews during the coronavirus pandemic on 25th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The coronavirus has hit Britain’s Orthodox Jewish community disproportionately hard, with hundreds in the  tested positive for the coronavirus. Police have become aware of a number of religious meetings like this in the Haredi community who are not taking the restrictions seriously enough and could be endangering themselves and wider society.
    _E6A0241.jpg
  • Women and children struggle to get vouchers for free kosher ice cream, the only kosher ice cream van in the UK visiting a community event in Allen Gardens, Stamford Hill to celebrate Lag B’Omer. Lag B’Omer is the holiday celebrating the thirty-third day of the (counting of the) Omer. Jews celebrate it as the day when the plague that killed 24,000 people ended in the holy land (according to the Babylonian Talmud). Other sources say the plague was actually the Roman occupation and the 24,000 people died in the second Jewish – Roman war  (Bar Kokhba revolt of the first century).  Bonfires (used as signals in wartime) are symbolically lit to commemorate the holiday of Lag’B’Omer.
    04-hill_1542.jpg
  • An orthodox Jewish family walk on the pavement of a busy road in Stamford Hill, London, England, United Kingdom.  Stamford Hill area is home to one of the largest populations of Orthodox Jewish people.
    UK-Orthodox-Jewish-Stamford-Hill-842...jpg
  • An Orthodox Jewish man in traditional clothes looks through a vandalised and smashed window in a bus shelter on the A20 Road in Stamford Hill, London, England.
    UK-Orthodox-Jewish-Stamford-Hill-730...jpg
  • Hundreds of Orthodox Jews gathered today (8th of April 2009) in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (blessing of the sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol (מחזור גדול, "the large cycle"). A solar year is estimated as 365.25 days and the "Blessing of the Sun", being said at the beginning of this cycle, is therefore recited every 10,227 (28 times 365.25) days
    09-OJC-birkat-8415.jpg
  • Hundreds of Orthodox Jews gathered today (8th of April 2009) in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (blessing of the sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol (מחזור גדול, "the large cycle"). A solar year is estimated as 365.25 days and the "Blessing of the Sun", being said at the beginning of this cycle, is therefore recited every 10,227 (28 times 365.25) days
    09-OJC-birkat-8399.jpg
  • Hundreds of Orthodox Jews gathered today (8th of April 2009) in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (blessing of the sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol (מחזור גדול, "the large cycle"). A solar year is estimated as 365.25 days and the "Blessing of the Sun", being said at the beginning of this cycle, is therefore recited every 10,227 (28 times 365.25) days
    09-OJC-birkat-8337.jpg
  • Two Orthodox Jewish men praying from the same prayer book in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (Blessing of the Sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol
    09-OJC-birkat-8158.jpg
  • Orthodox Jews from Stamford Hill pray outside the tomb of Rabbi Shulem Moshkovitz, The Shotzer Rebbe who is buried in the Adath Yisroel cemetery, Enfield. Before his death in 1958 (5718 Jewish years) he promised to help everyone who attended his tomb on a Friday morning and lit 3 candles.  It is thought by people in the local community that thousands have had spiritual help after lighting candles and praying here. On Friday the 12th of January 2007 it was the anniversary of his death, hundreds of people turned up to light candles, place them on his tomb and pray.
    07-shotzer_5942.jpg
  • Rabbi Tzvi Elimelech Halberstam (behind the microphone). Rebbe and current spiritual leader of the Klausenberger dynasty speaking to his followers at the Viznitz Synagogue (their own is too small) in Stamford Hill, London.
    06-rebbe_9187.jpg
  • Orthodox Jewish children playing in the street of Reizel close an Agudas Israel Housing Association development for low-income Orthodox Jewish families in Stamford Hill, London.  All the children play regularly together, having bike races and playing football. There is a real sense of a community, some mothers are out with their younger children keeping an eye on goings on.
    04-agudas_3226.jpg
  • An Orthodox Jewish boy climbing on a fence in front of a block of flats with open windows in Reizel close an Agudas Israel Housing Association development for low-income Orthodox Jewish families in Stamford Hill, London.
    04-agudas_3088.jpg
  • In a Stamford Hill Skwer synagogue Jewish men watch the Skwer Rebbe visiting from New York carry the new Sefer Torah (five books of Moses) into the Shul. Hundreds of men and women gathered to see the event take place.
    08-skwer_9768.jpg
  • Hundreds of Orthodox Jews gathered today (8th of April 2009) in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (blessing of the sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol (מחזור גדול, "the large cycle"). A solar year is estimated as 365.25 days and the "Blessing of the Sun", being said at the beginning of this cycle, is therefore recited every 10,227 (28 times 365.25) days
    09-OJC-birkat-8417.jpg
  • The local Tokea (Blaster) Rabbi Kahn blowing a Shofar for Rosh Hashanah to mark the start of the new year in Stamford Hill. The Shofar is usually made from a Rams horn and is one of the earliest wind instruments known to man. It is considered one of the commandments to hear a Shofar on Rosh Hashanah.
    07-shofar_7617.jpg
  • Women and children struggle to get vouchers for free kosher ice cream, the only kosher ice cream van in the UK visiting a community event in Allen Gardens, Stamford Hill to celebrate Lag B’Omer. Lag B’Omer is the holiday celebrating the thirty-third day of the (counting of the) Omer. Jews celebrate it as the day when the plague that killed 24,000 people ended in the holy land (according to the Babylonian Talmud). Other sources say the plague was actually the Roman occupation and the 24,000 people died in the second Jewish – Roman war  (Bar Kokhba revolt of the first century).  Bonfires (used as signals in wartime) are symbolically lit to commemorate the holiday of Lag’B’Omer.
    04-icecream_1554.jpg
  • On the 8th day after birth a Brit Milah (Circumcision) is performed on a Jewish baby boy (unless there is a medical reason to delay it). The ceremony takes place in the synagogue and the man who carries out the skin removal is know as a Mohel and is medically trained, the boy is also given his Hebrew and/or English names. Here the father and grandfather of the baby boy assist the Mohel, friends and family attend the ceremony.
    07-bris_9475.jpg
  • Chanukah last for 8 days and is the Jewish festival of light. It commemorates the rededication of the temple after it had been defiled. A candle is lit every night. In order to bring light to the world some put the candles in their front window.  Here at a local old peoples home a resident is being helped by her grandson to light her menorah in the window.
    05-chanukah_7730.jpg
  • Members of the Ultra Orthodox Jewish anti-Zionist group, the Neturei Karta, burning the Israeli flag in the street outside their synagogue during the festival of Purim.  Stamford Hill, London, United Kingdom.
    09-OJC-6633.jpg
  • A finance shop advertising Western Union, Money Gram, Pay Point, and epay. Stamford Hill, London.
    11-London-1431.jpg
  • A speed camera, used to enforce speed limits on motorists. Stamford Hill, London.
    11-London-1368.jpg
  • Members of the Ultra Orthodox Jewish anti-Zionist group, the Neturei Karta, burning the Israeli flag in the street outside their synagogue during the festival of Purim.  Stamford Hill, London, United Kingdom.
    09-OJC-6632.jpg
  • Members of the Ultra Orthodox Jewish anti-Zionist group, the Neturei Karta, burning the Israeli flag in the street outside their synagogue during the festival of Purim.  Stamford Hill, London, United Kingdom.
    09-OJC-6621.jpg
  • Hundreds of Orthodox Jews gathered today (8th of April 2009) in Springfield park, Stamford Hill, to celebrate the festival of Birkat Hachama (blessing of the sun).  It is a Jewish blessing that is recited in appreciation of the Sun once every twenty-eight years, when the vernal equinox as calculated by tradition falls on a Tuesday at sundown. Jewish tradition says that when the Sun completes this cycle, it has returned to its position when the world was created. According to Judaism, the Sun has a 28 year solar cycle known as machzor gadol
    09-OJC-birkat-8422.jpg
  • Yom Tov takes place when Passover has finished, Orthodox Jews return to the local supermarkets (Morrisons) to buy leavened products e.g.: cereal, biscuits, cake, and anything that contains yeast.  Shopping hours are extended until 3 AM to allow this to happen.
    07-ojc_6088.jpg
  • The process of baking unleavened matza bread for Passover begins with the flour mix; the room is kept covered with brown paper for hygienic purposes and the ingredients are totally separate. The baking process from start to finish has to be completed within 18 minutes for it to be Kosher. They are baking matza bread for Passover out the back of Bethune Road synagogue.
    07-matza_3441.jpg
  • During the Jewish festival of Purim a group of Orthodox Jewish boys from the Viznitz Yeshiva (school) in fancy dress visit local businessmen to collect money for their school. Some of the businessman that they visit read a prayer to the group. The young boys drink alcohol at every house they visit during the day.
    05-purim_4389.jpg
  • At the end of the Purim festival and 18 minutes before the beginning of Shabbat the candles are lit in the synagogue and everyone puts their hands toward the main candle to accept the sanctity of Shabbat. Shabbat is the Jewish day of rest and lasts from sunset on Friday night until 1 hour after sunset on Saturday. No work is allowed at all during Shabbat.
    04-purim_5597.jpg
  • A young boy dressed as a Purim Rabbi in white robes and a white tall furry hat crosses Dunsmure road by a local chemist during the festival of Purim.
    07-purim_0061.jpg
  • Pidyon Haben is a rite of passage in Judaism that is known as ‘the redemption of the first born son’. It takes place when a baby is at least 31 days old, and involves ‘buying him back from a Cohen.’ Here the baby is draped in gold by the mother, grandmother and family and then bought back from a Cohen for 5 pieces of silver. The baby has to be the first boy who has opened his mother’s womb and not have been delivered by a caesarean birth.
    07-pidyon_7720_1.jpg
  • Pidyon Haben is a rite of passage in Judaism that is known as ‘the redemption of the first born son’. It takes place when a baby is at least 31 days old, and involves ‘buying him back from a Cohen.’ Here the baby is draped in gold by the mother, grandmother and family and then bought back from a Cohen for 5 pieces of silver. The baby has to be the first boy who has opened his mother’s womb and not have been delivered by a caesarean birth.
    07-pidyon_7699.jpg
  • An Orthodox Jewish man checking the unleavened matza bread is properly cooked after taking it out of the oven. They are baking matza bread for Passover out the back of Bethune Road synagogue. The baking process from start to finish has to be completed within 18 minutes for it to be Kosher.
    07-matza_3290.jpg
  • On the first day of Passover Rabbi Gluck burns his homets and the tools used to collect the homets in a garden fire. While burning these items he recites a prayer.
    05-homets_8361.jpg
  • Orthodox Jewish men dance to music in a driveway of a wealthy man of the area whilst waiting to gain access to the household. It is stated that the men should drink so much alcohol that they don’t know the difference between right and wrong.  Purim is one of the most entertaining Jewish holidays.  It commemorates the time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination from a massacre by Haman. Due to the courage of a young Jewish woman called Esther. It is customary to hold carnival-like celebrations on Purim, and for groups of men to go round on the back of lorries and in open top buses visiting local wealthy men, collecting for their charity. It is stated that the men should drink so much alcohol that they don’t know the difference between right and wrong.
    04-purim_6559.jpg
  • A group of Orthodox Jewish boys in fancy dress collecting for charity visit a wealthy man of the area; some houses are so popular they have a bouncer on the front door. Purim is one of the most entertaining Jewish holidays.  It commemorates the time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination from a massacre by Haman. Due to the courage of a young Jewish woman called Esther. It is customary to hold carnival-like celebrations on Purim, and for groups of men to go round on the back of lorries and in open top buses visiting local wealthy men, collecting for their charity.
    04-purim_6387.jpg
  • Purim is one of the most entertaining Jewish holidays.  It commemorates the time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination from a massacre by Haman. Due to the courage of a young Jewish woman called Esther. It is customary to hold carnival-like celebrations on Purim, and for groups of men to go round on the back of lorries and in open top buses visiting local wealthy men, collecting for their charity. It is stated that the men should drink so much alcohol that they don’t know the difference between right and wrong.
    04-purim_6330.jpg
  • Young Orthodox Jewish boys in fancy dress collecting for their school (Yeshiva) wait in anticipation of the amount they will receive during a visit to the house of Mr Glick, a well off man of the area. Purim is one of the most entertaining Jewish holidays.  It commemorates the time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination from a massacre by Haman. Due to the courage of a young Jewish woman called Esther. It is customary to hold carnival-like celebrations on Purim, and for groups of men to go round on the back of lorries and in open top buses visiting local wealthy men, collecting for their charity. It is stated that the men should drink so much alcohol that they don’t know the difference between right and wrong.
    04-purim_5733.jpg
  • Young men tour the streets wearing fancy dress in an open top bus, drinking and dancing while going round visiting local wealthy men, collecting for their school charity during Purim. Purim is one of the most entertaining Jewish holidays.  It commemorates the time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination from a massacre by Haman. Due to the courage of a young Jewish woman called Esther. It is customary to hold carnival-like celebrations on Purim. Normally one of the group dresses up as Haman (right, covering his face).
    03-purim_8583.jpg
  • Pidyon Haben is a rite of passage in Judaism that is known as 'the redemption of the first born son'. It takes place when a baby is at least 31 days old, and involves 'buying him back from a Cohen.' Here the baby is draped in gold by the mother, grandmother and family and then bought back from a Cohen for 5 pieces of silver. The baby has to be the first boy who has opened his mother's womb and not have been delivered by a caesarean birth.
    07-pidyon_7720.jpg
  • Men praying and casting away their sins into the river Lea, Hackney, London for Tashlich. Tashlich is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah).
    06-tach_4210.jpg
  • On the 3rd birthday of an Orthodox Jewish boy he has his first ever hair cut in a ceremony called an Upsherin leaving his peyos (sideburns) to grow. Passing a mirror in his hallway this is the first moment he ever sees himself with short hair and a kippah on his head. A kippah is said to be ‘A blessing on the head’ and is perhaps the most instantly identifiable mark of a Jew. He will now begin to learn the Torah.
    04-Upsherin_3675.jpg
  • Orthodox Jewish school boys from the Bobov school watching the Lag B’Omer bonfire in the school playground. Lag B’Omer is the holiday celebrating the thirty-third day of the (counting of the) Omer. Jews celebrate it as the day when the plague that killed 24,000 people ended in the holy land (according to the Babylonian Talmud). Other sources say the plague was actually the Roman occupation and the 24,000 people died in the second Jewish – Roman war  (Bar Kokhba revolt of the first century).  Bonfires (used as signals in wartime) are symbolically lit to commemorate the holiday of Lag’B’Omer.
    04-hill_1070.jpg
  • Hatzola are a voluntary medical emergency service that provides care to the Orthodox Jewish community of North London.  Here 3 of their volunteers assist an Orthodox Jewish patient wearing an oxygen mask into the back of their ambulance.
    07-hatzola_8868.jpg
  • Hatzola are a voluntary medical emergency service that provides care to the Orthodox Jewish community of North London.  Here 3 of their volunteers provide care with oxygen to an Orthodox Jewish patient in the back of their ambulance.
    07-hatzola_8911.jpg
  • The Mohel washes his hands before the circumcision ceremony begins. On the 8th day after birth a Brit Milah (Circumcision) is performed on a Jewish baby boy (unless there is a medical reason to delay it). The ceremony takes place in the synagogue and the man who carries out the skin removal is know as a Mohel and is medically trained, the boy is also given his Hebrew and/or English names.
    07-bris_9496.jpg
  • Shabbat is the weekly day of rest for Orthodox Jews; it lasts from sunset on a Friday to 1 hour past sunset on Saturday. The women of the household mark the beginning the Sabbath by lighting the candles and saying prayers. All food for the 3 meals of Shabbat are prepared in advance as no work can be done on Shabbat.
    07-shabbat_8122.jpg
  • After the funeral of Rabbi Josef Dunner who died on the 1st of April 2007 hundreds of people follow the car carrying the coffin on its way to the cemetery.  Rabbi Dunner was one of the last German Jewish Orthodox Rabbis ordained before the holocaust and well respected within the local community.
    07-dunner_5752.jpg
  • Orthodox Jewish teenage boys playing in the street with a replica hand gun. As one pretends to shoot his friend in the chest the other acts as if he has been shot.
    05-gun_3870.jpg
  • The bride (Kallah) assisted by 2 escorts holding candles circles her groom 7 times under the chuppah. There are many reasons for this, Kabbalah (the Jewish tradition of mysticism) says that women, representing the earth, re-enact seven revolutions that the earth made during the seven days of creation.
    04-wedding_9285.jpg
  • The veiling (bedeken) is when the groom veils his bride immediately before the wedding ceremony. It’s a way for him to verify he is marring the right bride and is often preceded by singing and dancing around the bride who sits on a throne like chair. Once she is veiled the ceremony can take place.
    04-wedding_9209.jpg
  • Mr Leibowitz and his 3 sons reading (learning) the Torah inside their sukkah during Sukkot, the feast of Tabernacles. The holiday commemorates the forty-year period during which the children of Israel were wandering in the desert. In honor of the children of Israel in the wilderness, men dwell in temporary shelters. This shelter is called a sukkah it has at least three sides and a partially open roof covered with greenery.
    04-leibowitz_4062.jpg
  • A young Orthodox Jewish boy surrounded by hundreds of Orthodox Jewish men wearing black coats and hats. The men are gathered to see their spiritual leader who has arrived from Antwerp.
    07-boy_1861.jpg
  • Rabbi Herschel Gluck eating a takeaway meal in his Sukkah during the festival of Sukkot, the feast of Tabernacles. The holiday commemorates the forty-year period during which the children of Israel were wandering in the desert. In honor of the children of Israel in the wilderness, men dwell in temporary shelters. This shelter is called a Sukkah it has at least three sides and a partially open roof covered with greenery.
    04-sukkot_3376.jpg
  • A British post box used for letters that are then collected every day by the Royal Mail, the British postal service.
    11-London-1463.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4262_1.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4235_1.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4272_1.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4270_1.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4248_1.jpg
  • A large tree with it’s roots ripped out of the ground, blown down onto a 4th floor property on Stamford Hill estate.  The sever storm called St Jude is the worst to hit the Uk for years, it has caused sever damage to parts of the country with winds of up to 90mph.
    UK-Weather-Severe-Storms-4241_1.jpg
  • The Post Office sign, outside their branch at Stamford Hill, London.
    11-London-1455.jpg
  • An Orthodox Jewish man leaves a polling station after voting in the General Election in Stamford Hill, London, United Kingdom on 12th December 2019.
    CD 12-12-19 General Election-13.jpg
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