Japanese photographer showcases Hasidim of Crown Heights

Posted By on October 7, 2014

SHE WENT from being a stranger with a camera to a household staple.

Japanese photojournalist Chie Nishio, 84, spent much of the 1990s visiting Hasidic Jews in Crown Heights, snapping intimate shots from the tight-knit communitys weddings, family dinners and parties.

They are very friendly and open, she said, and I think I was very lucky.

Nishios photographs captured the Hasidim during the pivotal last years of the powerful Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, whose influence is still felt 20 years after his death.

Her work is now on display through February at the Brooklyn Public Library. The Hasidim of Crown Heights exhibit is the first showing of the personal snapshots in the U.S.

I really loved the photos of the children, said Barbara Wing, the librarys exhibitions manager. I think there was something magical about how she was able to photograph them so naturally.

A pair of kids playing in the yard first caught Nishios eye in the late 1980s or early 1990s as she visited the Brooklyn neighborhood.

By chance, the childrens grandfather happened to be one of about 6,000 Jewish refugees who fled Nazi forces to Japan during World War II, thanks to the kindness of a rebellious Japanese vice-consul in Lithuania.

He was the first person I interviewed in Crown Heights, said Nishio, who lives in Manhattans Central Park South. That was my beginning.

The shutterbug soon found herself invited into homes throughout the neighborhood.

Continued here:

Japanese photographer showcases Hasidim of Crown Heights

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