The Bronx,
that most maligned bit of New York City, paradoxically marooned on the mainland
of the United States, deserves a lot more respect than it is given. The Bronx
was the birthplace of Woody Allen, Lauren Bacall, Louis Farrakhan, the NY
Yankees, hip-hop music, Ed Koch, and most importantly, me. The Bronx is where I
grew up, and although my family moved to NJ when I was ten, they may as well have
moved to an alternative universe - one filled with bike paths and football fields
and parking lots and strange non-Catholic churches. As soon as I was able I rode
the buses back across the GW Bridge to the Bronx, to drink its egg creams and buy
reggae singles at Jamaican record shops.
The Bronx
has a bad reputation for poverty, violence, and urban ugliness that is not
entirely unearned, but not entirely of its own making either. Like a lot of New
York’s outer boroughs, until the 1960s the Bronx functioned pretty well as a
city unto itself, sharing services with the rest of NY but with its own
political machine. Then came Robert Moses. Moses was an incredibly powerful,
yet unelected politician appointed as “Master
Builder” to spend Roosevelt’s New Deal money on bridges, tunnels, and most of
all, highways to transport the suburban commuters of the future. He loved cities, but he hated people, especially people who were not white and rich. Annoyed at the
power wielded by established neighborhood political machines in Brooklyn and
the Bronx Robert Moses simply blasted massive highways through the neighborhoods,
creating cement canyons that cut parts of the city into new, socially isolated mini
districts. The Cross Bronx Expressway and Major Deegan Thruway may be a boon to
commuters but they were a death sentence to the neighborhoods of the Bronx.
By the 1970s many – including my family – had fled the Bronx as the city began
shrinking services to the borough and – secretly – colluding with developers to
buy up the rapidly devaluating property cheaply. Drugs fed on the hopelessness,
and gang culture flourished on the drug trade. Landlords found it easier to
burn down their buildings and collect insurance money than to rent them. By
1980s the Bronx had become the backdrop for films like Fort Apache The Bronx
and The Warriors (actually based on XenophonAnabasis) which portrayed the Bronx as a scorched earth zone of racist
nightmares.
The low point came in 1990 when an arson fire at the Happy Lands Social Club killed 87 people, mostly Garifuna (Black Carib) immigrants from
Honduras. After the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001 and the Oklahoma
City bombings in 1995, it is the third largest loss of life by fire in US
history. It also brought attention to the neglect of fire regulations in the Bronx and the growing demands of the immigrant communities to be treated on an equal footing by the New York municipal authorities.
What? Your subway metro system doesn't have live Mexican accordionists?
We passed
the Happy lands site while driving around the Bronx with Bob Godfried –
musician, researcher, accordion repair expert, social activist, High school shop teacher – who was
born and bred in the Bronx and is a deep well of knowledge of all things
Bronxian. Over the years we have done a lot of exploring in the Bronx and Jersey with Mr. Godfried, and he is not letting retirement slow him down at all. When the time comes for all the Jews in the Bronx to leave, Bob will
be the one who turns off the light.
Two feral Bronx Jews captured in the forests of central Bronx.
Luckily, that time won’t come soon. There are still quite a lot of us in the Bronx, along with Africans, Chaldeans, Irish, Albanian, Macedonian Gypsies, Dominicans, Jamaicans... you get the idea. Many of the New York traditional music scene folks I knew when I lived in the USA have moved out to the suburbs, especially to upstate New York and New Jersey. Not
Bob. He stays local, fixing the oddball accordions of Mexican Norteno
musicians, Irish box players, and most recently, the harmoniums of the Indian
community. Not many harmonium tuners in New York competing with him.
Bob Godfried in his natural element.
A day trip with Bob is basically an excuse to talk to somebody on my frequency: a
normal conversation may start by discussing early minstrel banjo construction, then contemporary Iranian Kurdish cinema, the evil calumny of Robert Moses, and then
winding up furiously linking the newer Hohner accordion reeds with the fall of civilization.
Bob also knows all the Oaxacan and Puebla taco shops in the Bronx and exactly
where to get a Donald Trump piñata for your next quinceñero party or bar
mitzvah.
Trump piñatas are literally flying out of the shop.
The Trump piñata was found in a Mexican party supplies shop in Yonkers, about a mile north of
the border with the Bronx but close enough for irredentism. Yonkers is home to
a large immigrant community from Mexico, and so we stopped in for a lunch of
tacos and tamales at Fonda de 5 Mayo
Carnitas tacos.
Across the street, we browsed a Botanica which specialized in a deeply orthodox
Yoruba expression of Santeria. The North Bronx and Yonkers is the center of New
York’s African born Yoruba community, but there are lots of Ghanaian, Malians,
and Senegalese up here as well. Just
down the road was the last of the Puerto Rican “cultural centers” – the Taino
Mayor Record Shop.
Rincon Center (A bad pun if you are Japanese, a good pun if you are Boriqueño.)
The shop is more of a neighborhood hangout than a commercial
concern. Guitars and drums lay around waiting to be picked up and played. An
old guy wearing Puerto Rico shaped sunglasses stands outside making comments
about everybody who passes by. Nobody spoke English, so Bob spoke in Spanish,
which long ago replaced Yiddish as the second language of the Bronx. Stuffed to
the ceilings with Puerto Rican flags, CDs, cuatros, guiros, Boriqueno key
rings, and even tamborines with dancing Jews printed on them, I think they were
surprised when I actually purchased a CD of plena music. Most of the Bronx Puerto
Ricans have moved out of the city, assimilated, or moved back to the island.
Pathfinders in the Thain Forest
Most casual visitors
to the Bronx are either there for jury duty or are headed to the Bronx Zoo. Good choice, but almost across the
street is the Bronx Botanical Gardens. When I was a kid I never wanted to visit
there. Why see a tree when you could see bison and screeching monkeys flinging
poo. But I am older now, and Fumie wanted to see it, and guess what… it is an vast
island of nature smack dab in the center of the Bronx. Not only that, but it is
home to the last untouched forest in New York, never logged or farmed, a parcel known as the
Thain Family Forest. It is also probably the only remaining virgin hardwood forest in New York that has its own gift shop.
For about ten years the forest was off limits to visitors
in order to weed out invasive species and soften environmental impact, but now
it has clear paths and for a moment you can stroll through an old growth Hickory
forest convenient to a NY transit metro rail stop. It is an unworldly feeling to be surrounded by 200 year old hickory and oak trees while hearing a city bus farting to a stop a few yards away. Hidden deep in the woods there is even a rarely
visited waterfall on the Bronx River.
The Botanical Gardens are brought to you by... a rich corporation!
By this time
it was time to find dinner, and Pere Godfried's interior cultural map of the Bronx did not fail us. After visiting an African grocery and inhaling the aromas of deeply smoked and salted goat meat for a while, we felt that something lighter might be in order.
Jerome Ave, near Kingsbridge Station on the 4 line.
Back in the mid 1970s when the US was settling refugees from Vietnam, the decision was made to scatter the resettled South Vietnamese communities around the country so that none of them would grow into an enclave with enough local political power to effectively control politics, as had the Cuban refugee community in Florida. (Ever hear of Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio?) Thus, New York did not really receive many Vietnamese, and those that were sent here were plunked down in the Bronx, where Bob G. was teaching wood shop in the High Schools. That's where he met the kids whose family run the Com Tam Ninh KieuVietnamese Restaurant. The menu is split between noodle soups and rice plates.
Add your bad pho pun here.
This was some of the best pho I have had in the states. Not delicate, clear broth, but a hearty, packed soup with tripe, tendon, with a small botanical garden of its own served on the side. The Bronx: some of the best eats in New York, if you know where to look.
The Botanical Garden used to be free. There might even be a legal requirement that it was supposed to be free forever, since it's on city parkland.
Then they started charging $3 for grounds admission, with extra charges to go in the buildings. Still a great deal, even for people without a lot of money.
I was horrified to stop by and discover that it's now $28 on weekends! A "discounted" $15 ticket for just the grounds is only available to NYC residents. This is a slap in the face to working people and the history of public amenities NYC used to provide for everyone.
The Botanical Garden used to be free. There might even be a legal requirement that it was supposed to be free forever, since it's on city parkland.
ReplyDeleteThen they started charging $3 for grounds admission, with extra charges to go in the buildings. Still a great deal, even for people without a lot of money.
I was horrified to stop by and discover that it's now $28 on weekends! A "discounted" $15 ticket for just the grounds is only available to NYC residents. This is a slap in the face to working people and the history of public amenities NYC used to provide for everyone.