Res 0438-2024
Recognizing Landing Day in the second week of September annually to commemorate the arrival of the first Jewish community in New Amsterdam in 1654.
ResolutionAdoptedCommittee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relationsintroduced 2024-05-23
Adopted by the full Council.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2024-05-23Passed: 2024-09-12
Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations — Department of Cultural Affairs, libraries, museums, Art Commission, New York City Commission for the United Nations, Consular Corps and Protocol, Mayor’s Office of Special Projects and Community Events, and to encourage harmony among the citizens of New York City, to promote the image of New York City and enhance the relationship of its citizens with the international community.
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15 passed · 35 died
This bill: 108 days in committee
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Sponsors (24)
Public Advocate Jumaane Williams
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2024-05-23 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2024-05-23 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2024-09-09 · Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations
AdvancedApproved by Committee
2024-09-09 · Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations
AdvancedApproved, by Council
2024-09-12 · City Council
Votes (9)
Aye (7)
David M. CarrFarah N. LouisCarlina Rivera Shahana K. HanifCrystal HudsonChi A. OsséSandra Ung
Absent (2)
Nantasha M. WilliamsKamillah Hanks
Heard at (3)
City Council · 2024-09-12 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations · 2024-09-09 · 12:00 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
City Council · 2024-05-23 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (11)
- Res. No. 438
- May 23, 2024 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 5-23-24
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - May 23, 2024
- Committee Report 9/9/24
- Hearing Testimony 9/9/24
- Hearing Transcript 9/9/24
- Committee Report - Stated Meeting 9/12/24
- September 12, 2024 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 9-12-24
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - September 12, 2024
Full text
Whereas, During the week of September 7, 1654, a few days before Rosh Hashanah, a group of 23 Sephardic Jews arrived by boat near the southern tip of the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam, having been preceded in late August by three Ashkenazi Jews-Jacob Barsimon and likely Solomon Pietersen and Asser Levy; and
Whereas, Fearing Spanish-Portuguese Inquisition reprisals, this group of 23 new arrivals had fled from the formerly Dutch city of Recife in Brazil after its capture by the Portuguese; and
Whereas, Based on his intolerant and hateful views, New Amsterdam's Dutch Director General Petrus (Peter) Stuyvesant took steps to expel these Jews from his jurisdiction in order to maintain the supremacy of the Dutch Reformed Church, writing that "the deceitful race...be not allowed to further infect and trouble this new colony"; and
Whereas, Upon appeal from the Dutch Jewish community, the Dutch West India Company, which itself included Jewish members, rebuked Stuyvesant and ordered him to allow Jews to become legal residents on the basis of "reason and equality"; and
Whereas, The new Jewish residents of New Amsterdam faced further discrimination from efforts to limit their civil rights, causing them to have to fight for their rights to own property, trade freely, stand guard duty, worship in public, serve on juries, and become official citizens; and
Whereas, The Jewish residents of New Amsterdam and of the English colony of New York won expanded rights, often under the leadership of Levy, after petitioning the government; and
Whereas, The Mill Street Synagogue, the first Jewish congregation in the United States (U.S.), was consecrated in 1730 and eventually became Congregation Shearith Israel, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, now located on West 70th Street in Manhattan; and
Whereas, The landing almost 370 years ago is now marked by the Jewish Tercentenary Monument and Flagstaff, placed at the southern tip of Manhattan in Peter Minuit Plaza by the State of New York and dedicated in 1955 in recognition of the Tercentennial Celebration of the arrival of the first Jews in North America; and
Whereas, The monument is a 75-foot-tall flagpole on a 7-foot-tall base of pink granite, which is adorned with a bronze plaque, sculpted by Abram Belskie; and
Whereas, The plaque is decorated with two lions framing a Star of David placed above a menorah and is inscribed with "Erected by the State of New York to honor the memory of the twenty three men women & children who landed in September 1654 and founded the first Jewish community in North America-American Jewish Tercentenary 1654-1954"; and
Whereas, In a September 2023 interview with New York Jewish Week during a Manhattan Jewish Historical Initiative (MJHI) Landing Day Celebration, Howard Teich, chair of MJHI and an advocate for an annual celebration of Jewish culture and achievements, noted that Jews have "got to spread a positive message of who we are, what we've accomplished, how we've worked with other people, what we've started, the difference we've made in the time we've been here and, really, what America has meant to us as a people"; and
Whereas, New York City (NYC) is now home to 1.6 million Jews, more than in any other city worldwide; and
Whereas, The Jewish people have more than a 3,500-year history, and NYC is one of the greatest urban centers of Jewish life in the history of the Jewish people; and
Whereas, A countless number of Jewish New Yorkers have distinguished themselves in NYC's political, cultural, religious, social, academic, legal, advocacy, civil rights, and economic life and history for centuries; and
Whereas, It is fitting to honor the arrival of those first Jews who came in 1654 to the shores of what would become the U.S. in pursuit of freedom and equality, just as so many other early arrivals did after them; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York recognizes Landing Day in the second week of September annually to commemorate the arrival of the first Jewish community in New Amsterdam in 1654 and to celebrate the continuing importance of the Jewish community in the City of New York.
LS #15865
5/16/24
RHP
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