best, the most unexpected, the most unique Jewish sights and experiences that reflect our past, present and future. / - NORTHEAST: New York, Boston, Newport No other city reflects the Jewish suc- cess story in America better than New York. Writer-humorist Harry Golden labeled it the greatest Jewish city in the world. Two million Jews reside in New York City and its sub- urbs, making it the largest concentration of Jews outside of Israel. It is also one of the oldest Jewish communities in the Americas. Jews have been immi- grating to New York since 1654 when 23 Portuguese Jews, sailing from Brazil, were hijacked by a group of Spanish pirates, then handed over to a French ship, and finally deposited with Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor of Niew Amsterdam. He wasn't too happy about the whole transaction. Our picks uptown include: Shearith Israel, also known as the Spanish-Portuguese Synagogue. It was founded by those 23 original Jewish settlers. It has been in its present loca- tion since 1897 at 8 West 70th St. Note the Tiffany windows in the small chapel and its camouflaged Havdala set and candlesticks that date back to the time of the Spanish Inquisition. The Jewish Museum, on 92nd and Fifth Avenue, three blocks west of the 92nd Street YMHA, has the largest collection of Jewish art, antiquities and cultural exhibits of any museum outside of Israel. The elegant quarters, once the mansion of German-Jewish investor Felix Warburg, feature special exhibits that range from "The Circle of Montparnasse: Jewish Artists in Paris," to "Jews in India" in addition to a variety of permanent collections. For hours and admission information, call (212) 423-3200. Experience the hippest, most active locale for Jewish travelers to the Big. Apple. It is not uptown but down- town: the Lower East Side. Once the epicenter of Jewish immigration at the turn of the century, the area is in the midst of regentrification and many important bits of Jewish life and cul- ture are being restored. Begin your tour at the Statue of Liberty and the Museum of Immigration, located at Ellis Island. Ferry boats leave regularly from Battery Park. The Lower East Side Tenement Museum, on Orchard and Broome Street, consists of three original apart- ments and walking tours of the neigh- borhood. It is less than a 10-minute walk. Tuesday-Friday tours are 1-4 p.m.; also available, tours Thursday evenings, Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; $8 adults; $6 children. For information, call (212) 431-0233. A few blocks west of Orchard is the Eldridge Street Project, located at 12 Eldridge, between Canal and Division. This synagogue is the first in the United States built by Eastern European Jews, in 1887, and the first built as a grand house of worship and a symbol of success. Abandoned for many years, it was rediscovered in the 1970s and is still being restored. It features a stained glass rose window and Moorish, Romanesque and Gothic design features. Keeping walking. One block north of Broome Street is Delancey Street, the site of world-reknowned Ratner's Kosher Dairy Restaurant, but some- thing new has been added. The Lansky Lounge is open every night but Fridays, for music and cocktails. A few blocks away, on Essex between Grant and Hester Street, is Gus's Pickles. For the real article, Gus's has a vast selection right out of the vats. Tonic, a bit further north and east, at 107 Norfolk St., was once the loca- tion of Kedem kosher winery, but now functions as a trendy cafe and hair . salon featuring klezmer music on Sunday afternoons. The phone num- ber is (212) 358-7501. Corned beef locator: almost any- where. Hot knishes and bagels are standard street food on most Manhattan street corners. Boston, with the sixth largest Jewish population in the United States, is a city of universities. Of 175,000 Jews in greater Boston, about 40,000 are college students attending 54 colleges and universities in the area. A visit to the Jewish Historical Society, located on the 250-acre cam- pus of Brandeis University in subur- ban Waltham, gives the Jewish traveler two sights on one trip. Yiddish theater posters are on display in the main room at the Historical Society, along with vintage photographs. There are special exhibits and a permanent col- lection that includes the archival papers of the American Jewish Congress and the collected papers of Rabbi Stephen S. Wise and actress Molly Picon. Corned beef locator: Brookline, especially along Harvard Street. About 75 miles from Boston, Newport, Rhode Island's Touro Synagogue is our last pick along the Northeast coast. It is strik- ing, - in spartan New England simplici- ty, especially amid the oversized sum- mer "cottages" of the American first families of Vanderbilt, Morgan and Rockefeller that sit jammed next to each other along the shoreline. Touro is the oldest synagogue in the U.S., dedicated in 1763. Tour guides point out the Windsor chairs used by dignitaries visiting the congre- gation; ordinary congregants sat on benches. A trap door hidden under the bima is an unexplained mystery: It might have been to protect worship- ping Jews from Indians or it might have been a reminder of more perilous times. On display is the oft-quoted, hand written letter from George Washington after he attended services there, declaring that "the government of the United States gives to bigotry no sanction ..." Newport's Jewish community is small and this Orthodox synagogue is not open all the time; there are daily (except Sunday) services during the summer. Tours are available, but need to be arranged. For information, call the Newport Jewish Community Center, (401) 847-4794. Corned beef locator: return to Boston. MIDDLE ATLANTIC: Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore For Jews in colonial America, Philadelphia has lived up to its label as the city of brotherly love. There is an apocryphal story that Ben. Franklin organized three lotteries to raise money for the construction of Christ Church. Members of Mikveh Israel, Philadelphia's first Jewish con- gregation, bought tickets. After the Revolutionary War, Mikveh Israel fell on hard times and could not pay its mortgage. Franklin and the parish- ioners of Christ Church returned the favor. They held a lottery to raise the necessary money for Mikveh Israel, a sum of 800 pounds. Mikveh Israel has moved several times over the years, but it is now locat- ed at one end of Independence Mall, a short walk from Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell. There is a museum of Jewish artifacts adjacent to it. Just a short walk away is Center City, an area of restored colonial townhouses. Between Front and Second is Elfreth's Alley, the oldest Colonial street in the city and one of the oldest continuously occupied streets in the U.S. Moses Mordecai, a Jewish mer- chant who signed the non-importa- don resolutions in 1765, lived at 118 Elfreth. For architecture fans, Beth Sholom 7/9 1999 Detroit Jewish News . 103