"Forget the jokes about late 1970s South Beach being the Yiddish-speaking section of “God's Waiting Room." Yes, upwards of 20,000 elderly Jews made up nearly half of its population in those days -- all crammed into an area of barely two square miles like a modern-day shtetl, the small, tightly knit Eastern European villages that defined so much of pre-World War II Jewry. But these New York transplants and Holocaust survivors all still had plenty of living, laughing and loving to do, as strikingly portrayed in Shtetl in the Sun, which features previously unseen photographs documenting South Beach's once-thriving and now-vanished Jewish world -- a project that American photographer Andy Sweet began in 1977 after receiving his MFA from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and a driving passion until his tragic death"--Publisher's description.
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