- ghetto



Ghetto
 

 

ghetto
Gingrich clarifies bilingual-'ghetto' remark 
USA Today - Apr 06 10:32 AM
Newt Gingrich, former leader of the House of Representatives, who is mulling a 2008 Republican presidential bid, said his "word choice was poor" when he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto."
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ghostbusters
Local resident offers insights to sudoku puzzle game 
Lodi News-Sentinel - Feb 10 7:41 AM
Twelve seniors sit poised, pencils in hand, as Bob Raingruber explains the double double crossfire and ghosting elimination. No, he doesn't teach a class on ghostbusters.
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gibson guitar
Guitar Warehouse Introduces Two New Sites for Gibson Les Paul Guitars and Drum Sets 
[Press Release] PR Web - Mar 26 12:35 AM
Guitar Warehouse is proud to announce the introduction of two new websites. One dedicated to providing product information and sales of Gibson Les Paul guitars and other Gibson products, and a second dedicate to drum sets and accessories. (PRWeb Mar 26, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/chachingpr.php/WmV0YS1TdW1tLU1hZ24tRmFsdS1NYWduLVplcm8=
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ginseng
In Indonesia's Aceh, a former rebel takes the reins 
International Herald Tribune - Mar 27 5:57 AM
Irwandi Yusuf, once a spokesman for Aceh Province's armed separatist movement, is now the governor, guarded by the army that once hunted him in the jungle. Photo: Governor Yusuf, right, talking to a farmer in Bireuen, Indonesia.
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giraffe
Giraffe Born At Animal Kingdom 
Central Florida News 13 - Apr 04 10:02 AM
The birth of a baby giraffe at the Animal Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort Monday was cause for celebration at the park.
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gisele
Supermodel Gisele Pregnant? 
Fox 6 News San Diego - Mar 09 5:35 AM
The romance between Gisele Bundchen and Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is heating up amid pregnancy rumors.
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giselle bundchen
One of America's Great Student Newspapers 
The Pitt News - Apr 01 11:53 PM
When Kale (Shia LaBeouf), a young man troubled by his father's death, is sentenced to house arrest for three months, he has nothing but idle time.
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giving birth
Coach at game hours after giving birth 
AP via Yahoo! News - Mar 13 2:26 PM
About five hours after giving birth to her first child, University of Nebraska at Kearney women's basketball coach Carol Russell was out of the hospital and on the bench to help coach her players in the North Central Region basketball tournament.
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gladiator
New on DVD 
USA Today - Mar 18 8:08 PM
Doing his best to sustain the greatest free ride in movie history, 007 newbie Daniel Craig emerged from the surf (though Dr. No's Ursula Andress still has a cuter navel) to launch the best reviews for a James Bond movie in the safe-sex era. A perfectly OK way to exhaust 2 hours if you have that much time to kill, this entry trades in gritty realism after an opening acrobatic chase impossible to ...
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glass tile
Gypsum Facing Paper resists mold, mildew, and moisture. 
ThomasNet - Mar 08 5:49 AM
Designed for wallboard industry, SafeFace MR(TM) can be manufactured in all regular and specialty gypsum facing paper grades, including creamface and grayback for interior drywall applications, shaftliner, sheathing, tile-backer, and pre-deck products. It has same application and finishing characteristics as regular wallboard, and when tested in accordance with ASTM D3273 protocol, wallboard made ...
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glitch
Glitch knocks out Japanese spy satellite 
AP via Yahoo! News - Mar 27 7:51 AM
An electrical glitch has knocked out a satellite in a spy network Japan hoped to use to gather intelligence on North Korea and other trouble spots around the world, a Cabinet official said Tuesday.
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glitter graphics
Alone on Valentine's Day? It doesn't have to hurt, you know 
The Idaho Statesman - Feb 10 11:06 PM
At one time or another, nearly everyone weathers a Valentine's Day on their lonesome. And I must say, those who have never had the pleasure have certainly missed out on an excellent character-building opportunity.
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glock
NASCAR GRAND NATIONAL - MICHELLE THERIAULT/GLOCK FIREARMS/SPRAKER RACING - A TEAM WITH ATTITUDE 
The Auto Channel - Apr 05 1:09 PM
To read the entire article please click here. Compare low price quotes from local dealers on all new car models at PriceQuotes.com . Recommended by The Auto Channel.
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gloria estefan
Stars Shine For Gloria Estefan's Home Gala 
CBS 4 Miami - Feb 09 7:21 PM
Entertainer Gloria Estefan has reached the top of the music charts and now she's reaching out for charity, hosting the first-ever Gloria Estefan Foundation Gala at her mansion Friday night.
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glucosamine
Natural sugars are tonics that can help 
Rapid City Journal - Mar 22 12:37 AM
The world of sports was moved in 1993 when the nine-member womens running team broke nine world records at the Chinese National Games and one of these records by an astonishing 42 seconds.
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gmac
Credit score is what counts for a borrower 
The Salt Lake Tribune - 58 minutes ago
In the midst of tightening lending standards, borrowers with low credit scores probably will struggle to get a good deal, but people with higher scores might actually find it easier to qualify. "We are seeing a huge shift going on right now," said Evan Jones of GMAC Mortgage in Salt Lake City. And it all boils down to credit scores. Generally, borrowers who have credit scores 620 ...
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gmc yukon
Ten-Million-Piece Ad-Sleeve(TM) Campaign for GMC Acadia Launched Through Britevision Cafe Network(R) 
The Auto Channel - Mar 20 10:40 PM
NEW YORK, March 20 -- Ten million eye-catching cup-sleeves, advertising GM's GMC Acadia, will be squarely in the hands of millions of Americans this month thanks to an ad campaign delivered by BriteVision (http://www.britevision.com/), inventor of the AdSleeve(TM) and a pioneer in cup-sleeve advertising, BriteVision announced today.
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gnome
GNOME 2.18 Shows Incremental Improvement 
Addict 3D - Apr 03 5:16 PM
"Like clockwork, the GNOME project released GNOME 2.18 six months after the release of GNOME 2.16. The new version carries a number of improvements over the 2.16 release, but doesn't bring many 'must have' features that would compel users to upgrade right away.".
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gnp
Senior Health Fair is Thursday 
Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune - Mar 21 1:26 PM
A Senior Health Fair will be held from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday at Harmony of Wisconsin Rapids, 2230 14th St. S. Admission is free and the public is invited. Vendors include: Active Healing Advantage Home Care Beltone GNP House Calls Ministry Home Care Rapids Rehab, LLC. Rapids Foot Care Center Roberts Associates and Stoiber Healthcare, S.C.
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goddess
Week in Photos: Living Goddess, Albino Wallaby, Japan Earthquake, More 
National Geographic - Apr 02 11:32 AM
This week: Nepal's "living goddess," India's Muslims flee ethnic violence, busload of iguanas seized, and more.
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godsmack
Singer's book of hard life in the '80s 
Boston Globe - Mar 18 3:18 AM
Dad says he knew about most of it. But after Godsmack front man Sully Erna recently published his memoir about growing up in Lawrence, his father, Salvatore Erna, admits he didn't know all of it. In fact, since reading his son's book, "The Paths We Choose," the former Lawrence resident says he learned a lot about what a young Sully ...
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goggles
Lawson hangs up his goggles, goes out on top 
Macon Telegraph - Apr 04 12:09 AM
When Brennan Lawson graduates in May, an era at Houston County High School will end.
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gold code
Code Blue Youth Talks coming to Blue/Gold Room at KSU-AC April 2 
Star Beacon - Mar 20 9:02 AM
ASHTABULA - Rob Paugh, a national and international speaker who speaks on the topic of today's teen entertainment, is coming to Ashtabula County April 2.
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gold jewelry
No Dirty Gold: Leading Retailers Pledge Their Gold Jewelry Will Sparkle Responsibly 
[Press Release] Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance - Feb 08 7:33 AM
WASHINGTON----This Valentine's season, 11 jewelry retailers are announcing their support for the No Dirty Gold campaign's Golden Rules criteria for more socially and environmentally responsible mining, bringing the total number of jewelry retailers supporting the Golden Rules up to 19.
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golf cart
Golf Cart Parade moves to October, needs new theme 
Desert Sun - Apr 02 1:15 PM
The Palm Desert Golf Cart Parade is on the move from January to October which means two parades this year and another chance for golf cart devotees to come up with a theme for parade number two.
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golf driver
Mickelson defends title with second-driver secret weapon 
AFP via Yahoo! News - Apr 03 1:29 PM
Phil Mickelson will unveil a secret weapon, a second driver designed specifically to offset the lengthened Augusta National Golf Club layout, when he opens defense of his Masters crown Thursday.
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google earth
Nasa Gives New Data For Google Earth 
Search Engine Journal - Feb 26 7:11 AM
The Google Earth Blog (not owned by Google) reports that Nasa has released some new image overlay & visualization data for Google Earth: NASA continues to add some great visualizations for overlaying in Google Earth. This time they have added some data again from MODIS (Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer). As recently reported, you can get near real-time [...]
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google maps
Congress Questions Google's Katrina Maps 
ABC News - Mar 30 7:30 PM
Congress Wants Answers From Google Over Why It Dropped Maps Showing Katrina Damage
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gorrilaz

gospel lyrics
Elton John Celebrates 60, Lavishly, in His Garden 
New York Times - 2 hours, 19 minutes ago
A rock royal reaches a birthday and a landmark number of concerts at an arena.
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gospel song lyrics
Churches sing the gospel according to U2 
Chicago Tribune - Feb 11 5:54 AM
Services turn to Irish rock band's Scripture-grounded music to help attract young On Sunday night the front pews of the Lutheran church will be moved to make room for dancing. On the right will stand a band whose lead singer strikingly resembles Bono of U2. And when the opening hymn begins, worshipers will shout the lyrics to the rock song "Pride":
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gothic
American Gothic Trail gains supervisors' support 
FairField Ledger - Mar 06 11:33 AM
A week after the Fairfield City Council passed a resolution supporting the American Gothic Regional Trail, the Jefferson County Board of Supervisors passed a similar resolution.
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gps
Police Chief: GPS Showed Officers Not On Patrol 
WISC Channel3000.com via Yahoo! News - Mar 09 6:22 PM
The Beloit police chief said five officers have been disciplined after GPS systems in their squad cars showed they were sitting together for large amounts of time and not on patrol.
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gps review
ALK Technologies Announces CoPilot Live 7 Mobile Phone GPS Navigation 
SYS-CON Media - Feb 11 8:23 PM
- Simple to use, dedicated satellite navigation performance for mobile phones. - Brand-customisable for Mobile Operators, OEMs and handset manufacturers.
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gq magazine
Marine Vet Returns to Vietnam With Nosy Journalist Son in Tow 
Bloomberg.com - Mar 29 6:58 PM
March 30 (Bloomberg) -- Tom Bissell and his GQ editor were at dinner batting around ideas for a story, he recounts at one point in ``The Father of All Things.''
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graduation
Drug court to have graduation Thursday 
The Idaho Statesman - Feb 11 11:33 PM
Quad County Drug Court will have a graduation ceremony at 6 p.m. Thursday at Warren E. McCain Middle School, 400 N. Iowa Ave.
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graduation songs
The word of God in the world of silence 
Opelousas Daily World - Feb 12 12:46 AM
MELVILLE - The guest minister at this Sunday's services at the First Pentecostal Church of Melville was like many others, leading the congregation in a fiery sermon, inspiring songs and an filling them with an outpouring of the power of the Lord.
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graffiti alphabet
Graffiti: A reminder of a gang's presence 
Visalia Times-Delta - Mar 06 4:01 AM
To some it's just an eyesore letters on a wall behind a central Visalia apartment building.
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graffiti creator
Diversion Media Adds Snowvision to Growing Broadband Network 
SYS-CON Media - Feb 21 12:38 PM
Snowvision, a broadband video site for snowboarders, launched today at http://www.snowvision.com/. Snowvision marks the second niche video site from Diversion Media, a New York-based company founded by Nicholas Butterworth, former CEO of MTV Interactive Group, and Tatum Lade, former head of technology at iFilm. Diversion launched Travelistic.com, a leading travel video site, in October 2006 and ...
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graffiti letters
Vandals tagged with handcuffs in graffiti sting 
Staten Island Advance - Apr 05 5:17 AM
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Two boys who police said had made their mark again and again were collared in a graffiti stakeout early yesterday morning.
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grafitti
Teens Charged With Painting Graffiti At Triad Park 
WXII ThePiedmontChannel.com via Yahoo! News - Mar 14 5:34 AM
Two teenagers have been charged with painting graffiti at a local park.
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Ghetto

A ghetto is an area where people from a specific racial or ethnic background or united in a given culture or religion live as a group, voluntarily or involuntarily, in milder or stricter seclusion. The word historically referred specifically to the Venetian Ghetto in Venice, Italy, where Jews were required to live; it derives from the Venetian gheto (slag from Latin GLĬTTU[M] cfr. Italian ghetto (slag)), and referred to the area of the Cannaregio sestiere, the site selected for the Ghetto Nuovo where a foundry cooled the slag (campo gheto). It was later applied to neighborhoods in other cities where Jews were required to live. The corresponding German term was Judengasse; in Moroccan Arabic ghettos were called mellah.

The term now commonly labels any poverty-stricken urban area, though the news media created new terms like rural ghetto to describe mobile home parks, farm labor housing tracts and Indian reservations to indicate the poorest areas in the U.S. aren't inside a major city. In the United States, urban neighborhoods where Hispanic immigrants settled in the late 20th century barrios are said comparable to ghettos, because most immigrants form a culturally isolated enclave and may choose to remain there or associate with their own group.

"Ghetto" is also used figuratively to indicate geographic areas with a concentration of any type of person, with or without poverty (e.g. gay ghetto) or for non-geographic categories (e.g. "sci fi ghetto" [1]). The term is also used to describe an item or an action as cheap or flimsy. some consider this misappropriation of language offensive[2].

Some people in the U.S. and Europe strongly dislike the term ghetto, believing to have racist, elitist and culturally insensitive overtones, and the mention of such a word to describe a working-class ethnic community is considered a generalization or an insult. Many social workers and community leaders suggest alternative words to describe these areas like Inner city and economically disadvantaged areas.

Contents

  • 1 Jewish ghettos in Europe
    • 1.1 13th–19th centuries
    • 1.2 Second World War
      • 1.2.1 List of Nazi era ghettos
  • 2 South African ghettos
  • 3 United States
  • 4 Post-WWII France
  • 5 Czech Republic
  • 6 Cultural life
  • 7 See also
  • 8 External links

Jewish ghettos in Europe

13th–19th centuries

While the word ghetto was never applied to a Jewish quarter prior to 1516, compulsory, segregated and enclosed Jewish quarters had existed prior to 1516. For example, the Jewish quarter of Frankfurt was established in 1462 before the term ghetto had been coined. Therefore, to say that the first ghetto was established in Venice in 1516 is correct in a technical, linguistic sense but is misleading in a wider context. To apply the term ghetto to an area prior to 1516 is anachronistic, while to state that the first ghetto was established in 1516 is somewhat of a misrepresentation.

The Judengasse was an area of Frankfurt am Main designated as a Jewish quarter from its creation in 1462 until its dissolution at the end of the 18th century. The city council limited expansion in the Judengasse, resulting in steadily increasing overcrowding. The original area of about a dozen houses with around 100 inhabitants, grew to almost 200 houses and some 3,000 inhabitants. The plots originally quite generous were successively divided, increasing the number of plots but reducing the size. In the process many houses were replaced by two or more houses which were often divided in turn. Many of the houses were designed to be narrow and long, in order to maximize the limited space – the smallest house, the Rote Hase, was only about one and a half meters wide.

The term ghetto comes from Venice's Ghetto, founded by the Venetian Republic on March 29, 1516. The island known as ghetto nuovo (the new ghetto) in the Cannaregio district which was designated for the Jewish segregation, lay across the canal from ghetto vecchio (the old ghetto), twenty dwellings of which would later be incorporated into the Jewish ghetto via a bridge. Both sites had previously housed metal casting foundries. hence the name ghetto, from the Italian for slag. Other etymologies suggested for the word derive from "getto," the Italian term for casting), the Griko Ghetonia (Γειτονία, neighbourhood), the Italian borghetto for "small neighbourhood" or the Hebrew word get (Hebrew: גט), literally a "bill of divorce." From the example of the Venice Ghetto the name then transferred to Jewish neighbourhoods. In Castile, they were called Judería and in Majorca and Catalonia, call. At the Ghetto's founding in 1516, there were no more than a few hundred Jews in Venice. Although there is evidence indicating the presence of Jews in the Venetian area dating back to the first few centuries A.D., during the 15th and early 16th centuries (until 1516), no Jew was allowed to live anywhere in the city of Venice for more than 15 days per year; so most of them lived in Venice's possessions on the terrafirma. At its maximum, the population of the Ghetto reached 3,000. In exchange for their loss of freedom, the Jews were granted the right to practice their religion openly within the ghetto walls. Non-Jews were not allowed to live in this ghetto, nor were Jews allowed to leave without permission and without articles of clothing which identified them as Jews: in Venice these were the yellow hat and the yellow circle stitched onto a Jew's coat (the colour yellow was considered humiliating, as it was associated with prostitutes). The gates were locked at night, and the Jewish community was forced to pay the salaries of the patrolmen who guarded the gates and patrolled the canals that surrounded the Ghetto. The Ghetto was abolished in 1797, after the fall of the Republic of Venice to Napoleon.

To place Venetian provisions requiring groups in the city to live in compulsory quarters in historical context, it should be noted that: Merchants from the Germanic lands were required to reside in a special building known as the 'Fondaco dei Tedeschi'. Prostitutes and pimps were confined to certain houses and were required to be recognizable through the wearing of yellow items of clothing, a step reminiscent of the Jewish badge which had been introduced in 1397 and replaced by a hat in 1497. The Moslem Ottoman Turkish merchants in Venice requested from the Venetian government, for the convenience of their trade, a place of their own similar to the Jews. The Venetian government subsequently required the Turkish merchants to live in a certain building which was carefully isolated from its surroundings, this building became known as the Fondaco dei Turchi. Girolamo Querini, commented in 1528 that the Greek Orthodox Christians in Venice, were severely restricted.

In 1555 Pope Paul IV created the Roman Ghetto and issued papal bull Cum nimis absurdum, forcing Jews to live in a specified area. The area of Rome chosen for the ghetto was the most undesirable quarter of the city, owing to constant flooding by the Tiber River. At the time of its founding, the four-block area was designated to contain roughly 2,000 inhabitants. However, over the years, the Jewish community grew, which caused severe overcrowding. Since the area could not expand horizontally (the ghetto was surrounded by high walls), the Jews built vertical additions to their houses, which blocked the sun from reaching the already dank and narrow streets. Life in the Roman Ghetto was one of crushing poverty, due to the severe restrictions placed upon the professions that Jews were allowed to perform. This was the last of the original ghettos to be abolished in Western Europe; not until 1870, when the kingdom of Italy conquered Rome from the Pope, was the Ghetto finally opened, with the walls themselves being torn down in 1888. Due to the three hundred plus years of isolation from the rest of the city, the Jews of the Roman Ghetto developed their own dialect, known as Giudeo-romanesco, which differs from the dialect of the rest of the city in its preservation of 16th-century dialectical forms and its liberal use of romanized Hebrew words.

Pope Pius V recommended that all the bordering states should set up ghettos, and at the beginning of the 17th century all the main towns had one (with the only exceptions in Italy, being Livorno and Pisa). In medieval Central Europe ghettos existed in Prague, Frankfurt am Main, Mainz and elsewhere.

The character of ghettos has varied through times. In some cases, the ghetto was a Jewish quarter with a relatively affluent population (for instance the Jewish ghetto in Venice). In other cases, ghettos were places of terrible poverty and lack of access to the basic essentials for healthy living, such as clean water.

Since Jews could not acquire land outside the ghetto or own their own houses inside the ghetto, during periods of population growth, ghettos had narrow streets and tall, crowded houses. Residents had their own justice system. Around the ghetto stood walls that during pogroms were closed from the inside and from the outside at night and during Christmas, Pesach, and Easter Week . Often ghetto residents had to have a pass to go outside of the bounds of the ghetto.

Jewish ghettos were progressively abolished, and their walls demolished, in the 19th century, following the ideals of the French Revolution. Furthermore, some Western European countries with tolerant governments (such as Napoleon's France, or the United Kingdom) incited industrious Jews to immigrate. In the Papal States, ghettos made somewhat less restrictive under Pope Pius IX (who relaxed many restrictions on Jews, but maintained others). They were completely abolished after the Papal States were overthrown in 1870. The Nazis re-instituted Jewish ghettos before and during World War II in Eastern Europe.

Famous ghettos include:

  • Josefov, Prague
  • Le Marais, Paris
  • Roman Ghetto
  • Venice Ghetto

Second World War

Main article: Ghettos in occupied Europe 1939 - 1944

Ghettos established by the Nazis in which Jews were confined, and later shipped to concentration camps.

During World War II, ghettos were established by the Nazis to confine Jews into tightly packed areas of the cities of Eastern Europe. Starting in 1939, Adolf Eichmann, head of the Final Solution program, began to systematically move Polish Jews into designated areas of large Polish cities. The first large ghetto at Tuliszkow was established in December 1939 or January 1940, followed by the Łódź Ghetto in April 1940 and the Warsaw Ghetto in October 1940, with many other ghettos established throughout 1940 and 1941. The Ghettos were walled off, and any Jew found leaving them was shot. The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest of these Ghettos, with 380,000 people and the Łódź Ghetto, the second largest, holding about 160,000.

The situation in the ghettos was brutal. In Warszawa, 30% of the population were forced to live in 2.4% of the city's area, a density of 9.2 people per room. In the ghetto of Odrzywol, 700 people lived in an area previously occupied by 5 families, between 12 and 30 to each small room. The Jews were not allowed out of the ghetto, so they had to rely on replenishments supplied by the Nazis: in Warszawa this was 253 calories per Jew, compared to 669 calories per non-Jewish Pole and 2,613 calories per German. With crowded living conditions, starvation diets, and little sanitation (in the Łódź Ghetto 95% of apartments had no sanitation, piped water or sewers) hundreds of thousands of Jews died of disease and starvation.

In 1942, the Nazis began Operation Reinhard, the systematic deportation to extermination camps during the Holocaust. The authorities deported Jews from everywhere in Europe to the ghettos of the East, or directly to the extermination camps -- almost 300,000 people were deported from the Warsaw Ghetto alone to Treblinka over the course of 52 days. In some of the Ghettos the local resistance organizations started Ghetto uprisings, none were successful, and the Jewish populations of the ghettos were almost entirely killed.

List of Nazi era ghettos

  • Będzin Ghetto
  • Białystok Ghetto
  • Budapest Ghetto
  • Cluj Ghetto
  • Częstochowa Ghetto
  • Kraków Ghetto
  • Łachwa Ghetto
  • Łódź Ghetto
  • Lwów Ghetto
  • Marcinkance Ghetto
  • Mińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto
  • Piotrków Trybunalski Ghetto
  • Pińsk Ghetto
  • Riga Ghetto
  • Sosnowiec Ghetto
  • Theresienstadt Ghetto
  • Warsaw Ghetto
  • Wilno Ghetto
  • List of Ghettos from deathcamps.org

South African ghettos

The Group Areas Act (27 April 1950) barred people of particular races from various urban areas.

Soweto is a mostly black urban area to the south west of Johannesburg. During the apartheid regime, Soweto was constructed for the specific purpose of housing black people who were then living in areas designated by the government for white settlement, such as the multi-racial area called Sophiatown. Today, Soweto is among the poorest parts of Johannesburg; however, there have been recent signs of economic improvement and Soweto has become a centre for nightlife and tourist excursions. There are other ghetto parts of South Africa like KwaMashu in Durban in the KZN province and Crossroads near Cape Town, as well as numerous squatter camps in and around the larger centres.

United States

The neutrality of this section is disputed.
Please see the discussion on the talk page.

The Irish immigrants of the 19th century were the first ethnic group to form ghettos in America’s cities, followed by Italians and Poles in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Because there was no official housing segregation against most European immigrants, the second or third generation families are able to relocate to better housing in the suburbs after World War II if possible. Other ethnic ghettos are the Lower East Side in Manhattan, New York was predominantly Jewish until the 1950's, and Spanish Harlem and also in Manhattan, New York home to a large Puerto Rican community dated back to the 1930's. Little Italys were predominately Italian ghettos. Chinatowns, where most Chinese immigrants settled from the 1850's onward in New York city, San Francisco, Oakland (Near San Francisco) and other major cities originated as racially segregated enclaves. However, most Chinese Americans no longer reside in those urban sections, but Asian immigration since the 1970s repopulated Chinatowns.

In the United States, between the abolition of slavery and the passing of the civil rights laws of the 1960s, discriminatory mores (sometimes codified in law) often forced urban African Americans to live in specific neighborhoods, which became known as "ghettos". Due to segregation laws, in existence in many US states until the Civil Rights Movement and the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, African-Americans of all economic levels had to live in ghettos such as Southeast San Diego, Bronzeville in Chicago and Harlem in New York City. 1960s civil rights laws allowed wealthier African Americans to emigrate to formerly all-white communities. (Generally, those were suburbs located outside of the urban areas.) Because those who were wealthier in the African American community were leaving the urban area, the result was an economic collapse for many of the ghettos. They became zones of abandonment, below-average wealth, poorly-maintained housing, and high crime. By the 1970's, the Robert Taylor Homes, located in Chicago's Bronzeville, was home to the poorest and third-poorest census tracts in the United States.

The formation of the ghetto and the black underclass forms one of the most controversial issues in sociology.

One of the earliest studies of the modern phenomenon of ghetto formation was Daniel Patrick Moynihan's 1965 work The Negro Family: The Case for National Action, usually simply referred to as the Moynihan Report. The Moynihan Report pointed out that black welfare cases and unemployment were beginning to "disaggregate," that is, the number of black welfare cases were rising while unemployment was falling. The Moynihan Report also pointed out that a quarter of all black children were born to unmarried women and that the percentage was rising. The Moynihan report described the ghetto as a "tangle of pathologies" and predicted that conditions would worsen, not improve, despite the Great Society.

Though it was a descriptive essay, and not a theoretical one, the Moynihan Report met howls of protest. The expression "Blaming the Victim" was coined as criticism.

In The Promised Land, Nicholas Lemann says of the Moynihan Report:

Today the Moynihan Report stands as probably the most refuted document in American history (though of course its dire predictions about the poor black family all came true). . . the practical effect of the controversy over it was exactly the opposite of what Moynihan intended - all public discussions in mainstream liberal circles of issues like the state of the black family and the culture of poverty simply ceased. (177)

For almost two decades after the Moynihan Report, there was little discussion of family conditions in the ghetto. The 1980s began to see a revival of this sociological question, as well as the development of new theories on why the ghetto emerged.

Charles Murray argues in Losing Ground that Great Society liberalism created the hopeless poor. Murray claims that the eligibility of single women for welfare encouraged women to have babies out of wedlock, and that welfare discouraged all from working. Murray concluded his book with a call for the abolition of welfare.

Losing Ground has met with a broad chorus of criticism. Losing Ground's opponents point out that in the 1970s, when the real amounts of welfare checks decreased, out-of-wedlock births increased. Critics also point out that illegitimacy rose just as much in low benefit states like Mississippi, where work undoubtedly paid better than welfare, as it did in high benefit states like Illinois and New York. Critics also say that Murray missed the fact that although the percentage of blacks born out of wedlock increased in the 60s and 70s, the percentage of black women having babies out of wedlock decreased. Moreover, rates of children born to unmarried white women have now risen to the 40 percent level in the United States, and these white women do not live in ghettos.

William Julius Wilson argues in The Truly Disadvantaged that easy access to welfare had little effect on women's decisions on childbearing. Wilson instead argues that the flight of low-skilled manufacturing jobs to the suburbs and the South left blacks economically isolated in the ghetto—the "spatial mismatch". Wilson explains the high percentage of out-of-wedlock births as due to the lack of marriageable—i.e., employed—men for mothers to marry.

Roger Waldinger offers a third, and less well known, theory of ghetto formation: detailing a mismatch between the wages which blacks desire and the wages which low-skilled jobs actually pay. The argument mainly appears in Waldinger's book, adapted from his Harvard PhD thesis, Still the Promised City?

In looking at New York City, Waldinger points out that new immigrants—Koreans, Pakistanis, Puerto Ricans, etc—often do better than American-born blacks. Waldinger also notices that southern-born and Caribbean-born blacks have higher incomes than northern-born blacks. But both of these examples need to be extrapolated for veracity. According to the United States Census Bureau, among Hispanic populations in the U.S., Puerto Ricans are the poorest(which is an oddity because they are the only Latino group who has a born citizenship into the United States, therefore having no immigration problems that hinder other Hispanic sub-groups) and in the Southwest U.S., Mexican Americans had historical low-income urban areas known as barrios such as Los Angeles and San Diego struggled with issues of crime, drugs, youth gangs and family breakdown. Waldingers second point is considered specious, because in the North and South US, blacks are more liklely to be employed in the public sector than the private sector. So one can infer that if blacks in the South have higher incomes it could be due to more expansive military installations and civil service jobs. Waldinger argues that immigrant groups benefit by establishing nepotistic niches for themselves, and use niches for mutual help, something blacks have in most cases been unable to do. Waldinger also says that even though hotels and restaurants may offer very low wages, they still outclass wages in Mexico, rural China, or Africa; thus, immigrants readily accept them. In contrast, unskilled northern-born blacks, who hope to do something better than their parents, disdain these jobs, in hope of something better, and may often wind up working outside the legitimate economy altogether. Waldinger's theory has not become as well-known as the theories of Murray or Wilson, and he is also criticized for "blaming the victim."

Post-WWII France

There are also ghettos in modern France. The poorer banlieues, or suburbs, of France, especially those of Paris, house an impoverished population largely of North African Muslim and Black African origin in large medium- and high-rise building developments known as "Cités". They were built in the 1960's and 1970's in the industrial suburbs to the north and east of Paris, especially in the Département of Seine-St-Denis (also known from its departmental code as "le 93" or "le 9-3"), and in other French cities like Villeurbanne near Lyon. They are similar in style and have similar problems as the large inner-city urban renewal projects in the US (like Cabrini Green in Chicago). Social issues that inhabitants of French ghettos must deal with regularly, including racism and police brutality, were famously highlighted in the 1996 film La Haine. Although there has been civil unrest (sometimes resulting in rioting) in these ghettos for decades, many people outside of France were not fully aware of the situation until the more internationally publicised 2005 riots, which largely originated within these areas.

Czech Republic

A ghetto in Chánov

A few ghettos have appeared in the Czech Republic. These RASTA ghettos are mainly inhabited by Roma who move there both voluntarily or involuntarily (municipalities often try to relocate them from other areas). The majority of the people are unemployed and uneducated, and the crime rate is high. As a ghetto begins to appear non-Roma people move away. The most infamous ghetto in the Czech Republic is Chánov (part of the city of Most). Other cities with neighborhoods slowly transforming into ghettos include Karviná.

Cultural life

It is often said that great art is born out of suffering. citation needed] So it is not necessarily a coincidence that great artists lived and still live in the ghetto. Ghettos often became known as vibrant cultural centers, for example the late 19th century Paris, or Harlem in the 1920s and 1930s. Artists such as Bob Marley, The Fugees, John Lee Hooker, Tupac Shakur, Nina Simone, and Cab Calloway were born and raised in ghettos, and much of their music comes from their own suffering, experiences and life in the Ghetto or their own experiences with desegregation, eg. Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry", Nina Simone's "Mississippi Goddamn", John Lee Hooker's "Rent Blues", Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five's "The Message", and Calloway's "Minnie The Moocher". The 1970s sitcom Good Times was modeled after life in the Cabrini-Green housing projects in Chicago. The show portrays a ghetto family that always triumphs over adversity and it has been criticized for painting too rosy a picture of how the ghetto really works.

In the United States, the word "ghetto" is often glorified in popular culture and sometimes used as an adjective to describe a certain way of dressing, speaking, and behaving. In common lingo, it may also be used as an alternative to explain a place that is "poorly maintained".

See also

  • African Americans
  • Angered
  • Bantustan
  • Cultural assimilation
  • Cultural geography
  • Da' Hood
  • Gay ghetto
  • Gangsta Rap
  • Ghetto uprising
  • Group Areas Act
  • Hip-hop music
  • Jewish history
  • Jim Crow laws
  • Latinos
  • Mellah
  • Pass Law
  • Poverty
  • Racial segregation
  • Second-class citizen
  • Separate but equal
  • Slum
  • Shanty town
  • Wigger

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Category:Ghetto
  • The Nazi Ghettos --Selected Holocaust Resource
  • Official web site of the Jewish Ghetto of Venice
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Personal Histories - Ghettos
  • A treatment of ghetto-culture and living conditions at wwww.urbanology.org
  • Initiative to wipe off Czech ghettos
  • Ghettos and Ghetto List
Search Term: "Ghetto"

Gingrich clarifies bilingual-'ghetto' remark 

USA Today - Apr 06 10:32 AM
Newt Gingrich, former leader of the House of Representatives, who is mulling a 2008 Republican presidential bid, said his "word choice was poor" when he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto."
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Gingrich clarifies 'ghetto' word choice 
AP via Yahoo! News - Apr 05 5:16 PM
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who is mulling a presidential bid, said his "word choice was poor" when he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto."
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Paul Abrams: The Newt Watch: Equates Illegal Immigrants to FedEx Packages 
HuffingtonPost - Apr 08 11:55 AM
In " Newt Wants to Catch You Napping ", there was the suggestion that Newt needs to be watched carefully because of his ability to do real mischief, and his clear lusting to be President. In that piece Newt's "logical" techniques were exposed so as to put people on alert, because they can be very disarming to the unwarned. This is "Newt Watch II". Attacking Spanish as a "ghetto-language" is his ...
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Gingrich Clarifies "Ghetto" Comments 
CBS News - Apr 05 10:30 AM
In a video statement read in Spanish and posted on YouTube, ex-House Speaker and possible presidential candidate Newt Gingrich said his "word choice was poor" when he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto."
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English only, please 
Chicago Sun-Times - Apr 08 2:23 AM
Newt Gingrich stuck his foot in his English-only- speaking mouth last week in a speech to the National Federation of Republican Women when he said Spanish was "the language of living in the ghetto."
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Gingrich Says 'Word Choice Was Poor' in 'Ghetto' Comment 
Fox News - Apr 05 9:48 AM
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich says his 'word choice was poor' when he linked bilingual education with 'the language of living in a ghetto.'
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Gingrich Clarifies 'Ghetto' Word Choice 
ABC News - Apr 05 8:38 AM
Newt Gingrich Clarifies Remarks Equating Bilingual Education With Language of 'A Ghetto'
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Gingrich Clarifies 'Ghetto' Word Choice 
San Francisco Chronicle - Apr 05 8:16 AM
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who is mulling a presidential bid, said his "word choice was poor" when he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto." In a video statement read in Spanish, subtitled in English and posted...
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Gingrich clarifies remarks equating bilingual education with the "ghetto" 
WFMJ Youngstown - Apr 05 7:08 PM
WASHINGTON Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has taken to the Internet to head off an angry backlash, after he equated bilingual education with "the language of living in a ghetto."
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Newt's Sorta Mea Culpa: Did 'Language of the Ghetto' Gaffe Hurt Newt's Politics or His Business? 
[Press Release] U.S. Newswire via Yahoo! News - Apr 05 12:20 PM
After calling Spanish the "language of the ghetto" in his latest inflammatory speech on immigration, Newt Gingrich yesterday released a Spanish language video attempting to clarify his remarks. While Gingrich refused to apologize, he revealed that, "for some time now, I have been personally taking Spanish language lessons in order to learn Spanish. In addition, the president and spokesperson of ...
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Last Update: 2007-04-08 19:54:05