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Maria Kostaki
writer, editor
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New York |
09.22.010
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Russian New York by Maria Kostaki
"The Russians are Coming! The Russians Are Here!" read a headline in The New York Times on September 7th, 1980, a reference to the wave of immigrants from the Soviet Union then settling on the shores of Brooklyn's Brighton Beach. Their arrival during the late 1970s and early 1980s revived a forgotten, rundown neighborhood on the shores of the Atlantic. Their arrival was the third and largest of the century—the first occurred after the Russian Revolution, and the second, after the Second World War. Those arriving as of the early 1970s were largely Jews, escaping religious persecution, under an agreement between Leonid Brezhnev and Jimmy Carter. Half of the 70,000 Russians that came to the United States, settled in New York City, establishing a Russian enclave in Brighton Beach.
Read more.
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MORE Recent Work: Russian New York:
RussianNewYork:Breaking In
Russian New York: Snapshots of Lives
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Feature Story: Nia Vardlaos and her Big Fat Greek Wedding
News Story: Gender Bender--The Literary Mutations of Jeffrey Eugenides
Profile: Why Orwell Does Not Matter
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maria.kostaki@verizon.net
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