LONG READS Issue 1008 · April 16, 2024

Through My Lens  

Abe Kugielsky’s camera goes to Brooklyn to highlight life and remove barriers

Through My Lens  
Photos: Hasidiminusa
Passionate about the color and beauty hiding in the black and white shades of chassidish life, Abe Kugielsky takes to Brooklyn streets and gets behind the lens of his camera to document the lives of a community he loves. Zooming in on the highlights and humdrum moments of  life in these parts, he hopes to share the wonder and bring us together in unity and understanding

“IN Meah Shearim, if you walk around with a camera, the locals are so used to it that they’re immune. There’s a history of many decades of photographers roaming around there, with so many photo books on life in Yerushalayim, that the concept has grown on the community. Yerushalmi men have told me that their grandfathers are in the pictures in some of the well-known books. But we don’t have many photo books on chassidim in Brooklyn. I saw a potential space.”

Photojournalist Abe Kugielsky says his early education in a chassidish elementary school has helped him realize his passion for photo-documenting chassidish life in New York. “I understand chassidish nuances, and I have the language, so I can connect.”

And he does connect. Many of his accounts of the pictures he’s taken finish with, “and then we had a conversation for an hour,” or even, “I go in to visit this guy whenever I’m passing by, just to schmooze.”

As a child, Abe loved browsing through photo books, and Russian-German Jewish photographer Roman Vishniac’s piece de resistance, A Vanished World, spoke deeply to him. The family business of antique Judaica stimulated a passion for history, and Vishniac’s iconic pictures of Jewish life in the once-bustling shtetlach gave Kugielsky a sense of the power of street photography to bridge generations. While learning in the Mir in Yerushalayim, he met up with photographer Eli Greenwald (ak.a. Boruch Yaari), picking up skills and techniques to bring his hobby into clearer focus.

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