'''A Home on the Range: The Jewish Chicken Ranchers of Petaluma''' is a
2002 documentary by
Bonnie Burt and
Judith Montell about a group of
Jews who fled from
pogroms in
Eastern Europe and
prejudice in
America to organized a
socialist society in
rural Northern California, where they relied on raising
chickens to support themselves.
Summary
“Who said Jews couldn't be farmers? Spitin as I, who would harm us?””
Scott Gerber, a former resident of Petaluma, belts out the lyrics to his
acoustic guitar. Although the chicken ranches in Petaluma have more recently been abandoned, Scott's maintained his Jewish culture and his love for the land, working as a cowboy and singing
Yiddish folk songs.
''A Home on the Range'' shows old photographs and archival color footage of Petaluma that bring the town to life. These visuals, along with interviews of former residents, reconstruct a idealistic society that put in hard work collecting and cleaning eggs but enjoyed lectures given by top notch Jewish
poets and
philosophers given at the Community Hall. United by their
culture, the Jews of Petaluma cared for one another as extended family and survived the
antisemitism of pre-
World War II and
anticommunist sentiments of the
McCarthy era. But with time and assimilation the quirky community dwindled, and, today, they're chicken ranches have been replaced by
telecommunication, dairy farms and vineyards.
For many of the Jews in Petaluma,
Judaism was more of a culture than a religion. One former resident says that people kept the holidays for the social attachment, and another spouts, “Judaism—there wasn't any!” In fact, when they were building their meeting hall it was almost unanimously decided to not build a
shoal or
synagogue—until they learned it could be a tax write off. For them, Judaism had nothing to do with God. Instead, it meant that they spoke Yiddish, ate
matzah, and wanted to form a
kibbutz. But most of all it meant they were outsiders to
American society. They were second rate citizens, called names and not allowed in Country Clubs.
They had fled pogroms in
Russia and antisemitism in urban America to live in a rural Jewish community, but still they faced antisemitism from their surrounding neighbors. One woman remembers, “they used to call us dirty Jew.” And another woman remembers a particularly frightening night when an antisemitic neighbor threw a barn party and the drunk and rowdy crowd terrified her parents so much that they couldn't sleep that night. These incidents ingrained the Jews with a painful feeling of being “lesser” than other Americans. But nothing can compare to the violent night that
Gentile leaders in the neighboring community took out their antisemitism and anticommunist fears through brute force against the men of Petaluma.
Strangely, it wasn't prejudice that destroyed their community, but acceptance. Once
Jewish Americans were no longer looked down on, they assimilated into society and the vibrant community of chicken ranchers in Petaluma dwindled. One former resident who grew up on a ranch and raised her children on a ranch expresses her mixed feelings about assimilation. She pines that she lost, “the core,” sense of attachment but in exchange, “we were accepted in as Americans.”
Production
For the past twenty years, Bonnie Burt has been making documentaries about Jewish life. Her films have screened at the
Museum of Modern Art and at
Lincoln Center in
New York.
[1]
Bonnie says she'd heard about Petaluma before she moved to California from the East Coast. But it wasn't until
1992 at the
Madrid Jewish Film Festical that she teamed up with Judy Montell, and the two began to work on the project together.
Reception
''A Home on the Range'' was well received. The
San Diego Jewish
Film Festival called it a modest film that "reads almost like an epic myth."
[ San Diego Jewish Film Festival ] Other reviews praised it for being a through and entertaining documentary that raises issues that are still relevent in Jewish American society today.
Notes
1. A Home on the Range: The Jewish Chicken Ranchers of Petaluma
References
★
When left-wingers and chicken wings populated Petaluma Sue Fishkoff
★
A Home on the Range: The Jewish Chicken Ranchers of Petaluma
★
San Diego Jewish Film Festival
★
A Home on the Range: The Jewish Chicken Ranchers of Petaluma
See also
Other Documentaries about Jews in America:
★ ''
My Yiddish Momme McCoy''
★ ''
Awake Zion''
★ ''
From Swastika to Jim Crow''
★ ''
Professional Revolutionary''
★ ''
Song of a Jewish Cowboy''
More information on Jewish communes:
★ ''
Bet Herut''
★
Kibbutz
★
Moshav
★
Socialism
★
Israel
External links
★
A Home on the Range's official website
★
The Petaluma Museum
★
75th Anaversery of the Jewish Community Center in Petaluma
★
Petaluma Chamber of Commerce