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Denver’s Jewish Chamber of Commerce

Participants at the Chamber's December’s Dreidel Networking event.It used to be that when Denver Jews wanted to do business with each other, the contacts and deals were often made in the comfort of a deli or country club dining room, at a community event, perhaps even in a synagogue lobby.

It was an informal, friendly and heimische way of doing business, a fraternal practice that more often than not need nothing more than a firm handshake to seal the deal.

Business is still done that way, of course, but at least in the mind of one Denver businessman, not nearly as often as it once was – nor as effectively — hence the creation of the Denver Jewish Chamber of Commerce.

That new organization’s president and one of its primary founders, Seth Peritzman, a Denver-based independent financial advisor, laments that Jews of the younger generation have largely forsaken the more personal model of business transaction.

“It’s very fragmented at this point, the idea of Jews working together,” Peritzman says. “We’re trying to change that.

“It used to be, 50 years ago, say, on the West Side, the natural tendency was for Jews to work with other Jews. We don’t see that anymore. We’re trying to build relationships among our peers, so working together would be more of a first choice.”

“Working together,” he explains, is a way of saying that if Jewish businesspeople do at least some of their business with other Jewish businesspeople, the community itself benefits in the long run – a commerce-based take on the old aphorism that “a rising tide lifts all boats.”

“If we can build relationships and businesses together we can grow together,” he says.

It’s far from a new idea. Peritzman cites no less authoritative a source than Maimonides who taught Jews that if they had to choose between a Jewish and a non-Jewish store with identical prices and merchandise, they should choose the Jewish store.

Peritzman admits that he’s not sure why younger Jewish entrepreneurs no longer seem to have the old instinct of intra-community business socialization. Somewhere along the line, informal business contacts became “networking,” a more professionalized – and less community-oriented – method of doing business.

The rest of this article is available in the IJN’s print edition only. Contact Carol to order your copy at (303) 861-2234 or email [email protected].



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IJN Assistant Editor | [email protected]


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