borough of
New York City The neighborhood features more than thirty
certified kosher restaurants, including
delis,
Chinese,
Italian and
Mexican restaurants, a donut shop, a frozen yogurt shop, bakeries, and butchers. The community features four men's
mikvahs and one woman's mikvah, the largest known as the Los Angeles Mikvah. There are several Jewish day schools located in the Pico-Robertson area. The
Chabad community operates four schools, Bais Chaya Mushka and Bais Chana, both of which are on Pico Boulevard, as well as the newly relocated Cheder Menachem on La Cienega.
Yeshiva University High School has campuses on both South Robertson Boulevard and West Pico Boulevard. The community overall has a wide variety of Jewish denominational groups. Over the past two decades, the
Orthodox community has grown to become the largest Jewish denomination in the area. This is evident in the growth of the Chabad community. According to Chabad, the
Hasidic movement has eleven centers in the immediate Pico-Robertson area, including the two high schools, boys cheder, day school, six synagogues, and a community center. Minyan Finder reports over twenty synagogues operating in the area. In 1993, the neighborhood became home to the Los Angeles
Museum of Tolerance. ==See also==