A Young, Multilingual City in Constant Transformation
Lakewood combines a large Yiddish- and English-speaking Orthodox community with a significant Hispanic population, forming an unusual mosaic in New Jersey.
Lakewood's population exceeds 130,000 residents in the most recent count, with one of the lowest median ages in the state. It is a young city because large Orthodox families pull the average down, and because many Hispanic workers also arrived with young children.
English is the official language, but in various neighborhoods Yiddish and Hebrew are heard in everyday life, and Spanish is dominant in areas such as the surroundings of Clifton Avenue. There is also a smaller presence of Portuguese, Russian, and Haitian Creole speakers. Religious diversity is pronounced: Orthodox Judaism, Catholicism, evangelical Christianity, and several mosques serving South Asian families.
This mix creates a city of micro-neighborhoods. Each community has its own markets, schools, and houses of worship, and coexistence functions more through division of space than through intense integration. For newcomers, it is easy to find people who speak the same language, while it is also important to understand which zone of the city to target when searching for housing.
- English
- Yiddish
- Spanish
- Hebrew
- Haitian Creole
- Orthodox Judaism
- Catholicism
- Evangelical Christianity
- Islam
- No religion