Please forgive my ignorance, but what does jewish communities look like? I've seen maybe one area with a high concentration of jews and I figured it out by all the yamakahs (sp?), area looked normal other than the jewish school.
Yamakahs? I thought they said I needed a YAMAHA! That's why I have an SR500.

Seriously, red, that's a reasonable question. I don't think the sort of little communities we're seeking out will "look" like anything. It's true that we're largely communal; many of our religious obligations are ideally done in community. Nonetheless, poor immigrants, or sometimes folks less concerned with religious community, made their way to the strangest out-of-the-way places. Especially the ones that came off the boat in Galveston, and just headed out to look for work. Out in the countryside where I work as a paramedic there's a little village called Ilfeld. The Ilfeld family cemetary is there, and that's all there is anymore of a Jewish presence there, as far as I know. In some places there may be a building that was once the synagogue (our place of prayer and study) or temple, or there may be something else. And in different places, there might now just be a group of Jews who get together for the Sabbath or holydays in someone's home.
So far, close to here, I have leads in New Mexico (Las Vegas, somewhere up Mora highway, Raton) and Colorado (Leadville, Walsenberg, Pueblo), but we know there's a lot more out there.
Thanks all! Keep those suggestions coming in! And if you're looking for a Sabbath meal (or just a beer) on your way through Santa Fe, let us know!