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Pogroms in the Russian Empire

Pogroms in the Russian Empire (Russian: Еврейские погромы в Российской империи) were large-scale, targeted, and repeated anti-Jewish rioting that began in the 19th century. Pogroms began to occur after Imperial Russia, which previously had very few Jews, acquired territories with large Jewish populations from the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire from 1772 to 1815. These territories were designated "the Pale of Settlement" by the Imperial Russian government, within which Jews were reluctantly permitted to live. The Pale of Settlement primarily included the territories of Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Bessarabia (modern Moldova), Lithuania and Crimea. Jews were forbidden from moving to other parts of European Russia (including Finland), unless they converted from Judaism or obtained a university diploma or first guild merchant status. Migration to the Caucasus, Siberia, the Far East or Central Asia was not restricted.

1821 edit

The 1821 Odessa pogroms are sometimes considered the first pogroms. After the execution of the Greek Orthodox patriarch, Gregory V, in Constantinople, 14 Jews were killed in response.[1] The initiators of the 1821 pogroms were the local Greeks, who used to have a substantial diaspora in the port cities of what was known as Novorossiya.[2]

1881–1882 edit

 
1881 pogrom in Kiev

The use of the term "pogrom" became common in the English language after a large-scale wave of anti-Jewish riots swept through south-western Imperial Russia (present-day Ukraine and Poland) from 1881 to 1882; when more than 200 anti-Jewish events occurred in the Russian Empire, the most notable of them were pogroms which occurred in Kiev, Warsaw and Odessa.[3] They changed perceptions among Russian Jews and indirectly gave a significant boost to the early Zionist movement.[4][5]

To circumvent censorship, these pogroms were referred to in the Jewish press as the "Storms in the South" or "Storms in the Negev" (Hebrew: הסופות בנגב, Sufot BaNegev).[6] The names are a reference to the prophecy in Isaiah 21:1.[7] Variants of the translation of the prophecy: "...As storms in the South pass through, So it comes from the desert, from a terrible land." or: "Like whirlwinds sweeping through the Negev, an invader comes from the desert, from a land of terror", and so on,[8] with "Negev" meaning "South" in Biblical Hebrew and the pogroms in question happening in the south (south-west) of the European part of the Russian Empire.

The event which triggered the pogroms was the assassination of Tsar Alexander II on 13 March [1 March, Old Style], 1881, for which some blamed "agents of foreign influence," implying that Jews committed it.[9][10] One of the conspirators was of Jewish origins, and the importance of her role in the assassination was greatly exaggerated during the pogroms that followed. Another conspirator was baselessly rumored to be Jewish.[11] The extent to which the Russian press was responsible for encouraging perceptions of the assassination as a Jewish act has been disputed.[12]

Local economic conditions (such as ancestral debts owed to Jewish moneylenders) are thought to have contributed significantly to the rioting, especially with regard to the participation of the business competitors of local Jews and the participation of railroad workers. Russia's industrialization caused Russians to be moving into and out of major cities.[13] People trying to escape the big cities carried their antisemitic values with them, spread the ideas throughout Russia, and caused more pogroms in different regions of Russia.[14] That has been argued to have been actually more important than rumors of Jewish responsibility for the death of the Tsar.[15] Those rumors, however, were clearly of some importance, if only as a trigger, and they drew upon a small kernel of truth: one of the close associates of the assassins, Hesya Helfman, was born into a Jewish home. The fact that the other assassins were all atheists and that the wider Jewish community had nothing to do with the assassination had little impact on the spread of such antisemitic rumors, and the assassination inspired retaliatory attacks on Jewish communities. During these pogroms, thousands of Jewish homes were destroyed; many families were reduced to poverty and large numbers of men, women and children were injured in 166 towns in the south-western provinces of the Empire, such as Ukraine.[citation needed]

There also was a large pogrom on the night of 15–16 April 1881 (the day of Eastern Orthodox Easter) in the city of Yelizavetgrad (now Kropyvnytskyi). On 17 April, the Army units were dispatched and were forced to use firearms to extinguish the riot. However, that only incited the whole situation in the region and a week later series of pogroms rolled through parts of the Kherson Governorate.[citation needed]

On 26 April 1881, an even bigger disorder engulfed the city of Kiev. The Kiev pogrom of 1881 is considered the worst one that took place in 1881.[16] The pogroms of 1881 did not stop then. They continued on through the summer, spreading across a big territory of modern-day Ukraine: (Podolia Governorate, Volyn Governorate, Chernigov Governorate, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, and others). During these pogroms the first local Jewish self-defense organizations started to form—the most prominent one in Odessa, which was organized by the Jewish students of the Novorossiysk University. [citation needed]

For decades after the 1881 pogroms, many government officials held the antisemitic belief that Jews in villages were more dangerous than Jews who lived in towns. The Minister of the Interior Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev rejected the theory that pogroms were caused by revolutionary socialists, and instead he adopted the idea that they were a protest by the rural population against Jewish exploitation. With this idea in mind, he promulgated the notion that pogroms had spread from villages to towns. Historians today recognize that although rural peasantry did largely participate in the pogrom violence, pogroms began in the towns and spread to the villages.[17]

The new Tsar Alexander III initially blamed revolutionaries and the Jews themselves for the riots and in May 1882 issued the May Laws, a series of harsh restrictions on Jews.[citation needed]

The pogroms continued for more than three years and were thought to have benefited from at least the tacit support of the authorities, although there were also attempts by the Russian government to end the rioting.[15]

The pogroms and the official reaction to them led many Russian Jews to reassess their perceptions of their status within the Russian Empire, and so led to significant Jewish emigration, mostly to the United States.[citation needed]

Casualties edit

At least 40 Jews were killed during pogroms between April and December 1881.[18]

British reaction edit

The leaders of the Jewish community in London were slow to speak out. It was only after Louisa Goldsmid's support following leadership from an anonymous writer named "Juriscontalus" and the editor of The Jewish Chronicle that action was taken in 1881. Public meetings were held across the country and Jewish and Christian leaders in Britain spoke out against the atrocities.[19]

1903–1906 edit

 
Photo believed to show the victims, mostly Jewish children, of a 1905 pogrom in Yekaterinoslav (today's Dnipro)

A much bloodier wave of pogroms broke out from 1903 to 1906, leaving an estimated 2,000 Jews dead and many more wounded, as the Jews took to arms to defend their families and property from the attackers. Particularly, the 1905 pogrom stands as one of the most severe incidents of anti-Jewish violence in Russia at the time, both in terms of property damage and human casualties. In comparison, the pogrom wave that occurred between 1881 and 1882 resulted in fewer fatalities. According to police records in Odessa, a minimum of 400 Jews and 100 non-Jews lost their lives, while around 300 individuals, predominantly Jewish, were injured. Additionally, an estimated 1,632 residential and commercial properties owned by Jews sustained damage. These numbers are considered by some to be conservative estimates, particularly regarding the number of injured individuals. The violence against the Jewish community was extreme, and involved acts such as physical assault and other forms of harm against men, women, and children who were not engaged in opposition to the government at the time. Reports also indicate instances of individuals being thrown from windows, sexual assault against women across age groups, and fatal violence against infants witnessed by their parents. [20][21]

The New York Times described the First Kishinev pogrom of Easter, 1903:

The anti-Jewish riots in Kishinev, Bessarabia [modern Moldova], are worse than the censor will permit to publish. There was a well laid-out plan for the general massacre of Jews on the day following the Orthodox Easter. The mob was led by priests, and the general cry, "Kill the Jews", was taken up all over the city. The Jews were taken wholly unaware and were slaughtered like sheep. The dead number 120 [Note: the actual number of dead was 47–48[22]] and the injured about 500. The scenes of horror attending this massacre are beyond description. Babies were literally torn to pieces by the frenzied and bloodthirsty mob. The local police made no attempt to check the reign of terror. At sunset the streets were piled with corpses and wounded. Those who could make their escape fled in terror, and the city is now practically deserted of Jews.[23]

 
Home at last by Moshe Maimon. An invalid Jewish soldier who, having returned home from the Russo-Japanese War, finds the bodies of his family who had died at the hands of pogromists. A rabbi is saying Kaddish for a member of the household who was killed.

This series of pogroms affected 64 towns (including Odessa, Yekaterinoslav, Kiev, Kishinev, Simferopol, Romny, Kremenchug, Nikolayev, Chernigov, Kamenets-Podolski, Yelizavetgrad), and 626 small towns (Russian: городок) and villages, mostly in Ukraine and Bessarabia.

Historians such as Edward Radzinsky suggest that many pogroms were incited by authorities and supported by the Tsarist Russian secret police (the Okhrana), even if some happened spontaneously.[24][25] The perpetrators who were prosecuted usually received clemency by Tsar's decree.[26]

Even outside of these main outbreaks, pogroms remained common; there was an anti-Jewish riot in Odessa in 1905 in which thousands of Jews were killed.[27]

The 1903 Kishinev pogrom, also known as the Kishinev Massacre, in present-day Moldova killed 47–49 persons. It provoked an international outcry after it was publicized by The Times and The New York Times. There was a second, smaller Kishinev pogrom in 1905.

A pogrom on July 20, 1905, in Yekaterinoslav (present-day Dnipro, Ukraine), was stopped by the Jewish self-defense group. One man in the group was killed.

On July 31, 1905, there was the first pogrom outside the Pale of Settlement, in the town of Makariev (near Nizhni Novgorod), where a patriotic procession led by the mayor turned violent.

At a pogrom in Kerch in Crimea on 31 July 1905,[28] the mayor ordered the police to fire at the self-defence group, and two fighters were killed (one of them, P. Kirilenko, was a Ukrainian who joined the Jewish defence group). The pogrom was conducted by the port workers apparently brought in for the purpose.

After the publication of the Tsar's Manifesto of October 17, 1905, pogroms erupted in 660 towns mainly in the present-day Ukraine, in the Southern and Southeastern areas of the Pale of Settlement. In contrast, there were no pogroms in present-day Lithuania. There were also very few incidents in Belarus or Russia proper. There were 24 pogroms outside of the Pale of Settlement, but those were directed at the revolutionaries rather than Jews.

 
Postcard depicting pogromists celebrating the murder and mutilation of Jews with shots of vodka. It was commonly believed that alcohol fueled the violence that characterized the killing of men, women, and children.

Eyewitness account from local milkmen described the 1905 Odessa pogrom as follows:

The three previous days they [Jewish family] had been in hiding. By Friday afternoon the pogrom was wrapping up. Friday night their neighbors, who were Russian, assured them that they could go home. They went and sat down for tea. And those same neighbors, it would seem, quietly let the killers in, since they never heard them knocking in the hallway. Suddenly, there was a knock on the door and strangers’ footsteps. The tea drinkers all hid: the servant by himself, the father by himself, the mother and daughter together. The killers found the mother and daughter first. They hit the mother in the head with an axe and cut the daughter’s arm. Their screams brought the father running, and he was taken down on the spot. The wounded mother was later taken to the hospital, while the daughter got off lightly.[29]

The greatest number of pogroms were registered in the Chernigov gubernia in northern Ukraine. The pogroms there in October 1905 took 800 Jewish lives, the material damages estimated at 70,000,000 rubles. 400 were killed in Odessa, over 150 in Rostov-on-Don, 67 in Yekaterinoslav, 54 in Minsk, 30 in Simferopol—over 40, in Orsha—over 30.

In 1906, the pogroms continued: January — in Gomel, June — in Bialystok (ca. 80 dead), and August — in Siedlce (ca. 30 dead). The Russian secret police and the military personnel organized the massacres.

In many of these incidents the most prominent participants were railway workers, industrial workers, and small shopkeepers and craftsmen, and (if the town was a river port (e.g. Dnipro) or a seaport (e.g. Kerch)), waterfront workmen; peasants joined in mainly to loot.[30]

Causes edit

Historian Bob Weinberg traces the roots of the pogrom to the complex social and political setting of Russia during that period. He contends that part of the explanation for the brutality lies in the realm of identity politics. For some individuals involved, their actions were not just acts of violence but also expressions of their Orthodox Christian beliefs and loyalty to the Russian monarch. The sense of eroding authority and changes in political structures seemed to amplify this sentiment, as exemplified by events like the vandalization of Tsar Nicholas II's portraits, which stirred animosity and rallied those resistant to change.[31]

Weinberg further argues that the pogroms functioned as a safety valve for defusing mounting societal discontent that could have otherwise led to revolutionary uprisings. He posits that the Jewish community was selected as a strategic scapegoat to redirect popular frustrations away from opposing the autocratic regime and focus them on an internal marginalized group instead. This tactic was not an innovation of the 1905 Odessa pogroms but had historical precedents, such as the pogrom wave of 1881 that similarly victimized Jewish communities.

Response of the United States edit

 
Herman S. Shapiro. "Kishinever shekhita, elegie" (Kishinev Massacre Elegy). Musical composition in New York attacking the Kishinev pogrom, 1904.

The pogroms increasingly angered American opinion.[32] The well-established German Jews in the United States, although they were not directly affected by the Russian pogroms, were well organized and convinced Washington to support the cause of Jews in Russia.[33][34] Led by Oscar Straus, Jacob Schiff, Mayer Sulzberger, and Rabbi Stephen Samuel Wise, they organized protest meetings, issued publicity, and met with President Theodore Roosevelt and Secretary of State John Hay. Stuart E. Knee reports that in April, 1903, Roosevelt received 363 addresses, 107 letters and 24 petitions signed by thousands of Christians, public and church leaders alike—all calling on the Tsar to stop the persecution of Jews. Public rallies were held in scores of cities, topped off at Carnegie Hall in New York in May. The Tsar retreated a bit and fired one local official after the Kishinev pogrom, which Roosevelt had explicitly denounced. But Roosevelt was mediating the war between Russia and Japan at the time and could not publicly take sides. Therefore, Secretary Hay took the initiative in Washington. Finally, Roosevelt forwarded a petition to the Tsar, who rejected it claiming that the Jews themselves were at fault. Roosevelt won Jewish support in his 1904 landslide reelection. The pogroms continued, as hundreds of thousands of Jews fled Russia, most heading for London or New York. With American public opinion turning against Russia, Congress officially denounced its policies in 1906. Roosevelt kept a low profile, as did his new Secretary of State Elihu Root. However, in late 1906 Roosevelt did appoint the first Jew to the cabinet, naming Oscar Straus as his Secretary of Commerce and Labor.[35][36]

Other prominent Americans who condemned Russia's actions included Cardinal James Gibbons.[37]

Organization edit

The pogroms are generally thought to have been organized or at least condoned by the authorities.[38][39][40][41] However, that view was challenged by Hans Rogger, I. Michael Aronson and John Klier, who were unable to find such sanction to be documented in the state archives.[42][43]

However, the antisemitic policy that was carried out from 1881 to 1917 made them possible. Official persecution and harassment of Jews influenced numerous antisemites to presume that their violence was legitimate. That sentiment was reinforced by the active participation of a few major and many minor officials in fomenting attacks and by the reluctance of the government to stop the pogroms and to punish those responsible for them.

Influence edit

The pogroms of the 1880s caused a worldwide outcry and, along with harsh laws, propelled mass Jewish emigration from Russia. Among the passed antisemitic laws were the 1882 May Laws, which prohibited Jews from moving into villages, allegedly in an attempt to address the cause of the pogroms (when, in fact, the pogroms were caused by an entirely different reason). The majority of the Russian High Commission for the Review of Jewish Legislation (1883–1888) actually noted the fact that almost all of the pogroms had begun in the towns and attempted to abolish the laws. However, the minority of the High Commission ignored the facts and backed the laws.[44] Two million Jews fled the Russian Empire between 1880 and 1920, with many going to the United Kingdom and United States.[45] In response, the United Kingdom introduced the Aliens Act 1905, which introduced immigration controls for the first time, a main objective being to reduce the influx of Eastern European Jews.[46]

In reaction to the pogroms and other oppressions of the Tsarist period, Jews increasingly became politically active. Jewish participation in The General Jewish Labor Bund, colloquially known as the Bund, and in the Bolshevik movements, was directly influenced by the pogroms. Similarly, the organization of Jewish self-defense leagues, which stopped the pogromists in certain areas during the second Kishinev pogrom, such as Hovevei Zion, led to a strong embrace of Zionism, especially by Russian Jews.

Cultural references edit

In 1903, Hebrew poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik wrote the poem In the City of Slaughter[47] in response to the Kishinev pogrom.

Elie Wiesel's The Trial of God depicts Jews fleeing a pogrom and setting up a fictitious "trial of God" for his negligence in not assisting them against the bloodthirsty mobs. In the end, it turns out that the mysterious stranger who has argued as God's advocate is none other than Lucifer. The experience of a Russian Jew is also depicted in Elie Wiesel's The Testament.

A pogrom is one of the central events in the musical play Fiddler on the Roof, which is adapted from Russian author Sholem Aleichem's Tevye the Dairyman stories. Aleichem writes about the pogroms in a story called "Lekh-Lekho".[48] The famous Broadway musical and film Fiddler on the Roof showed the cruelty of the Russian pogroms on the Jews in the fictional Anatevka in the early 20th century.

In the adult animated musical drama film American Pop, set during Imperial Russia during the late 1890s, a rabbi's wife and her young son Zalmie escape to America while the rabbi is killed by the Cossacks.

In the animated film An American Tail, set during and after the 1880s pogroms, Fievel and his family's village is destroyed by a pogrom. (Fievel and his family are mice, and their Cossack attackers are cats.)

The novel The Sacrifice by Adele Wiseman also deals with a family that is displaced after a pogrom in their home country and who emigrate to Canada after losing two sons to the riot and barely surviving themselves. The loss and murder of the sons haunts the entire story.

Mark Twain gives graphic descriptions of the Russian pogroms in Reflections on Religion, Part 3, published in 1906.[49]

Joseph Joffo describes the early history of his mother, a Jew in the Russia of Tsar Nicholas II, in the biographical 'Anna and her Orchestra'. He describes the raids by Cossacks on Jewish quarters and the eventual retribution inflicted by Anna's father and brothers on the Cossacks who murdered and burnt homes at the behest of the tsar.

In Bernard Malamud's novel The Fixer, set in Tsarist Russia around 1911, a Russian-Jewish handyman, Yakov Bog, is wrongly imprisoned for a most unlikely crime. It was later made into a film directed by John Frankenheimer with a screenplay by Dalton Trumbo.

Isaac Babel recounts a pogrom he experienced as a child in Mykolaiv, ca. 1905, in The Story of My Dovecote. He describes another pogrom against travelers on a train in early 1918 in the short story "The Way".

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Odessa pogroms January 21, 2007, at the Wayback Machine at the Center of Jewish Self-Education "Moria".
  2. ^ Pogrom (Virtual Jewish Encyclopedia) (in Russian)
  3. ^ (in Polish) Pogrom February 6, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, based on Alina Cała, Hanna Węgrzynek, Gabriela Zalewska, Historia i kultura Żydów polskich. Słownik, WSiP.
  4. ^ Leon Pinsker (1882) Autoemancipation
  5. ^ Yitzhak Maor, The "Sufot Banegev" as a Factor in the Rise of Nationalism among the Jewish Intelligentsia / "הסופות בנגב" כגורם להתעוררות התודעה הלאומית בקרב המשכילים היהודיים, 1981 JSTOR 23526296
  6. ^ Chapter 13 ‘‘Storms in the South,’’ 1881–1882 (doi:10.9783/9780812200812.143) from the book: Israel Bartal (Translated by Chaya Naor), The Jews of Eastern Europe, 1772-1881, 2005
  7. ^ The Diary of Rabbi Rozenblum, Section "The Pogroms 1882 -- Sufot BaNegev"
  8. ^ Isaiah 21:1 at Biblehub
  9. ^ The Jewish Chronicle, May 6, 1881, cited in Benjamin Blech, Eyewitness to Jewish History
  10. ^ Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti newspaper №65, March 8 (20), 1881
  11. ^ Arthur Morius Francis, Nihilism: Philosophy of Nothingness (2015), p. 64.
  12. ^ Stephen M Berk, Year of Crisis, Year of Hope: Russian Jewry and the Pogroms of 1881–1882 (Greenwood, 1985), pp. 54–55.
  13. ^ Aronson, Michael. Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia. New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.
  14. ^ Aronson, Michael. Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia. New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.
  15. ^ a b I. Michael Aronson, "Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia", Russian Review, Vol. 39, No. 1. (Jan., 1980), pp. 18–31
  16. ^ Pogrom Virtual Jewish Encyclopedia (in Russian)
  17. ^ Aronson, Michael. Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia. New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.
  18. ^ "Russian Jewish Horrors; A Nine-Months' Record of Rapine, Murder, and Outrage". The New York Times. January 28, 1882. Retrieved November 6, 2021.
  19. ^ C. S. Monaco (2013). The Rise of Modern Jewish Politics: Extraordinary Movement. Routledge. pp. 148–. ISBN 978-0-415-65983-3.
  20. ^ Weinberg, Robert. The Revolution of 1905 in Odessa: Blood on the Steps. 1993, p. 164.
  21. ^ Avrutin, Eugene M., and Elissa Bemporad, eds. Pogroms: A Documentary History. Oxford University Press, 2021, p. 90.
  22. ^ Hilary L. Rubinstein, Daniel C. Cohn-Sherbok, Abraham J. Edelheit, William D. Rubinstein, The Jews in the Modern World, Oxford University Press, 2002.
  23. ^ "Jewish Massacre Denounced", in The New York Times, 1903 April 28
  24. ^ Nicholas II. Life and Death by Edward Radzinsky (Russian ed., 1997) p. 89. According to Radzinsky, Sergei Witte (appointed Prime Minister 1905) remarked in his Memoirs that he found that some proclamations inciting pogroms were printed and distributed by Police.
  25. ^ Radzinsky, Edvard (2011-03-30). The Last Tsar: The Life and Death of Nicholas II. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 69, 77, 79. ISBN 978-0-307-75462-2. To the tsar, the pogroms organized by the police seemed like a holy outburst of popular indignation against the revolutionaries
  26. ^ "декабрь 1907 – Газетные "старости"(Архив)".
  27. ^ Robert Weinberg, "The Pogrom of 1905 in Odessa: A Case Study" in Pogroms: Anti-Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History, John D. Klier and Shlomo Lambroza, eds. (Cambridge,1992): 248–89
  28. ^ Kerch
  29. ^ Odesskii pogrom i samooborona (Paris: Impremerie Ch. Noblet, 1906), 1718, 31–32. Translated from the Russian by Eugenia Tietz-Sokolskaya.
  30. ^ Pogroms
  31. ^ Avrutin, Eugene M., and Elissa Bemporad, eds. Pogroms: A Documentary History. Oxford University Press, 2021. pp 90-91.
  32. ^ Taylor Stults, "Roosevelt, Russian Persecution of Jews, and American Public Opinion" Jewish Social Studies (1971) 33#3 pp 13–22.
  33. ^ Gerald Sorin, A Time for Building: The Third Migration, 1880–1920 (1995) pp 200–206, 302–303.
  34. ^ Alan J. Ward, "Immigrant minority 'diplomacy': American Jews and Russia, 1901–1912." Bulletin of the British Association for American Studies 9 (1964): 7–23.
  35. ^ Stuart E. Knee, "The Diplomacy of Neutrality: Theodore Roosevelt and the Russian Pogroms of 1903–1906," Presidential Studies Quarterly (1989), 19#1 pp. 71–78.
  36. ^ Ann E. Healy, "Tsarist Anti-Semitism and Russian-American Relations." Slavic Review 42.3 (1983): 408–425.
  37. ^ Rosenau, William (1928). "Cardinal Gibbons and His Attitude Toward Jewish Problems". Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society (31): 219–224. JSTOR 43059497.
  38. ^ "Погромы".
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-12-04. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on March 21, 2012. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  41. ^ "Virtual Kishivev – 1903 Pogrom".
  42. ^ John Klier, Christians and Jews and the "dialogue of violence" in late Imperial Russia, 2002, p. 167, "Despite the most active search of the authorities, outside agitators and instigators were never found. The urban intelligentsia was rarely involved.... All contemporary descriptions of the pogroms depict them as anarchistic rebels, rather than ideological protests. For most of the participants, it seems the pogroms were a form of carnival, of role-reversal, of 'the world turned upside down'. Questions of status and respect seem to have played a role in the pogroms, where the participants (predominantly peasants, town proletariat, vagrants, migrant workers, demobilized soldiers and other unsettled elements) wanted to put the Jews 'in their place'."
  43. ^ Sonja Weinberg, Pogroms and Riots: German Press Responses to Anti-Jewish Violence in Germany and Russia (1881–1882), Peter Lang, 2010, p. 210.
  44. ^ Aronson, Michael. Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia. New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.
  45. ^ Lewin, Rhoda G. (1979). "Stereotype and reality in the Jewish immigrant experience in Minneapolis" (PDF). Minnesota History. 46 (7). Minnesota Historical Society: 259. Retrieved August 12, 2018.
  46. ^ David Rosenberg, '' on the Channel 4 website
  47. ^ "In the City of Slaughter".
  48. ^ Sholem Aleichem. Tevye the Dairyman and the Railroad Stories. Schocken Books, Inc: 1987. p. 116–131.
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on April 5, 2012. Retrieved November 26, 2011. Reflections on Religion

Further reading edit

  • Arnold, Richard. Russian Nationalism and Ethnic Violence: Symbolic violence, lynching, pogrom, and massacre (Routledge, 2016).
  • Aronson, I. Michael. Troubled waters: Origins of the 1881 anti-Jewish pogroms in Russia (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1990).
  • Löwy, Bella. “The Russian Jews. Extermination or Emancipation?” The Jewish Quarterly Review 6, no. 3 (1894): 533–46. https://doi.org/10.2307/1450058.
  • Gerasimov, Ilya V. "Anti-Jewish Violence. Rethinking the Pogrom in East European History." Ab Imperio 2012.3 (2012): 396–412. online
  • Goldstein, Yossi. "The impact of Russian terrorism in Kishinev on the Zionist movement and the Jewish intelligentsia." Terrorism and Political Violence 25.4 (2013): 587–596.
  • Grosfeld, Irena, Seyhun Orcan Sakalli, and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya. "Middleman minorities and ethnic violence: anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian empire." Review of Economic Studies 87.1 (2020): 289–342. online
  • Humphrey, Caroline. "Odessa: Pogroms in a cosmopolitan city." in Post-Cosmopolitan Cities: Explorations of Urban Coexistence (2012): 17–64.
  • Judge, Edward H. Easter in Kishinev: anatomy of a pogrom (NYU Press, 1995).
  • Klier, John Doyle. Russians, Jews, and the Pogroms of 1881–1882 (2014).
  • Penkower, Monty Noam. "The Kishinev pogrom of 1903: A turning point in Jewish history." Modern Judaism 24.3 (2004): 187–225. online
  • Schoenberg, Philip Ernest. "The American Reaction to the Kishinev Pogrom of 1903." American Jewish Historical Quarterly 63.3 (1974): 262–283. online
  • Staliūnas, Darius. "Anti-Jewish disturbances in the north-western provinces in the early 1880s." East European Jewish Affairs 34.2 (2004): 119–138.
  • Weinberg, Robert. "Workers, pogroms, and the 1905 revolution in Odessa." Russian Review 46.1 (1987): 53–75. online
  • Zhuravskaya, Ekaterina, Irena Grosfeld, and Seyhun Orcan Sakalli. "Middleman Minorities and Ethnic Violence: Anti-Jewish Pogroms in the Russian Empire." (2018). online

Historiography edit

  • Budnitskii, Oleg. "Jews, Pogroms, and the White Movement: A Historiographical Critique." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2.4 (2001): 1–23.
  • Dekel-Chen, Jonathan, et al., eds. Anti-Jewish violence: rethinking the pogrom in East European history (Indiana UP, 2010).
  • Karlip, Joshua M. "Between martyrology and historiography: Elias Tcherikower and the making of a pogrom historian." East European Jewish Affairs 38.3 (2008): 257–280.
  • Klier, John Doyle, and Shlomo Lambroza, eds. Pogroms: Anti-Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History (2004).
  • Weinberg, Robert. "Visualizing pogroms in Russian history." Jewish History (1998): 71–92. online
  • Zipperstein, Steven J. Pogrom: Kishinev and the tilt of history (Liveright, 2018). online

External links edit

  • Lenin's speech: About Anti-Jewish Pogroms (Text of the speech, record)
  • Modern History Sourcebook: The Jewish Chronicle: Outrages Upon Jews in Russia, May 6, 1881
  • Jewish Virtual Library page "Pogroms"
  • The Pogrom of 1905 in Odessa: A Case Study

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Pogroms in the Russian Empire Russian Evrejskie pogromy v Rossijskoj imperii were large scale targeted and repeated anti Jewish rioting that began in the 19th century Pogroms began to occur after Imperial Russia which previously had very few Jews acquired territories with large Jewish populations from the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire from 1772 to 1815 These territories were designated the Pale of Settlement by the Imperial Russian government within which Jews were reluctantly permitted to live The Pale of Settlement primarily included the territories of Poland Ukraine Belarus Bessarabia modern Moldova Lithuania and Crimea Jews were forbidden from moving to other parts of European Russia including Finland unless they converted from Judaism or obtained a university diploma or first guild merchant status Migration to the Caucasus Siberia the Far East or Central Asia was not restricted Contents 1 1821 2 1881 1882 2 1 Casualties 2 2 British reaction 3 1903 1906 3 1 Causes 3 2 Response of the United States 4 Organization 5 Influence 6 Cultural references 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Historiography 10 External links1821 editThe 1821 Odessa pogroms are sometimes considered the first pogroms After the execution of the Greek Orthodox patriarch Gregory V in Constantinople 14 Jews were killed in response 1 The initiators of the 1821 pogroms were the local Greeks who used to have a substantial diaspora in the port cities of what was known as Novorossiya 2 1881 1882 edit nbsp 1881 pogrom in Kiev The use of the term pogrom became common in the English language after a large scale wave of anti Jewish riots swept through south western Imperial Russia present day Ukraine and Poland from 1881 to 1882 when more than 200 anti Jewish events occurred in the Russian Empire the most notable of them were pogroms which occurred in Kiev Warsaw and Odessa 3 They changed perceptions among Russian Jews and indirectly gave a significant boost to the early Zionist movement 4 5 To circumvent censorship these pogroms were referred to in the Jewish press as the Storms in the South or Storms in the Negev Hebrew הסופות בנגב Sufot BaNegev 6 The names are a reference to the prophecy in Isaiah 21 1 7 Variants of the translation of the prophecy As storms in the South pass through So it comes from the desert from a terrible land or Like whirlwinds sweeping through the Negev an invader comes from the desert from a land of terror and so on 8 with Negev meaning South in Biblical Hebrew and the pogroms in question happening in the south south west of the European part of the Russian Empire The event which triggered the pogroms was the assassination of Tsar Alexander II on 13 March 1 March Old Style 1881 for which some blamed agents of foreign influence implying that Jews committed it 9 10 One of the conspirators was of Jewish origins and the importance of her role in the assassination was greatly exaggerated during the pogroms that followed Another conspirator was baselessly rumored to be Jewish 11 The extent to which the Russian press was responsible for encouraging perceptions of the assassination as a Jewish act has been disputed 12 Local economic conditions such as ancestral debts owed to Jewish moneylenders are thought to have contributed significantly to the rioting especially with regard to the participation of the business competitors of local Jews and the participation of railroad workers Russia s industrialization caused Russians to be moving into and out of major cities 13 People trying to escape the big cities carried their antisemitic values with them spread the ideas throughout Russia and caused more pogroms in different regions of Russia 14 That has been argued to have been actually more important than rumors of Jewish responsibility for the death of the Tsar 15 Those rumors however were clearly of some importance if only as a trigger and they drew upon a small kernel of truth one of the close associates of the assassins Hesya Helfman was born into a Jewish home The fact that the other assassins were all atheists and that the wider Jewish community had nothing to do with the assassination had little impact on the spread of such antisemitic rumors and the assassination inspired retaliatory attacks on Jewish communities During these pogroms thousands of Jewish homes were destroyed many families were reduced to poverty and large numbers of men women and children were injured in 166 towns in the south western provinces of the Empire such as Ukraine citation needed There also was a large pogrom on the night of 15 16 April 1881 the day of Eastern Orthodox Easter in the city of Yelizavetgrad now Kropyvnytskyi On 17 April the Army units were dispatched and were forced to use firearms to extinguish the riot However that only incited the whole situation in the region and a week later series of pogroms rolled through parts of the Kherson Governorate citation needed On 26 April 1881 an even bigger disorder engulfed the city of Kiev The Kiev pogrom of 1881 is considered the worst one that took place in 1881 16 The pogroms of 1881 did not stop then They continued on through the summer spreading across a big territory of modern day Ukraine Podolia Governorate Volyn Governorate Chernigov Governorate Yekaterinoslav Governorate and others During these pogroms the first local Jewish self defense organizations started to form the most prominent one in Odessa which was organized by the Jewish students of the Novorossiysk University citation needed For decades after the 1881 pogroms many government officials held the antisemitic belief that Jews in villages were more dangerous than Jews who lived in towns The Minister of the Interior Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev rejected the theory that pogroms were caused by revolutionary socialists and instead he adopted the idea that they were a protest by the rural population against Jewish exploitation With this idea in mind he promulgated the notion that pogroms had spread from villages to towns Historians today recognize that although rural peasantry did largely participate in the pogrom violence pogroms began in the towns and spread to the villages 17 The new Tsar Alexander III initially blamed revolutionaries and the Jews themselves for the riots and in May 1882 issued the May Laws a series of harsh restrictions on Jews citation needed The pogroms continued for more than three years and were thought to have benefited from at least the tacit support of the authorities although there were also attempts by the Russian government to end the rioting 15 The pogroms and the official reaction to them led many Russian Jews to reassess their perceptions of their status within the Russian Empire and so led to significant Jewish emigration mostly to the United States citation needed Casualties edit At least 40 Jews were killed during pogroms between April and December 1881 18 British reaction edit The leaders of the Jewish community in London were slow to speak out It was only after Louisa Goldsmid s support following leadership from an anonymous writer named Juriscontalus and the editor of The Jewish Chronicle that action was taken in 1881 Public meetings were held across the country and Jewish and Christian leaders in Britain spoke out against the atrocities 19 1903 1906 edit nbsp Photo believed to show the victims mostly Jewish children of a 1905 pogrom in Yekaterinoslav today s Dnipro A much bloodier wave of pogroms broke out from 1903 to 1906 leaving an estimated 2 000 Jews dead and many more wounded as the Jews took to arms to defend their families and property from the attackers Particularly the 1905 pogrom stands as one of the most severe incidents of anti Jewish violence in Russia at the time both in terms of property damage and human casualties In comparison the pogrom wave that occurred between 1881 and 1882 resulted in fewer fatalities According to police records in Odessa a minimum of 400 Jews and 100 non Jews lost their lives while around 300 individuals predominantly Jewish were injured Additionally an estimated 1 632 residential and commercial properties owned by Jews sustained damage These numbers are considered by some to be conservative estimates particularly regarding the number of injured individuals The violence against the Jewish community was extreme and involved acts such as physical assault and other forms of harm against men women and children who were not engaged in opposition to the government at the time Reports also indicate instances of individuals being thrown from windows sexual assault against women across age groups and fatal violence against infants witnessed by their parents 20 21 The New York Times described the First Kishinev pogrom of Easter 1903 The anti Jewish riots in Kishinev Bessarabia modern Moldova are worse than the censor will permit to publish There was a well laid out plan for the general massacre of Jews on the day following the Orthodox Easter The mob was led by priests and the general cry Kill the Jews was taken up all over the city The Jews were taken wholly unaware and were slaughtered like sheep The dead number 120 Note the actual number of dead was 47 48 22 and the injured about 500 The scenes of horror attending this massacre are beyond description Babies were literally torn to pieces by the frenzied and bloodthirsty mob The local police made no attempt to check the reign of terror At sunset the streets were piled with corpses and wounded Those who could make their escape fled in terror and the city is now practically deserted of Jews 23 nbsp Home at last by Moshe Maimon An invalid Jewish soldier who having returned home from the Russo Japanese War finds the bodies of his family who had died at the hands of pogromists A rabbi is saying Kaddish for a member of the household who was killed This series of pogroms affected 64 towns including Odessa Yekaterinoslav Kiev Kishinev Simferopol Romny Kremenchug Nikolayev Chernigov Kamenets Podolski Yelizavetgrad and 626 small towns Russian gorodok and villages mostly in Ukraine and Bessarabia Historians such as Edward Radzinsky suggest that many pogroms were incited by authorities and supported by the Tsarist Russian secret police the Okhrana even if some happened spontaneously 24 25 The perpetrators who were prosecuted usually received clemency by Tsar s decree 26 Even outside of these main outbreaks pogroms remained common there was an anti Jewish riot in Odessa in 1905 in which thousands of Jews were killed 27 The 1903 Kishinev pogrom also known as the Kishinev Massacre in present day Moldova killed 47 49 persons It provoked an international outcry after it was publicized by The Times and The New York Times There was a second smaller Kishinev pogrom in 1905 A pogrom on July 20 1905 in Yekaterinoslav present day Dnipro Ukraine was stopped by the Jewish self defense group One man in the group was killed On July 31 1905 there was the first pogrom outside the Pale of Settlement in the town of Makariev near Nizhni Novgorod where a patriotic procession led by the mayor turned violent At a pogrom in Kerch in Crimea on 31 July 1905 28 the mayor ordered the police to fire at the self defence group and two fighters were killed one of them P Kirilenko was a Ukrainian who joined the Jewish defence group The pogrom was conducted by the port workers apparently brought in for the purpose After the publication of the Tsar s Manifesto of October 17 1905 pogroms erupted in 660 towns mainly in the present day Ukraine in the Southern and Southeastern areas of the Pale of Settlement In contrast there were no pogroms in present day Lithuania There were also very few incidents in Belarus or Russia proper There were 24 pogroms outside of the Pale of Settlement but those were directed at the revolutionaries rather than Jews nbsp Postcard depicting pogromists celebrating the murder and mutilation of Jews with shots of vodka It was commonly believed that alcohol fueled the violence that characterized the killing of men women and children Eyewitness account from local milkmen described the 1905 Odessa pogrom as follows The three previous days they Jewish family had been in hiding By Friday afternoon the pogrom was wrapping up Friday night their neighbors who were Russian assured them that they could go home They went and sat down for tea And those same neighbors it would seem quietly let the killers in since they never heard them knocking in the hallway Suddenly there was a knock on the door and strangers footsteps The tea drinkers all hid the servant by himself the father by himself the mother and daughter together The killers found the mother and daughter first They hit the mother in the head with an axe and cut the daughter s arm Their screams brought the father running and he was taken down on the spot The wounded mother was later taken to the hospital while the daughter got off lightly 29 The greatest number of pogroms were registered in the Chernigov gubernia in northern Ukraine The pogroms there in October 1905 took 800 Jewish lives the material damages estimated at 70 000 000 rubles 400 were killed in Odessa over 150 in Rostov on Don 67 in Yekaterinoslav 54 in Minsk 30 in Simferopol over 40 in Orsha over 30 In 1906 the pogroms continued January in Gomel June in Bialystok ca 80 dead and August in Siedlce ca 30 dead The Russian secret police and the military personnel organized the massacres In many of these incidents the most prominent participants were railway workers industrial workers and small shopkeepers and craftsmen and if the town was a river port e g Dnipro or a seaport e g Kerch waterfront workmen peasants joined in mainly to loot 30 Causes edit Historian Bob Weinberg traces the roots of the pogrom to the complex social and political setting of Russia during that period He contends that part of the explanation for the brutality lies in the realm of identity politics For some individuals involved their actions were not just acts of violence but also expressions of their Orthodox Christian beliefs and loyalty to the Russian monarch The sense of eroding authority and changes in political structures seemed to amplify this sentiment as exemplified by events like the vandalization of Tsar Nicholas II s portraits which stirred animosity and rallied those resistant to change 31 Weinberg further argues that the pogroms functioned as a safety valve for defusing mounting societal discontent that could have otherwise led to revolutionary uprisings He posits that the Jewish community was selected as a strategic scapegoat to redirect popular frustrations away from opposing the autocratic regime and focus them on an internal marginalized group instead This tactic was not an innovation of the 1905 Odessa pogroms but had historical precedents such as the pogrom wave of 1881 that similarly victimized Jewish communities Response of the United States edit nbsp Herman S Shapiro Kishinever shekhita elegie Kishinev Massacre Elegy Musical composition in New York attacking the Kishinev pogrom 1904 The pogroms increasingly angered American opinion 32 The well established German Jews in the United States although they were not directly affected by the Russian pogroms were well organized and convinced Washington to support the cause of Jews in Russia 33 34 Led by Oscar Straus Jacob Schiff Mayer Sulzberger and Rabbi Stephen Samuel Wise they organized protest meetings issued publicity and met with President Theodore Roosevelt and Secretary of State John Hay Stuart E Knee reports that in April 1903 Roosevelt received 363 addresses 107 letters and 24 petitions signed by thousands of Christians public and church leaders alike all calling on the Tsar to stop the persecution of Jews Public rallies were held in scores of cities topped off at Carnegie Hall in New York in May The Tsar retreated a bit and fired one local official after the Kishinev pogrom which Roosevelt had explicitly denounced But Roosevelt was mediating the war between Russia and Japan at the time and could not publicly take sides Therefore Secretary Hay took the initiative in Washington Finally Roosevelt forwarded a petition to the Tsar who rejected it claiming that the Jews themselves were at fault Roosevelt won Jewish support in his 1904 landslide reelection The pogroms continued as hundreds of thousands of Jews fled Russia most heading for London or New York With American public opinion turning against Russia Congress officially denounced its policies in 1906 Roosevelt kept a low profile as did his new Secretary of State Elihu Root However in late 1906 Roosevelt did appoint the first Jew to the cabinet naming Oscar Straus as his Secretary of Commerce and Labor 35 36 Other prominent Americans who condemned Russia s actions included Cardinal James Gibbons 37 Organization editThe pogroms are generally thought to have been organized or at least condoned by the authorities 38 39 40 41 However that view was challenged by Hans Rogger I Michael Aronson and John Klier who were unable to find such sanction to be documented in the state archives 42 43 However the antisemitic policy that was carried out from 1881 to 1917 made them possible Official persecution and harassment of Jews influenced numerous antisemites to presume that their violence was legitimate That sentiment was reinforced by the active participation of a few major and many minor officials in fomenting attacks and by the reluctance of the government to stop the pogroms and to punish those responsible for them Influence editThe pogroms of the 1880s caused a worldwide outcry and along with harsh laws propelled mass Jewish emigration from Russia Among the passed antisemitic laws were the 1882 May Laws which prohibited Jews from moving into villages allegedly in an attempt to address the cause of the pogroms when in fact the pogroms were caused by an entirely different reason The majority of the Russian High Commission for the Review of Jewish Legislation 1883 1888 actually noted the fact that almost all of the pogroms had begun in the towns and attempted to abolish the laws However the minority of the High Commission ignored the facts and backed the laws 44 Two million Jews fled the Russian Empire between 1880 and 1920 with many going to the United Kingdom and United States 45 In response the United Kingdom introduced the Aliens Act 1905 which introduced immigration controls for the first time a main objective being to reduce the influx of Eastern European Jews 46 In reaction to the pogroms and other oppressions of the Tsarist period Jews increasingly became politically active Jewish participation in The General Jewish Labor Bund colloquially known as the Bund and in the Bolshevik movements was directly influenced by the pogroms Similarly the organization of Jewish self defense leagues which stopped the pogromists in certain areas during the second Kishinev pogrom such as Hovevei Zion led to a strong embrace of Zionism especially by Russian Jews Cultural references editIn 1903 Hebrew poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik wrote the poem In the City of Slaughter 47 in response to the Kishinev pogrom Elie Wiesel s The Trial of God depicts Jews fleeing a pogrom and setting up a fictitious trial of God for his negligence in not assisting them against the bloodthirsty mobs In the end it turns out that the mysterious stranger who has argued as God s advocate is none other than Lucifer The experience of a Russian Jew is also depicted in Elie Wiesel s The Testament A pogrom is one of the central events in the musical play Fiddler on the Roof which is adapted from Russian author Sholem Aleichem s Tevye the Dairyman stories Aleichem writes about the pogroms in a story called Lekh Lekho 48 The famous Broadway musical and film Fiddler on the Roof showed the cruelty of the Russian pogroms on the Jews in the fictional Anatevka in the early 20th century In the adult animated musical drama film American Pop set during Imperial Russia during the late 1890s a rabbi s wife and her young son Zalmie escape to America while the rabbi is killed by the Cossacks In the animated film An American Tail set during and after the 1880s pogroms Fievel and his family s village is destroyed by a pogrom Fievel and his family are mice and their Cossack attackers are cats The novel The Sacrifice by Adele Wiseman also deals with a family that is displaced after a pogrom in their home country and who emigrate to Canada after losing two sons to the riot and barely surviving themselves The loss and murder of the sons haunts the entire story Mark Twain gives graphic descriptions of the Russian pogroms in Reflections on Religion Part 3 published in 1906 49 Joseph Joffo describes the early history of his mother a Jew in the Russia of Tsar Nicholas II in the biographical Anna and her Orchestra He describes the raids by Cossacks on Jewish quarters and the eventual retribution inflicted by Anna s father and brothers on the Cossacks who murdered and burnt homes at the behest of the tsar In Bernard Malamud s novel The Fixer set in Tsarist Russia around 1911 a Russian Jewish handyman Yakov Bog is wrongly imprisoned for a most unlikely crime It was later made into a film directed by John Frankenheimer with a screenplay by Dalton Trumbo Isaac Babel recounts a pogrom he experienced as a child in Mykolaiv ca 1905 in The Story of My Dovecote He describes another pogrom against travelers on a train in early 1918 in the short story The Way See also editAntisemitism History of Antisemitism Martyrdom in Judaism Religious antisemitism Antisemitism in Christianity Christianity and Judaism Antisemitism in the Russian Empire Relations between Eastern Orthodoxy and Judaism Antisemitism in the Soviet Union Antisemitism in Russia Antisemitism in Europe Antisemitism in the United States British responses to the anti Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire Emancipation of the Jews in England Pogroms in Russia History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union Jewish emancipation Pogroms of the Russian Civil WarReferences edit Odessa pogroms Archived January 21 2007 at the Wayback Machine at the Center of Jewish Self Education Moria Pogrom Virtual Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian in Polish Pogrom Archived February 6 2010 at the Wayback Machine based on Alina Cala Hanna Wegrzynek Gabriela Zalewska Historia i kultura Zydow polskich Slownik WSiP Leon Pinsker 1882 Autoemancipation Yitzhak Maor The Sufot Banegev as a Factor in the Rise of Nationalism among the Jewish Intelligentsia הסופות בנגב כגורם להתעוררות התודעה הלאומית בקרב המשכילים היהודיים 1981 JSTOR 23526296 Chapter 13 Storms in the South 1881 1882 doi 10 9783 9780812200812 143 from the book Israel Bartal Translated by Chaya Naor The Jews of Eastern Europe 1772 1881 2005 The Diary of Rabbi Rozenblum Section The Pogroms 1882 Sufot BaNegev Isaiah 21 1 at Biblehub The Jewish Chronicle May 6 1881 cited in Benjamin Blech Eyewitness to Jewish History Sankt Peterburgskie Vedomosti newspaper 65 March 8 20 1881 Arthur Morius Francis Nihilism Philosophy of Nothingness 2015 p 64 Stephen M Berk Year of Crisis Year of Hope Russian Jewry and the Pogroms of 1881 1882 Greenwood 1985 pp 54 55 Aronson Michael Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti Jewish Pogroms in Russia New Jersey Wiley Blackwell Aronson Michael Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti Jewish Pogroms in Russia New Jersey Wiley Blackwell a b I Michael Aronson Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti Jewish Pogroms in Russia Russian Review Vol 39 No 1 Jan 1980 pp 18 31 Pogrom Virtual Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian Aronson Michael Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti Jewish Pogroms in Russia New Jersey Wiley Blackwell Russian Jewish Horrors A Nine Months Record of Rapine Murder and Outrage The New York Times January 28 1882 Retrieved November 6 2021 C S Monaco 2013 The Rise of Modern Jewish Politics Extraordinary Movement Routledge pp 148 ISBN 978 0 415 65983 3 Weinberg Robert The Revolution of 1905 in Odessa Blood on the Steps 1993 p 164 Avrutin Eugene M and Elissa Bemporad eds Pogroms A Documentary History Oxford University Press 2021 p 90 Hilary L Rubinstein Daniel C Cohn Sherbok Abraham J Edelheit William D Rubinstein The Jews in the Modern World Oxford University Press 2002 Jewish Massacre Denounced in The New York Times 1903 April 28 Nicholas II Life and Death by Edward Radzinsky Russian ed 1997 p 89 According to Radzinsky Sergei Witte appointed Prime Minister 1905 remarked in his Memoirs that he found that some proclamations inciting pogroms were printed and distributed by Police Radzinsky Edvard 2011 03 30 The Last Tsar The Life and Death of Nicholas II Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group pp 69 77 79 ISBN 978 0 307 75462 2 To the tsar the pogroms organized by the police seemed like a holy outburst of popular indignation against the revolutionaries dekabr 1907 Gazetnye starosti Arhiv Robert Weinberg The Pogrom of 1905 in Odessa A Case Study in Pogroms Anti Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History John D Klier and Shlomo Lambroza eds Cambridge 1992 248 89 Kerch Odesskii pogrom i samooborona Paris Impremerie Ch Noblet 1906 1718 31 32 Translated from the Russian by Eugenia Tietz Sokolskaya Pogroms Avrutin Eugene M and Elissa Bemporad eds Pogroms A Documentary History Oxford University Press 2021 pp 90 91 Taylor Stults Roosevelt Russian Persecution of Jews and American Public Opinion Jewish Social Studies 1971 33 3 pp 13 22 Gerald Sorin A Time for Building The Third Migration 1880 1920 1995 pp 200 206 302 303 Alan J Ward Immigrant minority diplomacy American Jews and Russia 1901 1912 Bulletin of the British Association for American Studies 9 1964 7 23 Stuart E Knee The Diplomacy of Neutrality Theodore Roosevelt and the Russian Pogroms of 1903 1906 Presidential Studies Quarterly 1989 19 1 pp 71 78 Ann E Healy Tsarist Anti Semitism and Russian American Relations Slavic Review 42 3 1983 408 425 Rosenau William 1928 Cardinal Gibbons and His Attitude Toward Jewish Problems Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 31 219 224 JSTOR 43059497 Pogromy CFCA The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism Archived from the original on 2010 12 04 Retrieved 2012 12 13 Istoriya evreev Rossijskoj imperii Pogrom v Balte Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved December 13 2012 Virtual Kishivev 1903 Pogrom John Klier Christians and Jews and the dialogue of violence in late Imperial Russia 2002 p 167 Despite the most active search of the authorities outside agitators and instigators were never found The urban intelligentsia was rarely involved All contemporary descriptions of the pogroms depict them as anarchistic rebels rather than ideological protests For most of the participants it seems the pogroms were a form of carnival of role reversal of the world turned upside down Questions of status and respect seem to have played a role in the pogroms where the participants predominantly peasants town proletariat vagrants migrant workers demobilized soldiers and other unsettled elements wanted to put the Jews in their place Sonja Weinberg Pogroms and Riots German Press Responses to Anti Jewish Violence in Germany and Russia 1881 1882 Peter Lang 2010 p 210 Aronson Michael Geographical and Socioeconomic Factors in the 1881 Anti Jewish Pogroms in Russia New Jersey Wiley Blackwell Lewin Rhoda G 1979 Stereotype and reality in the Jewish immigrant experience in Minneapolis PDF Minnesota History 46 7 Minnesota Historical Society 259 Retrieved August 12 2018 David Rosenberg Immigration on the Channel 4 website In the City of Slaughter Sholem Aleichem Tevye the Dairyman and the Railroad Stories Schocken Books Inc 1987 p 116 131 Mark Twain Reflections on Religion Auburn Journal Archived from the original on April 5 2012 Retrieved November 26 2011 Reflections on ReligionFurther reading editArnold Richard Russian Nationalism and Ethnic Violence Symbolic violence lynching pogrom and massacre Routledge 2016 Aronson I Michael Troubled waters Origins of the 1881 anti Jewish pogroms in Russia University of Pittsburgh Press 1990 Lowy Bella The Russian Jews Extermination or Emancipation The Jewish Quarterly Review 6 no 3 1894 533 46 https doi org 10 2307 1450058 Gerasimov Ilya V Anti Jewish Violence Rethinking the Pogrom in East European History Ab Imperio 2012 3 2012 396 412 online Goldstein Yossi The impact of Russian terrorism in Kishinev on the Zionist movement and the Jewish intelligentsia Terrorism and Political Violence 25 4 2013 587 596 Grosfeld Irena Seyhun Orcan Sakalli and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya Middleman minorities and ethnic violence anti Jewish pogroms in the Russian empire Review of Economic Studies 87 1 2020 289 342 online Humphrey Caroline Odessa Pogroms in a cosmopolitan city in Post Cosmopolitan Cities Explorations of Urban Coexistence 2012 17 64 Judge Edward H Easter in Kishinev anatomy of a pogrom NYU Press 1995 Klier John Doyle Russians Jews and the Pogroms of 1881 1882 2014 Penkower Monty Noam The Kishinev pogrom of 1903 A turning point in Jewish history Modern Judaism 24 3 2004 187 225 online Schoenberg Philip Ernest The American Reaction to the Kishinev Pogrom of 1903 American Jewish Historical Quarterly 63 3 1974 262 283 online Staliunas Darius Anti Jewish disturbances in the north western provinces in the early 1880s East European Jewish Affairs 34 2 2004 119 138 Weinberg Robert Workers pogroms and the 1905 revolution in Odessa Russian Review 46 1 1987 53 75 online Zhuravskaya Ekaterina Irena Grosfeld and Seyhun Orcan Sakalli Middleman Minorities and Ethnic Violence Anti Jewish Pogroms in the Russian Empire 2018 online Historiography edit Budnitskii Oleg Jews Pogroms and the White Movement A Historiographical Critique Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2 4 2001 1 23 Dekel Chen Jonathan et al eds Anti Jewish violence rethinking the pogrom in East European history Indiana UP 2010 Karlip Joshua M Between martyrology and historiography Elias Tcherikower and the making of a pogrom historian East European Jewish Affairs 38 3 2008 257 280 Klier John Doyle and Shlomo Lambroza eds Pogroms Anti Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History 2004 Weinberg Robert Visualizing pogroms in Russian history Jewish History 1998 71 92 online Zipperstein Steven J Pogrom Kishinev and the tilt of history Liveright 2018 onlineExternal links editLenin s speech About Anti Jewish Pogroms Text of the speech record Jewish history of the Russian Federation through the Second World War Modern History Sourcebook The Jewish Chronicle Outrages Upon Jews in Russia May 6 1881 Jewish Virtual Library page Pogroms History of pogroms in Odessa The Pogrom of 1905 in Odessa A Case Study Kishinev pogrom history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pogroms in the Russian Empire amp oldid 1213971469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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