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History of the Jews in Russia

The history of the Jews in Russia and areas historically connected with it goes back at least 1,500 years. Jews in Russia have historically constituted a large religious and ethnic diaspora; the Russian Empire at one time hosted the largest population of Jews in the world.[9] Within these territories, the primarily Ashkenazi Jewish communities of many different areas flourished and developed many of modern Judaism's most distinctive theological and cultural traditions, while also facing periods of antisemitic discriminatory policies and persecution, including violent pogroms. Some have described a "renaissance" in the Jewish community inside Russia since the beginning of the 21st century;[10] however, the Russian Jewish population has experienced precipitous decline since the dissolution of the USSR which continues to this day, although it is still among the largest in Europe.[11]

Russian Jews
  • יהדות רוסיה (Hebrew)
  • Русские евреи (Russian)
  • רוסישע ייִדן (Yiddish)
The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow, the largest Jewish museum in the world.
Regions with significant populations
Israel1,200,000[1]
United States350,000[2]
Germany178,500[3]
Russia83,896 according to the 2021 census[4]
Australia10,000–11,000[5]
Languages
Hebrew, Russian, Yiddish
Religion
Judaism (31%), Jewish atheism (27%),[6] Non-religious (25%), Christianity (17%)[7][8]
Related ethnic groups
Ashkenazi Jews, Sephardi Jews, Ukrainian Jews, Belarusian Jews, Lithuanian Jews, Latvian Jews, Czech Jews, Hungarian Jews, Polish Jews, Slovak Jews, Serbian Jews, Romanian Jews, Turkish Jews, Crimean Karaites, Krymchaks, Mountain Jews, Bukharan Jews, Georgian Jews, American Jews

Overview and background

The largest group among Russian Jews are Ashkenazi Jews, but the community also includes a significant proportion of other non-Ashkenazi from other Jewish diaspora including Mountain Jews, Sephardi Jews, Crimean Karaites, Krymchaks, Bukharan Jews and Georgian Jews.

The presence of Jewish people in the European part of Russia can be traced to the 7th–14th centuries CE. In the 11th and 12th centuries, the Jewish population in Kiev, in present-day Ukraine, was restricted to a separate quarter. Evidence of the presence of Jewish people in Muscovite Russia is first documented in the chronicles of 1471. During the reign of Catherine II in the 18th century, Jewish people were restricted to the Pale of Settlement (1791–1917) within Russia, the territory where they could live or immigrate to. Alexander III escalated anti-Jewish policies. Beginning in the 1880s, waves of anti-Jewish pogroms swept across different regions of the empire for several decades. More than two million Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920, mostly to the United States and what is today the State of Israel. The Pale of Settlement took away many of the rights that the Jewish people of the late 17th century Russia had enjoyed. At this time, the Jewish people were restricted to an area of what is current day Belarus, Lithuania, eastern Poland and Ukraine.[12] Where Western Europe was experiencing emancipation at this time, in Russia the laws for the Jewish people were getting more strict. They were allowed to move further east, towards a less crowded region, though it was only a minority of Jews who took to this migration option.[12] The sporadic and often impoverished communities formed were known as Shtetls.[12]

Before 1917 there were 300,000 Zionists in Russia, while the main Jewish socialist organization, the Bund, had 33,000 members. Only 958 Jews had joined the Bolshevik Party before 1917; thousands joined after the Revolution.[13]: 565  The chaotic years of World War I, the February and October Revolutions, and the Russian Civil War had created social disruption that led to anti-Semitism. Some 150,000 Jews were killed in the pogroms of 1918–1922, 125,000 of them in Ukraine, 25,000 in Belarus.[14] The pogroms were mostly perpetrated by anti-communist forces; sometimes, Red Army units engaged in pogroms as well.[15] Anton Denikin's White Army was a bastion of anti-Semitism, using "Strike at the Jews and save Russia!" as its motto.[16] The Bolshevik Red Army, although individual soldiers committed anti-Semitic abuses, had a policy of opposing anti-Semitism, and as a result, it won the support of much of the Jewish population. After a short period of confusion, the Soviets started executing guilty individuals and even disbanding the army units whose men had attacked Jews. Although pogroms were still perpetrated after this, in general the Jews regarded the Red Army as the only force which was able and willing to defend them. The Russian Civil War pogroms shocked world Jewry and rallied many Jews to the Red Army and the Soviet regime, strengthening the desire for the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people.[15] In August 1919 the Soviet government arrested many rabbis, seized Jewish properties, including synagogues, and dissolved many Jewish communities.[17] The Jewish section of the Communist Party labeled the use of the Hebrew language "reactionary" and "elitist" and the teaching of Hebrew was banned.[18] Zionists were persecuted harshly, with Jewish communists leading the attacks.[13]: 567 

Following the civil war, however, the new Bolshevik government's policies produced a flourishing of secular Jewish culture in Belarus and western Ukraine in the 1920s. The Soviet government outlawed all expressions of anti-Semitism, with the public use of the ethnic slur жид ("Yid") being punished by up to one year of imprisonment,[19] and tried to modernize the Jewish community by establishing 1,100 Yiddish-language schools, 40 Yiddish-language daily newspapers and by settling Jews on farms in Ukraine and Crimea; the number of Jews working in the industry had more than doubled between 1926 and 1931.[13]: 567  At the beginning of the 1930s, the Jews were 1.8 percent of the Soviet population but 12–15 percent of all university students.[20] In 1934 the Soviet state established the Jewish Autonomous Oblast in the Russian Far East. This region never came to have a majority Jewish population.[21] The JAO is Russia's only autonomous oblast[22] and, outside of Israel, the world's only Jewish territory with an official status.[23] The observance of the Sabbath was banned in 1929,[13]: 567  foreshadowing the dissolution of the Communist Party's Yiddish-language Yevsektsia in 1930 and worse repression to come. Numerous Jews were victimized in Stalin's purges as "counterrevolutionaries" and "reactionary nationalists", although in the 1930s the Jews were underrepresented in the Gulag population.[13]: 567 [24] The share of Jews in the Soviet ruling elite declined during the 1930s, but was still more than double their proportion in the general Soviet population. According to Israeli historian Benjamin Pinkus, "We can say that the Jews in the Soviet Union took over the privileged position, previously held by the Germans in tsarist Russia".[25]: 83 

In the 1930s, many Jews held high rank in the Red Army High Command: Generals Iona Yakir, Yan Gamarnik, Yakov Smushkevich (Commander of the Soviet Air Forces) and Grigori Shtern (Commander-in-Chief in the war against Japan and Commander at the front in the Winter War).[25]: 84  During World War Two, an estimated 500,000 soldiers in the Red Army were Jewish; about 200,000 were killed in battle. About 160,000 were decorated, and more than a hundred achieved the rank of Red Army general.[26] Over 150 were designated Heroes of the Soviet Union, the highest award in the country.[27] More than two million Soviet Jews are believed to have died during the Holocaust in warfare and in Nazi-occupied territories. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, many Soviet Jews took the opportunity of liberalized emigration policies, with more than half of the population leaving, most for Israel and the West: Germany, the United States, Canada and Australia. For many years during this period, Russia had a higher rate of immigration to Israel than any other country.[28] Russia's Jewish population is still the third biggest in Europe, after France and United Kingdom.[29] In November 2012, the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, one of the world's biggest museums of Jewish history, opened in Moscow.[30]

Early history

 
The Khazar Khaganate (650–850)

Jews have been present in contemporary Armenia and Georgia since the Babylonian captivity. Records exist from the 4th century showing that there were Armenian cities possessing Jewish populations ranging from 10,000 to 30,000 along with substantial Jewish settlements in the Crimea.[31] The presence of Jewish people in the territories corresponding to modern Belarus, Ukraine, and the European part of Russia can be traced back to the 7th–14th centuries CE.[32][33] Under the influence of the Caucasian Jewish communities, Bulan, the Khagan Bek of the Turkic Khazars, and the ruling classes of Khazaria (located in what is now Ukraine, southern Russia and Kazakhstan), may have adopted and/or converted to Judaism at some point in the mid-to-late 8th or early 9th centuries. After the conquest of the Khazarian kingdom by Sviatoslav I of Kiev (969), the Khazar Jewish population may have assimilated or migrated in part.

Kievan Rus'

In the 11th and 12th centuries, the Jewish population may have been restricted to a separate quarter in Kiev, known as the Jewish Town (Old East Slav: Жидове, Zhidovye, i.e. "The Jews"), the gates probably leading to which were known as the Jewish Gates (Old East Slavic: Жидовская ворота, Zhidovskaya vorota). The Kievan community was oriented towards Byzantium (the Romaniotes), Babylonia and Palestine in the 10th and 11th centuries, but appears to have been increasingly open to the Ashkenazim from the 12th century on. Few products of Kievan Jewish intellectual activity exist, however.[34] Other communities, or groups of individuals, are known from Chernigov and, probably, Volodymyr-Volynskyi. At that time, Jews were probably found also in northeastern Russia, in the domains of Prince Andrei Bogolyubsky (1169–1174), although it is uncertain to which degree they would have been living there permanently.[34]

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

 
Number of Jews in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth per voivodeship in 1764

Although northeastern Russia had a low Jewish population, countries just to its west had rapidly growing Jewish populations, as waves of anti-Jewish pogroms and expulsions from the countries of Western Europe marked the last centuries of the Middle Ages, a sizable portion of the Jewish populations there moved to the more tolerant countries of Central and Eastern Europe, as well as the Middle East.

Expelled en masse from England, France, Spain and most other Western European countries at various times, and persecuted in Germany in the 14th century, many Western European Jews migrated to Poland upon the invitation of Polish ruler Casimir III the Great to settle in Polish-controlled areas of Eastern Europe as a third estate, although restricted to commercial, middleman services in an agricultural society for the Polish king and nobility between 1330 and 1370, during the reign of Casimir the Great.

After settling in Poland (later Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth) and Hungary (later Austria-Hungary), the population expanded into the lightly populated areas of Ukraine and Lithuania, which were to become part of the expanding Russian Empire. In 1495, Alexander the Jagiellonian expelled Jewish residents from Grand Duchy of Lithuania, but reversed his decision in 1503.

In the shtetls populated almost entirely by Jews, or in the middle-sized town where Jews constituted a significant part of population, Jewish communities traditionally ruled themselves according to halakha, and were limited by the privileges granted them by local rulers. (See also Shtadlan). These Jews were not assimilated into the larger eastern European societies, and identified as an ethnic group with a unique set of religious beliefs and practices, as well as an ethnically unique economic role.

Tsardom of Russia

 
Peter Shafirov, vice-chancellor of Russia under Peter the Great

Documentary evidence as to the presence of Jews in Muscovite Russia is first found in the chronicles of 1471. The relatively small population of them were subject to discriminatory laws, but these laws do not appear to have been enforced at all times. Jews residing in Russian and Ukrainian towns suffered numerous religious persecutions. Converted Jews occasionally rose to important positions in the Russian State, for example Peter Shafirov, vice-chancellor under Peter the Great. Shafirov came, as most Russian Jews after the fall of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, from a Jewish family of Polish origin. He had extraordinary knowledge of foreign languages and served as the chief translator in the Russian Foreign Office, subsequently he began to accompany Tsar Peter on his international travels. Following this, he was raised to the rank of vice-chancellor because of his many diplomatic talents and skills, but was later imprisoned, sentenced to death, and eventually banished.

Russian Empire

 
Map of the Pale of Settlement, showing percentage of Jewish populations

Their situation changed radically, during the reign of Catherine II, when the Russian Empire acquired rule over large Lithuanian and Polish territories which historically included a high proportion of Jewish residents, especially during the second (1793) and the third (1795) Partitions of Poland. Under the Commonwealth's legal system, Jews endured economic restrictions euphemised as "disabilities", which also continued following the Russian occupation. Catherine established the Pale of Settlement, which included Congress Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine, and the Crimea (the latter was later excluded). Jewish people were restricted to residence within the Pale and were required to obtain special permission to immigrate into other parts of Russia. Within the Pale, the Jewish residents were given right of voting in municipal elections, but their vote was limited to one third of the total number of voters, even though their proportion in many areas was much higher, even a majority. This served to provide an aura of democracy, while institutionalizing conflict amongst ethnic groups on a local level.

Jewish communities in Russia were governed internally by local administrative bodies, called the Councils of Elders (Qahal, Kehilla), constituted in every town or hamlet possessing a Jewish population. The Councils of Elders had jurisdiction over Jews in matters of internal litigation, as well as fiscal transactions relating to the collection and payment of taxes (poll tax, land tax, etc.). Later, this right of collecting taxes was much abused; in 1844 the civil authority of the Councils of Elders over its Jewish population was abolished.[35]

Under Alexander I and Nicholas I, decrees were put forth requiring a Russian-speaking member of a Jewish community to be named to act as an intermediary between his community and the Imperial government to perform certain civil duties, such as registering births, marriages, and divorces. This position came to be known as the crown rabbi although they were not always rabbis and often were not respected by members of their own communities because their main job qualification was fluency in Russian, and they often had no education in, or knowledge of Jewish law.[36][37][38] The beginning of the 19th century was marked by intensive movement of Jews to Novorossiya, where towns, villages and agricultural colonies rapidly sprang up.

Forcible conscription of Jewish cantonists

 
Cantonist Herzel Yankel Tsam. After 1827, Jewish boys were forcibly conscripted to military service at the age of twelve and placed in cantonist schools.[39][40]
 
Kalonimus Wolf Wissotzky founded Wissotzky Tea in 1849, what would become the largest tea manufacturer in the Russian Empire and the world.[41] In response to the pogroms of the 1880s, he funded the Hovevei Zion movement to encourage immigration to Ottoman Palestine. The family tea company itself was seized and confiscated by the Bolsheviks after 1917.

The 'decree of August 26, 1827' made Jews liable for military service, and allowed their conscription between the ages of twelve and twenty-five. Each year, the Jewish community had to supply four recruits per thousand of the population. However, in practice, Jewish children were often conscripted as young as eight or nine years old.[42] At the age of twelve, they would be placed for their six-year military education in cantonist schools. They were then required to serve in the Imperial Russian army for 25 years after the completion of their studies, often never seeing their families again. Strict quotas were imposed on all communities and the qahals were given the unpleasant task of implementing conscription within the Jewish communities. Since the merchant-guild members, agricultural colonists, factory mechanics, clergy, and all Jews with secondary education were exempt, and the wealthy bribed their way out of having their children conscripted, fewer potential conscripts were available; the adopted policy deeply sharpened internal Jewish social tensions. Seeking to protect the socio-economic and religious integrity of Jewish society, the qahals did their best to include “non-useful Jews” in the draft lists so that the heads of tax-paying middle-class families were predominantly exempt from conscription, whereas single Jews, as well as "heretics" (Haskalah influenced individuals), paupers, outcasts, and orphaned children were drafted. They used their power to suppress protests and intimidate potential informers who sought to expose the arbitrariness of the qahal to the Russian government. In some cases, communal elders had the most threatening informers murdered (such as the Ushitsa case, 1836).

The zoning rule was suspended during the Crimean War, when conscription became annual. During this period the qahals leaders would employ informers and kidnappers (Russian: "ловчики", lovchiki, Yiddish: khappers), as many potential conscripts preferred to run away rather than voluntarily submit. In the case of unfulfilled quotas, younger Jewish boys of eight and even younger were frequently taken. The official Russian policy was to encourage the conversion of Jewish cantonists to the state religion of Orthodox Christianity and Jewish boys were coerced to baptism. As kosher food was unavailable, they were faced with the necessity of abandoning of Jewish dietary laws. Polish Catholic boys were subject to similar pressure to convert and assimilate as the Russian Empire was hostile to Catholicism and Polish nationalism.

Haskalah in the Russian Empire

 
Samuel Polyakov, nicknamed the "most famous railroad king" of the 19th century. He co-founded the World ORT in the 1880s, the largest Jewish education organization in the Russian Empire, perpetuating a vocational education program influenced by the values of Haskalah.

The cultural and habitual isolation of the Jews gradually began eroding. An ever-increasing number of Jewish people adopted Russian customs and the Russian language. Russian education was spread among the Jewish population. A number of Jewish-Russian periodicals appeared.

Alexander II was known as the "Tsar liberator" for the 1861 abolition of serfdom in Russia. Under his rule Jewish people could not hire Christian servants, could not own land, and were restricted in travel.[43]

Alexander III was a staunch reactionary and an antisemite[44] (influenced by Pobedonostsev[45]) who strictly adhered to the old doctrine of Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality. His escalation of anti-Jewish policies sought to ignite "popular antisemitism", which portrayed the Jews as "Christ-killers" and the oppressors of the Slavic, Christian victims.

 
Victim of fanaticism. Painting by Mykola Pymonenko, 1899. The painting does not depict a pogrom, but actually documents an event in Ukraine, that the artist read about: a Jewish woman was attacked by members of her community for falling in love with a Christian man. The townspeople are raising sticks and objects, and her parents are shown to the right, denouncing her.

A large-scale wave of anti-Jewish pogroms swept Ukraine in 1881, after Jews were scapegoated for the assassination of Alexander II. In the 1881 outbreak, there were pogroms in 166 Ukrainian towns, thousands of Jewish homes were destroyed, many families reduced to extremes of poverty;[citation needed] large numbers of men, women, and children were injured and some killed. Disorders in the south once again recalled the government attention to the Jewish question. A conference was convened at the Ministry of Interior and on May 15, 1882, so-called Temporary Regulations were introduced that stayed in effect for more than thirty years and came to be known as the May Laws.

The repressive legislation was repeatedly revised. Many historians noted the concurrence of these state-enforced antisemitic policies with waves of pogroms[46] that continued until 1884, with at least tacit government knowledge and in some cases policemen were seen inciting or joining the mob. The systematic policy of discrimination banned Jewish people from rural areas and towns of fewer than ten thousand people, even within the Pale, assuring the slow death of many shtetls. In 1887, the quotas placed on the number of Jews allowed into secondary and higher education were tightened down to 10% within the Pale, 5% outside the Pale, except Moscow and Saint Petersburg, held at 3%, even though the Jewish population was a majority or plurality in many communities. It was possible to evade these restrictions upon secondary education by combining private tuition with examination as an "outside student". Accordingly, within the Pale such outside pupils were almost entirely young Jews. The restrictions placed on education, traditionally highly valued in Jewish communities, resulted in ambition to excel over the peers and increased emigration rates. Special quotas restricted Jews from entering profession of law, limiting number of Jews admitted to the bar.

In 1886, an Edict of Expulsion was enforced on the historic Jewish population of Kiev. Most Jews were expelled from Moscow in 1891 (except few deemed useful) and a newly built synagogue was closed by the city's authorities headed by the Tsar's brother. Tsar Alexander III refused to curtail repressive practices and reportedly noted: "But we must never forget that the Jews have crucified our Master and have shed his precious blood."[47]

In 1892, new measures banned Jewish participation in local elections despite their large numbers in many towns of the Pale. The Town Regulations prohibited Jews from the right to elect or be elected to town Dumas. Only a small number of Jews were allowed to be members of a town Duma, through appointment by special committees.

 
Distribution of Jews in Europe around 1900

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Russian Empire had not only the largest Jewish population in the world, but actually a majority of the world's Jews living within its borders.[48] In 1897, according to Russian census of 1897, the total Jewish population of Russia was 5,189,401 persons of both sexes (4.13% of total population). Of this total, 93.9% lived in the 25 provinces of the Pale of Settlement. The total population of the Pale of Settlement amounted to 42,338,367—of these, 4,805,354 (11.5%) were Jews.

About 450,000 Jewish soldiers served in the Russian Army during World War I,[49] and fought side by side with their Slavic fellows. When hundreds of thousands of refugees from Poland and Lithuania, among them innumerable Jews, fled in terror before enemy invasion, the Pale of Settlement de facto ceased to exist. Most of the education restrictions on the Jews were removed with the appointment of count Pavel Ignatiev as Minister of Education.

Mass emigration

 
Joseph Trumpeldor, the most decorated Jewish soldier in the Imperial Russian Army for his bravery in the Russo-Japanese War, before conducting operations in the Ottoman Empire.

Even though the persecutions provided the impetus for mass emigration, there were other relevant factors that can account for the Jews' migration. After the first years of large emigration from Russia, positive feedback from the emigrants in the U.S. encouraged further emigration. Indeed, more than two million[50] Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920. While a large majority emigrated to the United States, some turned to Zionism. In 1882, members of Bilu and Hovevei Zion made what came to be known the First Aliyah to Palestine, then a part of the Ottoman Empire.

The Tsarist government sporadically encouraged Jewish emigration. In 1890, it approved the establishment of "The Society for the Support of Jewish Farmers and Artisans in Syria and Palestine"[51] (known as the "Odessa Committee" headed by Leon Pinsker) dedicated to practical aspects in establishing agricultural Jewish settlements in Palestine.

Jewish emigration from Russia, 1880–1928[52]
Destination Number
Australia 5,000
Canada 70,000
Europe 240,000
Palestine (modern day Israel) 45,000
South Africa 45,000
South America 111,000
United States 1,749,000

Jewish members of the Duma

In total, there were at least twelve Jewish deputies in the First Duma (1906–1907), falling to three or four in the Second Duma (February 1907 to June 1907), two in the Third Duma (1907–1912) and again three in the fourth, elected in 1912. Converts to Christianity like Mikhail Herzenstein and Ossip Pergament were still considered as Jews by the public (and antisemitic) opinion and are most of the time included in these figures.

At the 1906 elections, the Jewish Labour Bund had made an electoral agreement with the Lithuanian Labourers' Party (Trudoviks), which resulted in the election to the Duma of two (non-Bundist) candidates in the Lithuanian provinces: Dr. Shmaryahu Levin for the Vilnius province and Leon Bramson for the Kaunas province.[53]

Among the other Jewish deputies were Maxim Vinaver, chairman of the League for the Attainment of Equal Rights for the Jewish People in Russia (Folksgrupe) and cofounder of the Constitutional Democratic Party (Kadets), Dr. Nissan Katzenelson (Courland province, Zionist, Kadet), Dr. Moisei Yakovlevich Ostrogorsky (Grodno province), attorney Simon Yakovlevich Rosenbaum (Minsk province, Zionist, Kadet), Mikhail Isaakovich Sheftel (Ekaterinoslav province, Kadet), Dr. Grigory Bruk, Dr. Benyamin Yakubson, Zakhar Frenkel, Solomon Frenkel, Meilakh Chervonenkis.[54] There was also a Crimean Karaim deputy, Salomon Krym.[55]

Three of the Jewish deputies, Bramson, Chervonenkis and Yakubson, joined the Labour faction; nine others joined the Kadet fraction.[54] According to Rufus Learsi, five of them were Zionists, including Dr. Shmaryahu Levin, Dr. Victor Jacobson and Simon Yakovlevich Rosenbaum.[56]

Two of them, Grigori Borisovich Iollos (Poltava province) and Mikhail Herzenstein (b. 1859, d. 1906 in Terijoki), both from the Constitutional Democratic Party, were assassinated by the Black Hundreds antisemite terrorist group. "The Russkoye Znamya declares openly that 'Real Russians' assassinated Herzenstein and Iollos with knowledge of officials, and expresses regret that only two Jews perished in crusade against revolutionaries.[57]

The Second Duma included seven Jewish deputies: Shakho Abramson, Iosif Gessen, Vladimir Matveevich Gessen, Lazar Rabinovich, Yakov Shapiro (all of them Kadets) and Avigdor Mandelberg (Siberia Social Democrat),[58] plus a convert to Christianity, the attorney Ossip Pergament (Odessa).[59]

The two Jewish members of the Third Duma were the Judge Leopold Nikolayevich (or Lazar) Nisselovich (Courland province, Kadet) and Naftali Markovich Friedman (Kaunas province, Kadet). Ossip Pergament was reelected and died before the end of his mandate.[60]

Friedman was the only one reelected to the Fourth Duma in 1912, joined by two new deputies, Meer Bomash, and Dr. Ezekiel Gurevich.[58]

Jews in the revolutionary movement

 
Kampf un kempfer – a Yiddish pamphlet published by the PSR exile branch in London 1904.

Many Jews were prominent in Russian revolutionary parties. The idea of overthrowing the Tsarist regime was attractive to many members of the Jewish intelligentsia because of the oppression of non-Russian nations and non-Orthodox Christians within the Russian Empire. For much the same reason, many non-Russians, notably Latvians or Poles, were disproportionately represented in the party leaderships.

In 1897 General Jewish Labour Bund (The Bund), was formed. Many Jews joined the ranks of two principal revolutionary parties: Socialist-Revolutionary Party and Russian Social Democratic Labour Party—both Bolshevik and Menshevik factions. A notable number of Bolshevik party members were ethnically Jewish, especially in the leadership of the party, and the percentage of Jewish party members among the rival Mensheviks was even higher. Both the founders and leaders of Menshevik faction, Julius Martov and Pavel Axelrod, were Jewish.

Because some of the leading Bolsheviks were Ethnic Jews, and Bolshevism supports a policy of promoting international proletarian revolution—most notably in the case of Leon Trotsky—many enemies of Bolshevism, as well as contemporary antisemites, draw a picture of Communism as a political slur at Jews and accuse Jews of pursuing Bolshevism to benefit Jewish interests, reflected in the terms Jewish Bolshevism or Judeo-Bolshevism.[citation needed] The original atheistic and internationalistic ideology of the Bolsheviks (See proletarian internationalism, bourgeois nationalism) was incompatible with Jewish traditionalism. Bolsheviks such as Trotsky echoed sentiments dismissing Jewish heritage in place of "internationalism".

Soon after seizing power, the Bolsheviks established the Yevsektsiya, the Jewish section of the Communist party in order to destroy the rival Bund and Zionist parties, suppress Judaism and replace traditional Jewish culture with "proletarian culture".[61]

 
Genrikh Grigoryevich Yagoda on police information card from 1912

In March 1919, Vladimir Lenin delivered a speech "On Anti-Jewish Pogroms"[62] on a gramophone disc. Lenin sought to explain the phenomenon of antisemitism in Marxist terms. According to Lenin, antisemitism was an "attempt to divert the hatred of the workers and peasants from the exploiters toward the Jews". Linking antisemitism to class struggle, he argued that it was merely a political technique used by the tsar to exploit religious fanaticism, popularize the despotic, unpopular regime, and divert popular anger toward a scapegoat. The Soviet Union also officially maintained this Marxist-Leninist interpretation under Joseph Stalin, who expounded Lenin's critique of antisemitism. However, this did not prevent the widely publicized repressions of Jewish intellectuals during 1948–1953 when Stalin increasingly associated Jews with "cosmopolitanism" and pro-Americanism.

Jews were prominent in the Russian Constitutional Democrat Party, Russian Social Democratic Party (Mensheviks) and Socialist-Revolutionary Party. The Russian Anarchist movement also included many prominent Jewish revolutionaries. In Ukraine, Makhnovist anarchist leaders also included several Jews.[63]

The attempts of the socialist Bund to be the sole representative of the Jewish worker in Russia had always conflicted with Lenin's idea of a universal coalition of workers of all nationalities. Like some other socialist parties in Russia, the Bund was initially opposed to the Bolsheviks' seizing of power in 1917 and to the dissolution of the Russian Constituent Assembly. Consequently, the Bund suffered repressions in the first months of the Soviet regime.[citation needed] However, the antisemitism of many Whites during the Russian Civil War caused many if not most Bund members to readily join the Bolsheviks, and most of the factions eventually merged with the Communist Party. The movement did split in three; the Bundist identity survived in interwar Poland, while many Bundists joined the Mensheviks.

Dissolution and seizure of Jewish properties and institutions

 
Samara Choral Synagogue in Samara. It was shut down by the Soviet Government in 1929.

In August 1919 Jewish properties, including synagogues, were seized and many Jewish communities were dissolved. The anti-religious laws against all expressions of religion and religious education were imposed upon the Jewish population, just like on other religious groups. Many Rabbis and other religious officials were forced to resign from their posts under the threat of violent persecution. This type of persecution continued on into the 1920s.[64]

In 1921, a large number of Jews opted for Poland, as they were entitled by the peace treaty in Riga to choose the country they preferred. Several hundred thousand joined the already numerous Jewish population of Poland.

The chaotic years of World War I, the February and October Revolutions, and the Civil War were fertile ground for the antisemitism that was endemic to tsarist Russia. During the World War, Jews were often accused of sympathizing with Germany and often persecuted.

Pogroms were unleashed throughout the Russian Civil War, perpetrated by virtually every competing faction, from Polish and Ukrainian nationalists to the Red and White Armies.[65] 31,071 civilian Jews were killed during documented pogroms throughout the former Russian Empire; the number of Jewish orphans exceeded 300,000. A majority of pogroms in Ukraine during 1918–1920 were perpetrated by the Ukrainian nationalists, miscellaneous bands and anti-Communist forces.[66]

Perpetrator Number of pogroms or excesses Number murdered[66]
Hryhoriv's bands 52 3,471
Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic 493 16,706
White army 213 5,235
Miscellaneous bands 307 4,615
Red Army 106 725
Others 33 185
Polish army 32 134
Total 1,236 31,071

Soviet Union

Before World War II

 
Bolshevik revolutionaries Leon Trotsky, Lev Kamenev and Grigory Zinoviev, later executed or assassinated on Stalin's orders

Continuing the policy of the Bolsheviks before the Revolution, Lenin and the Bolshevik Party strongly condemned the pogroms, including official denunciations in 1918 by the Council of People's Commissars. Opposition to the pogroms and to manifestations of Russian antisemitism in this era were complicated by both the official Bolshevik policy of assimilationism towards all national and religious minorities, and concerns about overemphasizing Jewish concerns for fear of exacerbating popular antisemitism, as the White forces were openly identifying the Bolshevik regime with Jews.[67][68][69]

Lenin recorded eight of his speeches on gramophone records in 1919. Only seven of these were later re-recorded and put on sale. The one suppressed in the Nikita Khrushchev era recorded Lenin's feelings on antisemitism:[70]

The Tsarist police, in alliance with the landowners and the capitalists, organized pogroms against the Jews. The landowners and capitalists tried to divert the hatred of the workers and peasants who were tortured by want against the Jews. ... Only the most ignorant and downtrodden people can believe the lies and slander that are spread about the Jews. ... It is not the Jews who are the enemies of the working people. The enemies of the workers are the capitalists of all countries. Among the Jews there are working people, and they form the majority. They are our brothers, who, like us, are oppressed by capital; they are our comrades in the struggle for socialism. Among the Jews there are kulaks, exploiters and capitalists, just as there are among the Russians, and among people of all nations... Rich Jews, like rich Russians, and the rich in all countries, are in alliance to oppress, crush, rob and disunite the workers... Shame on accursed Tsarism, which tortured and persecuted the Jews. Shame on those who foment hatred towards the Jews, who foment hatred towards other nations.[71]

Despite the Soviet state's official opposition to antisemitism, the spring of 1918 saw widespread anti-Jewish violence perpetrated by members of the Red Guard in the former Pale of Settlement. In February 1918, as Russian forces advanced on the capital of Petrograd, the Soviet government signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which stipulated that Russia would withdraw from World War I and cede large swaths of territory in eastern Russia to the German Empire. Even after the signing of the treaty, however, the Germans continued to advance and seize territory, as the Soviets had no choice but to retreat across the Ukraine. At this point in the war, the Red Guard comprised mostly untrained workers and peasants with no overarching command structure, leaving the state with virtually no control over the volunteer forces.[72] Between March and May 1918, various Red Guard squadrons, embittered by their military defeat and animated by revolutionary sentiment, attacked Jews in cities and towns across the Chernihiv region of the Ukraine. One of the most brutal instances of this violence occurred in the city of Novhorod-Siverskyi, where it was reported that 88 Jews were killed and 11 injured in a pogrom incited by Red Guard soldiers.[73] Similarly, after the successful capture of the city of Hlukhiv, the Red Guard murdered at least 100 Jews, whom the soldiers accused of being 'exploiters of the proletariat.'[74] In all, Jewish activist Nahum Gergel estimated that the Red forces were responsible for about 8.6% of pogroms during the years 1918-1922, while Ukrainian and White Army forces were responsible for 40% and 17.2%, respectively.[75]

 
Soviet politician and administrator Lazar Kaganovich in 1936

Lenin was supported by the Labor Zionist (Poale Zion) movement, then under the leadership of Marxist theorist Ber Borochov, which was fighting for the creation of a Jewish workers' state in Palestine and also participated in the October Revolution (and in the Soviet political scene afterwards until being banned by Stalin in 1928). While Lenin remained opposed to outward forms of antisemitism (and all forms of racism), allowing Jewish people to rise to the highest offices in both party and state, certain historians such as Dmitri Volkogonov argue that the record of his government in this regard was highly uneven. A former official Soviet historian (turned staunch anti-communist), Volkogonov claims that Lenin was aware of pogroms carried out by units of the Red Army during the war with Poland, particularly those carried out by Semyon Budyonny's troops,[76] though the whole issue was effectively ignored. Volkogonov writes that "While condemning anti-Semitism in general, Lenin was unable to analyze, let alone eradicate, its prevalence in Soviet society".[77] Likewise, the hostility of the Soviet regime towards all religion made no exception for Judaism, and the 1921 campaign against religion saw the seizure of many synagogues (whether this should be regarded as antisemitism is a matter of definition—since Orthodox churches received the same treatment). In any event, there was still a fair degree of tolerance for Jewish religious practice in the 1920s: in the Belarusian capital Minsk, for example, of the 657 synagogues existing in 1917, 547 were still functioning in 1930.[78]

 
A Jewish kolkhoz. To promote Jewish agriculture, in 1925 the CPSU set up a government committee (the Komzet) and a public society (the OZET).

According to Zvi Gitelman: "Never before in Russian history—and never subsequently has a government made such an effort to uproot and stamp out antisemitism."[79]

According to the census of 1926, the total number of Jews in the USSR was 2,672,398—of whom 59% lived in Ukrainian SSR, 15.2% in Byelorussian SSR, 22% in Russian SFSR and 3.8% in other Soviet republics.

Russian Jews were long considered to be a non-native Semitic ethnic group among the Slavic Russians, and such categorization was solidified when ethnic minorities in the Soviet Union were categorized according to ethnicity (национальность). In his 1913 theoretical work Marxism and the National Question, Stalin described Jews as "not a living and active nation, but something mystical, intangible and supernatural. For, I repeat, what sort of nation, for instance, is a Jewish nation which consists of Georgian, Daghestanian, Russian, American and other Jews, the members of which do not understand each other (since they speak different languages), inhabit different parts of the globe, will never see each other, and will never act together, whether in time of peace or in time of war?!"[80] According to Stalin, who became the People's Commissar for Nationalities Affairs after the revolution, to qualify as a nation, a minority was required to have a culture, a language, and a homeland.

 
Prosecutor General Vyshinsky (centre), reading the 1937 indictment against Karl Radek during the 2nd Moscow Trial.

Yiddish, rather than Hebrew, would be the national language, and proletarian socialist literature and arts would replace Judaism as the quintessence of culture. The use of Yiddish was strongly encouraged in the 1920s in areas of the USSR with substantial Jewish populations, especially in the Ukrainian and Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republics. Yiddish was one of the Belarusian SSR's four official languages, alongside Belarusian, Russian, and Polish. The equality of the official languages was taken seriously. A visitor arriving at main train station of the Belarusian capital Minsk saw the city's name written in all four languages above the main station entrance. Yiddish was a language of newspapers, magazines, book publishing, theater, radio, film, the post office, official correspondence, election materials, and even a Central Jewish Court. Yiddish writers like Sholem Aleichem and Mendele Mocher Seforim were celebrated in the 1920s as Soviet Jewish heroes.

Minsk had a public, state-supported Yiddish-language school system, extending from kindergarten to the Yiddish-language section of the Belarusian State University. Although Jewish students tended to switch to studying in Russian as they moved on to secondary and higher education, 55.3 percent of the city's Jewish primary school students attended Yiddish-language schools in 1927.[81] At its peak, the Soviet Yiddish-language school system had 160,000 students in it.[82] Such was the prestige of Minsk's Yiddish scholarship that researchers trained in Warsaw and Berlin applied for faculty positions at the university. All this leads historian Elissa Bemporad to conclude that this “very ordinary Jewish city” was in the 1920s “one of the world capitals of Yiddish language and culture."[83]

Jews also played a disproportionate role in Belarusian politics through the Bolshevik Party's Yiddish-language branch, the Yevsekstsia. Because there were few Jewish Bolsheviks before 1917 (with a few prominent exceptions like Zinoviev and Kamenev), the Yevsekstia's leaders in the 1920s were largely former Bundists, who pursued as Bolsheviks their campaign for secular Jewish education and culture. Although for example only a bit over 40 percent of Minsk's population was Jewish at the time, 19 of its 25 Communist Party cell secretaries were Jewish in 1924.[84] Jewish predominance in the party cells was such that several cell meetings were held in Yiddish. In fact, Yiddish was spoken at citywide party meetings in Minsk into the late 1930s.

 
Jewish Autonomous Oblast on the map of Russia

To offset the growing Jewish national and religious aspirations of Zionism and to successfully categorize Soviet Jews under Stalin's definition of nationality, an alternative to the Land of Israel was established with the help of Komzet and OZET in 1928. The Jewish Autonomous Oblast with its center in Birobidzhan in the Russian Far East was to become a "Soviet Zion".[85] Despite a massive domestic and international state propaganda campaign, however, the Jewish population in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast never reached 30% (in 2003 it was only about 1.2%[86]). The experiment ground to a halt in the mid-1930s, during Stalin's first campaign of purges.

In fact the Bolshevik Party's Yiddish-language Yevsekstia was dissolved in 1930, as part of the regime's overall turn away from encouraging minority languages and cultures and towards Russification. Many Jewish leaders, especially those with Bundist backgrounds, were arrested and executed in the purges later in the 1930s,[citation needed] and Yiddish schools were shut down. The Belasusian SSR shut down its entire network of Yiddish-language schools in 1938.

In his January 12, 1931, letter "Antisemitism: Reply to an Inquiry of the Jewish News Agency in the United States" (published domestically by Pravda in 1936), Stalin officially condemned antisemitism:

In answer to your inquiry: National and racial chauvinism is a vestige of the misanthropic customs characteristic of the period of cannibalism. Antisemitism, as an extreme form of racial chauvinism, is the most dangerous vestige of cannibalism.

Antisemitism is of advantage to the exploiters as a lightning conductor that deflects the blows aimed by the working people at capitalism. Antisemitism is dangerous for the working people as being a false path that leads them off the right road and lands them in the jungle. Hence Communists, as consistent internationalists, cannot but be irreconcilable, sworn enemies of antisemitism.

In the U.S.S.R. antisemitism is punishable with the utmost severity of the law as a phenomenon deeply hostile to the Soviet system. Under U.S.S.R. law active antisemites are liable to the death penalty.[87]

 
1938 NKVD arrest photo of the poet Osip Mandelstam, who died in a Gulag.

The Molotov–Ribbentrop pact—the 1939 non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany—created further suspicion regarding the Soviet Union's position toward Jews. According to the pact, Poland, the nation with the world's largest Jewish population, was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union in September 1939. While the pact had no basis in ideological sympathy (as evidenced by Nazi propaganda about "Jewish Bolshevism"), Germany's occupation of Western Poland was a disaster for Eastern European Jews. Evidence suggests that some, at least, of the Jews in the eastern Soviet zone of occupation welcomed the Russians as having a more liberated policy towards their civil rights than the preceding antisemitic Polish regime.[88] Jews in areas annexed by the Soviet Union were deported eastward in great waves;[citation needed] as these areas would soon be invaded by Nazi Germany, this forced migration, deplored by many of its victims, paradoxically also saved the lives of several hundred thousand Jewish deportees.

 
The NKVD photo of writer Isaac Babel made after his arrest during Stalin's Great Purge.

Jews who escaped the purges include Lazar Kaganovich, who came to Stalin's attention in the 1920s as a successful bureaucrat in Tashkent and participated in the purges of the 1930s. Kaganovich's loyalty endured even after Stalin's death, when he and Molotov were expelled from the party ranks in 1957 due to their opposition to destalinization.

Beyond longstanding controversies, ranging from the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact to anti-Zionism, the Soviet Union did grant official "equality of all citizens regardless of status, sex, race, religion, and nationality". The years before the Holocaust were an era of rapid change for Soviet Jews, leaving behind the dreadful poverty of the Pale of Settlement. Forty percent of the population in the former Pale left for large cities within the USSR.

Emphasis on education and movement from countryside shtetls to newly industrialized cities allowed many Soviet Jews to enjoy overall advances under Stalin and to become one of the most educated population groups in the world.

 
Yakov Kreizer, field commander of the Red Army.

Because of Stalinist emphasis on its urban population, interwar migration inadvertently rescued countless Soviet Jews; Nazi Germany penetrated the entire former Jewish Pale—but were kilometers short of Leningrad and Moscow. The migration of many Jews farther East from the Jewish Pale, which would become occupied by Nazi Germany, saved at least 40 percent of the Pale's original Jewish population.

By 1941, it was estimated that the Soviet Union was home to 4.855 million Jews, around 30% of all Jews worldwide. However, the majority of these were residents of rural western Belarus and Ukraine—populations that suffered greatly due to the German occupation and the Holocaust. Only around 800,000 Jews lived outside the occupied territory, and 1,200,000 to 1,400,000 Jews were eventually evacuated eastwards.[89] Of the three million left in occupied areas, the vast majority is thought to have perished in German extermination camps.

World War II and the Holocaust

 
Lieutenant General Semyon Krivoshein, one of the Red Army's most influential tank commanders.
 
Artisans' Synagogue, in Rostov-on-Don. Burned down in 1942, during the Great Patriotic War
 
Soviet writer and journalist Ilya Ehrenburg with Soviet soldiers in 1942

Over two million Soviet Jews are believed to have died during the Holocaust, second only to the number of Polish Jews who fell victim to Hitler (see The Holocaust in Poland). Among some of the larger massacres which were committed in 1941 were: 33,771 Jews of Kiev shot in ditches at Babi Yar; 100,000 Jews and Poles of Vilnius killed in the forests of Ponary, 20,000 Jews killed in Kharkiv at Drobnitzky Yar, 36,000 Jews machine-gunned in Odessa, 25,000 Jews of Riga killed in the woods at Rumbula, and 10,000 Jews slaughtered in Simferopol in the Crimea.[citation needed] Although mass shootings continued through 1942, most notably 16,000 Jews shot at Pinsk, Jews were increasingly shipped to concentration camps in German Nazi-occupied Poland.

Local residents of German-occupied areas, especially Ukrainians, Lithuanians, and Latvians, sometimes played key roles in the genocide of other Latvians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Slavs, Romani, homosexuals and Jews alike. Under the Nazi occupation, some members of the Ukrainian and Latvian Nazi police carried out deportations in the Warsaw Ghetto, and Lithuanians marched Jews to their death at Ponary. Even as some assisted the Germans, a significant number of individuals in the territories under German control also helped Jews escape death (see Righteous Among the Nations). In Latvia, particularly, the number of Nazi-collaborators was only slightly more than that of Jewish saviours. It is estimated that up to 1.4 million Jews fought in Allied armies; 40% of them in the Red Army.[90] In total, at least 142,500 Soviet soldiers of Jewish nationality lost their lives fighting against the German invaders and their allies[91]

 
1946. The official response to an inquiry by JAC about the military decorations of Jews during the war (1.8% of the total number). Some antisemites attempted to accuse Jews of lack of patriotism and of hiding from military service.

The typical Soviet policy regarding the Holocaust was to present it as atrocities against Soviet citizens, not emphasizing the genocide of the Jews. For example, after the liberation of Kiev from the Nazi occupation, the Extraordinary State Commission (Чрезвычайная Государственная Комиссия; Chrezv'chaynaya Gosudarstvennaya Komissiya) was set out to investigate Nazi crimes. The description of the Babi Yar massacre was officially censored as follows:[92]

Draft report (December 25, 1943) Censored version (February 1944)

"The Hitlerist bandits committed brutal mass extermination of the Jewish population. They announced that on September 29, 1941, all Jews were required to arrive to the corner of Melnikov and Dokterev streets and bring their documents, money and valuables. The butchers herded them to Babi Yar, took away their valuables, then shot them."

"The Hitlerist bandits herded thousands of Soviet citizens to the corner of Melnikov and Dokterev streets. The butchers marched them to Babi Yar, took away their valuables, then shot them."

Stalinist antisemitic campaigns

The revival of Jewish identity after the war, stimulated by the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, was cautiously welcomed by Stalin as a means to put pressure on Western imperialism in the Middle East, but when it became evident that many Soviet Jews expected the revival of Zionism to enhance their own aspirations for separate cultural and religious development in the Soviet Union, a wave of repression was unleashed.[93]

In January 1948 Solomon Mikhoels, a popular actor-director of the Moscow State Jewish Theater and the chairman of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee, was killed in a suspicious car accident.[94] Mass arrests of prominent Jewish intellectuals and suppression of Jewish culture followed under the banners of campaign against "rootless cosmopolitans" and anti-Zionism. On August 12, 1952, in the event known as the Night of the Murdered Poets, thirteen of the most prominent Yiddish writers, poets, actors and other intellectuals were executed on the orders of Joseph Stalin, among them Peretz Markish, Leib Kvitko, David Hofstein, Itzik Feffer and David Bergelson.[95] In the 1955 United Nations General Assembly's session a high Soviet official still denied the "rumors" about their disappearance.

The Doctors' Plot allegation in 1953 was a deliberately antisemitic policy: Stalin targeted "corrupt Jewish bourgeois nationalists", eschewing the usual code words like "rootless cosmopolitans" or "cosmopolitans". Stalin died, however, before this next wave of arrests and executions could be launched in earnest. A number of historians claim that the Doctors' Plot was intended as the opening of a campaign that would have resulted in the mass deportation of Soviet Jews had Stalin not died on March 5, 1953. Days after Stalin's death the plot was declared a hoax by the Soviet government.

These cases may have reflected Stalin's paranoia, rather than state ideology—a distinction that made no practical difference as long as Stalin was alive, but which became salient on his death.

In April 1956, the Warsaw Yiddish language Jewish newspaper Folkshtimme published sensational long lists of Soviet Jews who had perished before and after the Holocaust. The world press began demanding answers from Soviet leaders, as well as inquiring about the current condition of the Jewish education system and culture. The same autumn, a group of leading Jewish world figures publicly requested the heads of Soviet state to clarify the situation. Since no cohesive answer was received, their concern was only heightened. The fate of Soviet Jews emerged as a major human rights issue in the West.

The Soviet Union and Zionism

 
Itzik Feffer (left), Albert Einstein and Solomon Mikhoels in the United States in 1943. Feffer was executed on the Night of the Murdered Poets and rehabilitated posthumously in 1955, after Stalin's death.

Marxist anti-nationalism[vague] and anti-clericalism had a mixed effect on Soviet Jews. Jews were the immediate benefactors, but they were also long-term victims, of the Marxist notion that any manifestation of nationalism is "socially retrogressive". On one hand, Jews were liberated from the religious persecution of the Tsarist years of "Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality". On the other, this notion was threatening to Jewish cultural institutions, the Bund, Jewish autonomy, Judaism and Zionism.

Political Zionism was officially stamped out as a form of bourgeois nationalism during the entire history of the Soviet Union. Although Leninism emphasizes the belief in "self-determination", this fact did not make the Soviet state more accepting of Zionism. Leninism defines self-determination by territory or culture, rather than by religion, which allowed Soviet minorities to have separate oblasts, autonomous regions, or republics, which were nonetheless symbolic until its later years. Jews, however, did not fit such a theoretical model; Jews in the Diaspora did not even have an agricultural base, as Stalin often asserted when he attempted to deny the existence of a Jewish nation, and they certainly did not have a territorial unit. Marxist notions even denied the existence of a Jewish identity beyond the existence of a religion and caste; Marx defined Jews as a "chimerical nation".

 
A giant menorah dominating the main square in Birobidzhan, in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, founded in the Russian Far East in 1936

Lenin, who claimed to be deeply committed to egalitarian ideals and the universality of all humanity, rejected Zionism as a reactionary movement, "bourgeois nationalism", "socially retrogressive", and a backward force that deprecates class divisions among Jews. Moreover, Zionism entailed contact between Soviet citizens and westerners, which was dangerous in a closed society. Soviet authorities were likewise fearful of any mass-movement which was independent of the monopolistic Communist Party, and not tied to the state or the ideology of Marxism-Leninism.

Without changing his official anti-Zionist stance, from late 1944 until 1948 Joseph Stalin adopted a de facto pro-Zionist foreign policy, apparently believing that the new country would be socialist and hasten the decline of British influence in the Middle East.[96]

In a May 14, 1947 speech during the UN Partition Plan debate, published in Izvestiya two days later, the Soviet ambassador Andrei Gromyko announced:

As we know, the aspirations of a considerable part of the Jewish people are linked with the problem of Palestine and of its future administration. This fact scarcely requires proof... During the last war, the Jewish people underwent exceptional sorrow and suffering...

The United Nations cannot and must not regard this situation with indifference, since this would be incompatible with the high principles proclaimed in its Charter...

The fact that no Western European State has been able to ensure the defence of the elementary rights of the Jewish people and to safeguard it against the violence of the fascist executioners explains the aspirations of the Jews to establish their own State. It would be unjust not to take this into consideration and to deny the right of the Jewish people to realize this aspiration.[97]

Soviet approval in the United Nations Security Council was critical to the UN partitioning of the British Mandate of Palestine, which led to the founding of the State of Israel. Three days after Israel declared its independence, the Soviet Union legally recognized it de jure. In addition, the USSR allowed Czechoslovakia to continue supplying arms to the Jewish forces during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, even though this conflict took place after the Soviet-supported Czechoslovak coup d'état of 1948. At the time, the U.S. maintained an arms embargo on both sides in the conflict. See Arms shipments from Czechoslovakia to Israel 1947–1949.

By the end of 1957 the USSR switched sides in the Arab–Israeli conflict and throughout the course of the Cold War unequivocally supported various Arab regimes against Israel. The official position of the Soviet Union and its satellite states and agencies was that Zionism was a tool used by the Jews and Americans for "racist imperialism".

 
A Soviet birth certificate from 1972 indicating the person's parents' ethnicity as "Jew".

As Israel was emerging as a close Western ally, the specter of Zionism raised fears of internal dissent and opposition. During the later parts of the Cold War, Soviet Jews were suspected of being possible traitors, Western sympathisers, or a security liability. The Communist leadership closed down various Jewish organizations and declared Zionism an ideological enemy. Synagogues were often placed under police surveillance, both openly and through the use of informers.[citation needed]

As a result of the persecution, both state-sponsored and unofficial, antisemitism was ingrained in the society and remained for years: ordinary Soviet Jews often suffered hardships, epitomized by often not being allowed to enlist in universities, work in certain professions, or participate in government. However, it should be mentioned that this was not always the case and this kind of persecution varied depending on the region. Still many Jews felt compelled to hide their identities by changing their names.

The word "Jew" was also avoided in the media when criticising undertakings by Israel, which the Soviets often accused of racism, chauvinism etc. Instead of Jew, the word Israeli was used almost exclusively, so as to paint its harsh criticism not as antisemitism but anti-Zionism. More controversially, the Soviet media, when depicting political events, sometimes used the term 'fascism' to characterise Israeli nationalism (e.g. calling Jabotinsky a 'fascist', and claiming 'new fascist organisations were emerging in Israel in the 1970s' etc.).

1967–1985

 
In a 1965 letter in the New York Times Nobel Physics laureate Lev Landau (above) and Evsei Liberman said that as Soviet Jews they opposed the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry.[98]

According to the census of 1959 the Jewish population of the city Leningrad numbered 169,000 and the Great Choral synagogue was open in the 1960s with some 1,200 seats. The rabbi was Avraham Lubanov. This synagogue has never been closed. The great majority of the Leningrad Jews were not religious, but several thousand used to visit the synagogue on great holidays, mostly on Simchat Torah.[99]

A mass emigration was politically undesirable for the Soviet regime. As increasing numbers of Soviet Jews applied to emigrate to Israel in the period following the 1967 Six-Day War, many were formally refused permission to leave. A typical excuse given by the OVIR (ОВиР), the MVD department responsible for the provisioning of exit visas, was that persons who had been given access at some point in their careers to information vital to Soviet national security could not be allowed to leave the country.

After the Dymshits–Kuznetsov hijacking affair in 1970 and the crackdown that followed, strong international condemnations caused the Soviet authorities to increase the emigration quota. From 1960 to 1970, only 4,000 people left the USSR; in the following decade, the number rose to 250,000.[100]

In 1972, the USSR imposed the so-called "diploma tax" on would-be emigrants who received higher education in the USSR.[101] In some cases, the fee was as high as twenty annual salaries. This measure was possibly designed to combat the brain drain caused by the growing emigration of Soviet Jews and other members of the intelligentsia to the West. Although Jews now made up less than 1% of the population, some surveys have suggested that around one-third of the emigrating Jews had achieved some form of higher education. Furthermore, Jews holding positions requiring specialized training tended to be highly concentrated in a small set of specialties, including medicine, mathematics, biology and music.[102] Following international protests, the Kremlin soon revoked the tax, but continued to sporadically impose various limitations. Besides, an unofficial Jewish quota was introduced in the leading institutions of higher education by subjecting Jewish applicants to harsher entrance examinations.[103][104][105][106]

At first almost all of those who managed to get exit visas to Israel actually made aliyah, but after the mid-1970s, most of those allowed to leave for Israel actually chose other destinations, most notably the United States.

Glasnost and end of the USSR

In 1989 a record 71,000 Soviet Jews were granted exodus from the USSR, of whom only 12,117 immigrated to Israel. At first, American policy treated Soviet Jews as refugees and allowed unlimited numbers to emigrate, but this policy eventually came to an end. As a result, more Jews began moving to Israel, as it was the only country willing to take them unconditionally.

In the 1980s, the liberal government of Mikhail Gorbachev allowed unlimited Jewish emigration, and the Soviet Union itself collapsed in 1991. As a result, a mass emigration of Jews from the former Soviet Union took place. Since the 1970s, over 1.1 million Russians of Jewish origin immigrated to Israel, of whom 100,000 emigrated to third countries such as the United States and Canada soon afterward and 240,000 were not considered Jewish under Halakha, but were eligible under the Law of Return due to Jewish ancestry or marriage. Since the adoption of the Jackson–Vanik amendment, over 600,000 Soviet Jews have emigrated.

Modern-day Russia

 
Tomsk Choral Synagogue, the oldest synagogue in Siberia
 
The Grand Choral Synagogue of Saint Petersburg, among the largest synagogues in Europe and the world.
 
President Putin lighting a Hannukah Menorah with Russia's Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar. Judaism is officially designated as one of Russia's four state-religions.[107]
 
Saint-Petersburg Mathematician Grigory Perelman
 
Arkady Rotenberg, a billionaire businessman and co-owner of Stroygazmontazh. He is considered a close confidant of Vladimir Putin.
 
Russian opposition politician Yevgeny Roizman, who served as the Mayor of Yekaterinburg from 2013 to 2018.

Judaism today is officially designated as one of Russia's four "traditional religions", alongside Orthodox Christianity, Islam and Buddhism.[107] However, the Jewish community continues to decrease rapidly, going from 232,267 people in the 2002 census to 83,896 in 2021, not counting 500 Crimean Karaites, of which 28,119 lived in Moscow and 5,111 lived in the surrounding Moscow Oblast for a total of 33,230, or 39.61% of the entire Russian Jewish population. A further 9,215 lived in Saint-Petersburg with 851 in the surrounding Leningrad Oblast for a total of 10,066, or 12.00% of the entire Russian Jewish population; thus, Russia's two largest cities and surrounding areas hosted 51.61% of the total Russian Jewish population.

The third most populous community was Crimea, which had a population of 2,522 (of which 864 Krymchaks) in the Autonomous Republic in addition to 517 (including 35 Krymchaks) in Sevastopol, for a total of 3,039 (of which 29.58% Krymchaks), not counting 215 Crimean Karaites. This amounts to 3.62% of the total Russian Jewish population.

After Crimea, the most numerically significant populations were Sverdlovsk with 2,354 (2.81%) and Samara, with 2,266 (2.70%), followed by Tatarstan with 1,792 (2.14%), Rostov Oblast with 1,690 (2.01%), Chelyabinsk with 1,677 (2.00%), Krasnodar Krai with 1,620 (1.93%), Stavropol with 1,614 (1.92%), Nizhny Novgorod with 1,473 (1.76%), Bashkortostan with 1,209 (1.44%), Saratov with 1,151 (1.37%) and Novosibirsk with 1,150 (1.37%). The remaining 20,565 (24.52%) of Russian Jews lived in regions with communities numbering fewer than 1,000 Jews.

Despite being designated as a Jewish oblast, the Jewish Autonomous Oblast has only 837 self-identifying Jews, or 0.56% of the total population of the Autonomous Oblast. This is down 64.03% from the 2,327 recorded in the 2002 census, or 1.22% of the Oblast's population at the time.

As of the 2021 census, most Russian Jews are Ashkenazi (82,644 of the 83,896 total, or 98.51%). The second largest community are the Krymchaks, who numbered 954, or 1.14% of the Jewish population. There were 266 Mountain Jews (0.32%) and only remnants of the formerly significant Bukharan and Georgian communities, who numbered 18 (0.02%) and 14 (0.02%) respectively. In addition to this, there were 500 Crimean Karaites, who have historically not identified as Jews.

Most Crimean Karaites lived in Crimea (215, or 43.00%) or Moscow (60); most Krymchaks lived in Crimea (864, or 90.57% of the total) or Sebastopol (35, or 3.68%) meaning 899, or 94.23% of the Russian Krymchak population, still lives on the Crimean peninsula, largely rurally. The Crimean Karaite population in Crimea has declined by well over 50% since the Ukrainian census of 2001. Conversely, most Juhurim have left the Caucasus region, and the largest single community still in Russia (84, 31.58%) is found in Moscow. Of the Jewish populations remaining in the northern Caucasus, most are now Ashkenazi, with only a few being Mountain Jews. There are still 145 Mountain Jews scattered throughout the northern Caucasus, of which 60 are in Dagestan (amounting to 6.49% of the republic's Jewish population), 47 are in Kabardino-Balkaria (6.02%), 29 are in Stavropol (1.80%), 6 are in Krasnodar (0.37%) and 3 are in Adygea (2.24%). There are no Mountain Jews remaining in Chechnya, Ingushetia, North Ossetia-Alania or Karachay-Cherkessia.

Apart from the Krymchaks, all Jewish communities were heavily urbanised - 100% of Bukharan and Georgian Jew, 95.39% of Ashkenazim, 94.74% of Mountain Jews and 91.00% of Crimean Karaites lived in urban areas, whereas only 34.91% of Krymchaks did.

Most Russian Jews are secular and identify themselves as Jews via ethnicity rather than religion, although interest about Jewish identity as well as practice of Jewish tradition amongst Russian Jews is growing.[citation needed] The Lubavitcher Jewish Movement has been active in this sector, setting up synagogues and Jewish kindergartens in Russian cities with Jewish populations. In addition, most Russian Jews have relatives who live in Israel.

There are several major Jewish organizations in the territories of the former USSR. The central Jewish organization is the Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS under the leadership of Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar.[108]

A linguistic distinction remains to this day in the Russian language where there are two distinct terms that correspond to the word Jew in English. The word еврей ("yevrey" – Hebrew) typically denotes a Jewish ethnicity, as "Hebrew" did in English up until the early 20th century. The word иудей ("iudey" – Judean, etymologically related to the English Jew) is reserved for denoting a follower of the Jewish religion, whether he or she is ethnically Jewish or ethnically Gentile; this term has largely fallen out of use in favor of the equivalent term иудаист ("iudaist"-Judaist). For example, according to a 2012 Russian survey, евреи account for only 32.2% of иудаисты in Russia, with nearly half (49.8%) being Ethnic Russians (русские),.[109] An ethnic slur, жид (borrowed from the Polish Żyd, Jew), also remains in widespread use in Russia.

Antisemitism is one of the most common expressions of xenophobia in post-Soviet Russia, even among some groups of politicians.[110] Despite stipulations against fomenting hatred based on ethnic or religious grounds (Article 282 of Russian Federation Penal Code),[111] In 2002, the number of anti-Semitic neo-Nazi groups in the republics of the former Soviet Union, led Pravda to declare in 2002 that "Anti-Semitism is booming in Russia".[112] In January 2005, a group of 15 Duma members demanded that Judaism and Jewish organizations be banned from Russia.[113] In 2005, 500 prominent Russians, including some 20 members of the nationalist Rodina party, demanded that the state prosecutor investigate ancient Jewish texts as "anti-Russian" and ban Judaism. An investigation was in fact launched, but halted after an international outcry.[114][115]

Overall, in recent years, particularly since the early 2000s, levels of anti-semitism in Russia have been reportedly low, and steadily decreasing.[116][117] In 2019, Ilya Yablogov wrote that many Russians were keen on antisemitic conspiracy theories in 1990s but it declined after 2000 and many high-ranking officials were forced to apologize for the antisemitic behavior.[118]

In Russia, both historical and contemporary antisemitic materials are frequently published. For example, a set (called Library of a Russian Patriot) consisting of twenty five antisemitic titles was recently published, including Mein Kampf translated to Russian (2002), which although was banned in 2010,[119] The Myth of Holocaust by Jürgen Graf, a title by Douglas Reed, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and others.

Antisemitic incidents are mostly conducted by extremist, nationalist, and Islamist groups. Most of the antisemitic incidents are against Jewish cemeteries and building (community centers and synagogues) such as the assault against the Jewish community's center in Perm in March 2013[120] and the attack on Jewish nursery school in Volgograd in August 2013.[121] Nevertheless, there were several violent attacks against Jews in Moscow in 2006 when a neo-Nazi stabbed 9 people at the Bolshaya Bronnaya Synagogue,[122] the failed bomb attack on the same synagogue in 1999.[123]

Attacks against Jews made by extremist Islamic groups are rare in Russia although there has been increase in the scope of the attacks mainly in Muslim populated areas. On July 25, 2013, the rabbi of Derbent was attacked and badly injured by an unknown person near his home, most likely by a terrorist. The incident sparked concerns among the local Jews of further acts against the Jewish community.[124]

After the passage of some anti-gay laws in Russia in 2013 and the incident with the "Pussy-riot" band in 2012 causing a growing criticism on the subject inside and outside Russia a number of verbal anti-Semitic attacks were made against Russian gay activists by extremist activists and anti-Semitic writers such as Israel Shamir who viewed the "Pussy-riot" incident as the war of Judaism on the Christian Orthodox church.[125][126][127]

Today, the Jewish population of Russia is shrinking due to small family sizes, and high rates of assimilation and intermarriage. This shrinkage has been slowed by some Russian-Jewish emigrants having returned from abroad, especially from Germany. The great majority of up to 90% of children born to a Jewish parent are the offspring of mixed marriages, and most Jews have only one or two children.[128]

The EuroStars young adults program provides Jewish learning and social activities in 32 cities across Russia.[129][130][131] Some have described a 'renaissance' in the Jewish community inside Russia since the beginning of the 21st century.[10]

Historical demographics

Demographic data for Russian Empire, Soviet Union and Post-Soviet states Jews
Year Jewish population (including Tats) Notes
1914 More than 5,250,000 Russian Empire
1926[132] 2,672,499 First All-Union Census of the Soviet Union

A result of border change (secession of Poland and union of Bessarabia with Romania), emigration and assimilation.

1939[133] 3,028,538 A result of natural growth, emigration, assimilation and repressions
Early 1941 5,400,000 A result of the annexation of Western Ukraine and Belarus, Baltic republics, and inflow of Jewish refugees from Poland
1959 2,279,277 See the Holocaust and immigration to Israel.
1970 2,166,026 A result of natural population decline (death rates being greater than birth rates), emigration, and assimilation (such as intermarriage)
1979 1,830,317 Decline for the same reason as for 1970
1989 1,479,732 Soviet Census. Final census in the entire Soviet Union. Decline for the same reason as for 1970.
2002 233,439 A result of border changes (namely the fall of Soviet Union, with only Russia considered in the 2002 census rather than the entire USSR) mass emigration, natural population decline, and assimilation.
2010 159,348 Further mass emigration, natural population decline and assimilation.
2021 83,896 Decline for the same reason as 2010. However, this census included Crimea, which including Sevastopol had 3,039 Jews; this means the population increased in one respect due to border changes. The population as compared to 2010 was thus only 80,857, a drop of around 50%.
Jewish population in each SSR and former SSR by year (using 1989 SSR borders)[134][a]
SSR 1897 1926 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 1999-2001 2009-2011 2019-2022
Russian SFSR/Russia 250,000[135] 539,037 891,147 880,443 816,668 713,399 570,467 233,439 159,348 83,896
Ukrainian SSR/Ukraine 2,680,000[136] 2,720,000[137] 2,700,000[138][139][c] 840,446 777,406 634,420 487,555 106,600 71,500 45,000[140]
Byelorussian SSR/Belarus 690,000[141][c] 150,090 148,027 135,539 112,031 24,300 12,926 13,705[142]
Uzbek SSR/Uzbekistan 37,896 50,676 94,488 103,058 100,067 95,104 40,000 15,000 9,865[143]
Azerbaijan SSR/Azerbaijan 59,768 41,245 46,091 49,057 44,345 41,072 8,916 9,084[144] 9,500
Latvian SSR/Latvia 95,675[145][b] 95,600[146] 36,604 36,686 28,338 22,925 9,600 6,454 8,094[147]
Kazakh SSR/Kazakhstan 3,548 19,240 28,085 27,676 23,601 20,104 6,823 3,578[148] 2,500[140]
Lithuanian SSR/Lithuania 263,000[146] 24,683 23,566 14,703 12,398 4,007 3,050 2,256[149][e]
Estonian SSR/Estonia 4,309[146] 5,439 5,290 4,993 4,653 2,003 1,738 1,852[150]
Moldavian SSR/Moldova 250,000[151] 95,107 98,072 80,124 65,836 5,500 3,628 1,597[152][d]
Georgian SSR/Georgia 30,389 42,300 51,582 55,382 28,298 24,795 2,333 2,000 1,405[153][f]
Kirghiz SSR/Kyrgyzstan 318 1,895 8,607 7,677 6,836 6,005 1,571 604 433[154]
Turkmen SSR/Turkmenistan 2,045 3,037 4,102 3,530 2,866 2,509 1,000[155] 700[156] 200
Armenian SSR/Armenia 335 512 1,042 1,049 962 747 109 127 150
Tajik SSR/Tajikistan 275 5,166 12,435 14,627 14,697 14,580 197 36[157] 25
Soviet Union/Former Soviet Union 5,250,000 2,672,499 3,028,538 2,279,277 2,166,026 1,830,317 1,479,732 460,000 280,678 180,478
Historical Russian Jewish population
YearPop.±%
1897250,000—    
1926539,037+115.6%
1939891,147+65.3%
1959880,443−1.2%
1970816,668−7.2%
1979713,399−12.6%
1989570,467−20.0%
2002233,439−59.1%
2010159,348−31.7%
202183,896−47.4%
Source: [134][158][159][135]
The Jewish population data includes Mountain Jews, Georgian Jews, Bukharan Jews (or Central Asian Jews), Krymchaks (all per the 1959 Soviet census), and Tats.[160]
Jewish population in each SSR and former SSR by year (using 1989 SSR borders) as a percent of the total population[134][a]
SSR % 1926 % 1939 % 1959 % 1970 % 1979 % 1989 % 2002[158] % 2010[159]
Russian SFSR/Russia 0.58% 0.81% 0.75% 0.63% 0.52% 0.39% 0.18% 0.11%
Ukrainian SSR/Ukraine 6.55%[161][c] 2.01% 1.65% 1.28% 0.95% 0.20% 0.16%
Byelorussian SSR/Belarus 6.55%[162][c] 1.86% 1.64% 1.42% 1.10% 0.24% 0.14%[163]
Moldavian SSR/Moldova 3.30% 2.75% 2.03% 1.52% 0.13% 0.11% 0.06%
Estonian SSR/Estonia 0.38%[146] 0.45% 0.39% 0.34% 0.30% 0.14% 0.13%
Latvian SSR/Latvia 5.19%[145][b] 4.79%[146] 1.75% 1.55% 1.13% 0.86% 0.40% 0.31%[164]
Lithuanian SSR/Lithuania 9.13%[146] 0.91% 0.75% 0.43% 0.34% 0.10% 0.10%[165]
Georgian SSR/Georgia 1.15% 1.19% 1.28% 1.18% 0.57% 0.46% 0.10% 0.08%
Armenian SSR/Armenia 0.04% 0.04% 0.06% 0.04% 0.03% 0.02% <0.01% <0.01%
Azerbaijan SSR/Azerbaijan 2.58% 1.29% 1.25% 0.96% 0.74% 0.58% 0.10% 0.10%[144]
Turkmen SSR/Turkmenistan 0.20% 0.24% 0.27% 0.16% 0.10% 0.07% 0.01% <0.01%
Uzbek SSR/Uzbekistan 0.80% 0.81% 1.17% 0.86% 0.65% 0.48% 0.02% 0.02%
Tajik SSR/Tajikistan 0.03% 0.35% 0.63% 0.50% 0.39% 0.29% <0.01% <0.01%
Kirghiz SSR/Kyrgyzstan 0.03% 0.13% 0.42% 0.26% 0.20% 0.14% 0.02% 0.01%
Kazakh SSR/Kazakhstan 0.06% 0.31% 0.30% 0.22% 0.16% 0.12% 0.03% 0.02%
Soviet Union/Former Soviet Union 1.80% 1.80% 1.09% 0.90% 0.70% 0.52% 0.16% 0.10%

a^ The Jewish population data for all of the years includes Mountain Jews, Georgian Jews, Bukharan Jews (or Central Asian Jews), Krymchaks (all per the 1959 Soviet census), and Tats.[166]
b^ The data is from 1925.
c^ The data is from 1941.
d^ The data is from 2014.
e^ Does not include 192 Karaim.

Russian Jewish aliyah and immigration to countries outside Israel

Israel

 
Yuli Edelstein, one of the Soviet Union's most prominent refuseniks, who served as Speaker of the Knesset (Israel's parliament) from 2013 to 2020.
Year TFR
2000 1.544
1999 1.612
1998 1.632
1997 1.723
1996 1.743
1995 1.731
1994 1.756
1993 1.707
1992 1.604
1991 1.398
1990 1.390

In present times, the largest number of Russian Jews are olim (עוֹלים) and sabras. In 2011 Russians were around 15% of Israel's 7.7 million population (including Halakhally non-Jews who constituted about 30% of immigrants from the former Soviet Union).[167] The Aliyah in the 1990s accounts for 85–90% of this population. The population growth rate for Former Soviet Union (FSU)-born olim were among the lowest for any Israeli groups, with a Fertility rate of 1.70 and natural increase of just +0.5% per year.[168] The increase in Jewish birth rate in Israel during the 2000–2007 period was partly due to the increasing birth rate among the FSU olim, who now form 20% of the Jewish population of Israel.[169][170] 96.5% of the enlarged Russian Jewish population in Israel either belong to Judaism or are non-religious, while 3.5% (35,000) belong to other religions (mostly Christianity) and about 10,000 identifying as Messianic Jews separate from Jewish Christians.[171]

The Total Fertility Rate for FSU-born olim in Israel is given in the table below. The TFR increased with time, peaking in 1997, then slightly decreased after that and then again increased after 2000.[168]

In 1999, about 1,037,000 FSU-born olim lived in Israel, of whom about 738,900 made aliyah after 1989.[172][173] The second largest oleh (עוֹלֶה) group (Moroccan Jews) numbered just 1,000,000. From 2000 to 2006, 142,638 FSU-born olim moved to Israel, while 70,000 of them emigrated from Israel to countries like the U.S. and Canada—bringing the total population to 1,150,000 by January 2007.[1] The natural increase was around 0.3% in the late 1990s. For example, 2,456 in 1996 (7,463 births to 5,007 deaths), 2,819 in 1997 (8,214 to 5,395), 2,959 in 1998 (8,926 to 5,967) and 2,970 in 1999 (9,282 to 6,312). In 1999, the natural growth was +0.385%. (Figures only for FSU-born olim moved in after 1989).[174]

An estimated 45,000 illegal immigrants from the Former Soviet Union lived in Israel at the end of 2010, but it is not clear how many of them are actually Jews.[175]

In 2013, 7,520 people, nearly 40% of all olim, made aliyah from the Former Soviet Union.[176][177][178][179] In 2014 4,685 Russian citizens relocated to Israel, more than double than usual in any of the previous 16 years.[180] In 2015, nearly 7,000 or just over twenty percent of all olim came from the former Soviet Union.[181][182]

Recent olim and olot (עוֹלות) from the Former Soviet Union include notables such as Anna Zak, Natan Sharansky, Yuri Foreman, Yuli-Yoel Edelstein, Ze'ev Elkin, Nachman Dushanski, Boris Gelfand, Natasha Mozgovaya, Avigdor Lieberman, Roman Dzindzichashvili, Anastassia Michaeli, Haim Megrelashvili, Victor Mikhalevski, Evgeny Postny, Maxim Rodshtein, Tatiana Zatulovskaya, Maria Gorokhovskaya, Katia Pisetsky, Aleksandr Averbukh, Anna Smashnova, Jan Talesnikov, Vadim Alexeev, Michael Kolganov, Alexander Danilov, Evgenia Linetskaya, Marina Kravchenko, David Kazhdan, Leonid Nevzlin, Vadim Akolzin, Roman Bronfman, Michael Cherney, Arcadi Gaydamak, Sergei Sakhnovski, Roman Zaretski, Alexandra Zaretski, Larisa Trembovler, Boris Tsirelson, Ania Bukstein, and Margarita Levieva.

United States

 
American singer Regina Spektor, who cites poets such as Pasternak in her songs.

The second largest Russian Jewish population is in the United States. According to RINA, there is a core Russian Jewish population of 350,000 in the U.S. The enlarged Russian Jewish population in the U.S. is estimated to be 700,000.[2]

Notable Russia, Imperial Russia, Soviet Union, and former Soviet Union, born Jewish Americans (living and deceased) include Alexei Abrikosov, Isaac Asimov, Leonard Blavatnik, Sergey Brin, Joseph Brodsky, Sergei Dovlatov, Anthony Fedorov, Israel Gelfand, Emma Goldman, Vladimir Horowitz, Gregory Kaidanov, Avi Kaplan, Anna Khachiyan, Jan Koum, Savely Kramarov, Mila Kunis, Leonid Levin, Lev Loseff, Alexander Migdal, Eugene Mirman, Alla Nazimova, Ayn Rand, Markus Rothkovich (Mark Rothko), Dmitry Salita, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Yakov Sinai, Mikhail Shifman, Mikhail Shufutinsky, Regina Spektor, Willi Tokarev, and Arkady Vainshtein.

Large Russian Jewish communities include Brighton Beach and Sheepshead Bay in the Brooklyn Borough of New York City; Fair Lawn and nearby areas in Bergen County, New Jersey; Bucks and Montgomery Counties near Philadelphia; Pikesville, Maryland, a predominantly-Jewish suburb of Baltimore; Washington Heights in the Sunny Isles Beach neighborhood of South Florida; Skokie and Buffalo Grove, suburbs of Chicago; and West Hollywood, California.

Germany

The fourth largest Russian-Jewish community exists in Germany with a core Russian-Jewish population of 119,000 and an enlarged population of 250,000.[183][184][185]

In the 1991–2006 period, approximately 230,000 ethnic Jews from the FSU immigrated to Germany. In the beginning of 2006, Germany tightened the immigration program. A survey conducted among approximately 215,000 enlarged Russian Jewish population (taking natural decrease into consideration) indicated that about 81% of the enlarged population was religiously Jewish or Atheist, while about 18.5% identified as Christian. That gives a core Russian Jewish population of 111,800 (religiously Jewish, 52%) or 174,150 (religiously Jewish or Atheist).[186][187]

Notable Russian Jews in Germany include Valery Belenky, Maxim Biller, Friedrich Gorenstein, Wladimir Kaminer, Lev Kopelev, Elena Kuschnerova, Alfred Schnittke, Vladimir Voinovich, and Lilya Zilberstein.

Canada

The fifth largest Russian Jewish community is in Canada. The core Russian Jewish population in Canada numbers 30,000 and the enlarged Russian Jewish population numbered 50,000+, mostly in Montreal and Toronto.[188] Notable Russian Jewish residents include judoka Mark Berger, ice hockey player Eliezer Sherbatov, voice actress Tara Strong,[189] and the musical group Tasseomancy.

Australia

Jews from the former Soviet Union settled in Australia in two migration waves in the 1970s and 1990s. About 5,000 immigrated in the 1970s and 7,000 to 8,000 in the 1990s.[190] The estimated population of Jews from the former Soviet Union in Australia is 10,000 to 11,000, constituting about 10% of the Australian Jewish population. About half of the Jews from the former Soviet Union are from Ukraine and a third from the Russian Federation.[191]

Finland

Hundreds of Russian Jews have moved to Finland since 1990 and have helped to stem the negative population growth of the Jewish community there.[192] The total number of Jews in Finland have grown from 800 in 1980 to 1,200 in 2006. Of all the schoolgoing Jewish children, 75% have at least one Russian born parent.

Other countries

 
Maya Plisetskaya receives a governmental award from President of Russia Vladimir Putin on 20 November 2000.

Austria, Belgium, Britain, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand and Switzerland also have small populations of Russian Jews. The addition of Russian Jews have neutralized the negative Jewish population trends in some European countries like the Netherlands and Austria. Notable Russian Jews in France include Léon Bakst, Marc Chagall, Leon Poliakov, Evgeny Kissin, Alexandre Koyré, Ida Rubinstein, Lev Shestov, and Anatoly Vaisser. Some other notable Russian Jews are Roman Abramovich, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Boris Berezovsky, and Maxim Vengerov (United Kingdom), Gennadi Sosonko (Netherlands), Viktor Korchnoi (Switzerland), and Maya Plisetskaya (Spain).

Russian Prime Ministers of Jewish origin

See also

Notes

References

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Further reading

External links

  • Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS
  • Chabad-Lubavitch centers in Russia
  • Russian Jews Face Continual Challenges As Country Seeks To Be A Global Player by Karina Ioffee, The Huffington Post, July 13, 2009
  • RJCF – Russian Jewish Community Foundation
  • Genesis Philanthropy Group's movie – Russian Jews: Trilogy by Leonid Parfenov / English Subtitles, on YouTube
  • Collected news and commentary at The Times of Israel

history, jews, russia, history, jews, russia, areas, historically, connected, with, goes, back, least, years, jews, russia, have, historically, constituted, large, religious, ethnic, diaspora, russian, empire, time, hosted, largest, population, jews, world, wi. The history of the Jews in Russia and areas historically connected with it goes back at least 1 500 years Jews in Russia have historically constituted a large religious and ethnic diaspora the Russian Empire at one time hosted the largest population of Jews in the world 9 Within these territories the primarily Ashkenazi Jewish communities of many different areas flourished and developed many of modern Judaism s most distinctive theological and cultural traditions while also facing periods of antisemitic discriminatory policies and persecution including violent pogroms Some have described a renaissance in the Jewish community inside Russia since the beginning of the 21st century 10 however the Russian Jewish population has experienced precipitous decline since the dissolution of the USSR which continues to this day although it is still among the largest in Europe 11 Russian Jewsיהדות רוסיה Hebrew Russkie evrei Russian רוסישע יי דן Yiddish The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow the largest Jewish museum in the world Regions with significant populationsIsrael1 200 000 1 United States350 000 2 Germany178 500 3 Russia83 896 according to the 2021 census 4 Australia10 000 11 000 5 LanguagesHebrew Russian YiddishReligionJudaism 31 Jewish atheism 27 6 Non religious 25 Christianity 17 7 8 Related ethnic groupsAshkenazi Jews Sephardi Jews Ukrainian Jews Belarusian Jews Lithuanian Jews Latvian Jews Czech Jews Hungarian Jews Polish Jews Slovak Jews Serbian Jews Romanian Jews Turkish Jews Crimean Karaites Krymchaks Mountain Jews Bukharan Jews Georgian Jews American Jews Contents 1 Overview and background 2 Early history 3 Kievan Rus 4 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 5 Tsardom of Russia 6 Russian Empire 6 1 Forcible conscription of Jewish cantonists 6 2 Haskalah in the Russian Empire 6 3 Mass emigration 6 4 Jewish members of the Duma 6 5 Jews in the revolutionary movement 6 6 Dissolution and seizure of Jewish properties and institutions 7 Soviet Union 7 1 Before World War II 7 2 World War II and the Holocaust 7 3 Stalinist antisemitic campaigns 7 4 The Soviet Union and Zionism 7 5 1967 1985 7 6 Glasnost and end of the USSR 8 Modern day Russia 9 Historical demographics 10 Russian Jewish aliyah and immigration to countries outside Israel 10 1 Israel 10 2 United States 10 3 Germany 10 4 Canada 10 5 Australia 10 6 Finland 10 7 Other countries 11 Russian Prime Ministers of Jewish origin 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksOverview and background EditThe largest group among Russian Jews are Ashkenazi Jews but the community also includes a significant proportion of other non Ashkenazi from other Jewish diaspora including Mountain Jews Sephardi Jews Crimean Karaites Krymchaks Bukharan Jews and Georgian Jews The presence of Jewish people in the European part of Russia can be traced to the 7th 14th centuries CE In the 11th and 12th centuries the Jewish population in Kiev in present day Ukraine was restricted to a separate quarter Evidence of the presence of Jewish people in Muscovite Russia is first documented in the chronicles of 1471 During the reign of Catherine II in the 18th century Jewish people were restricted to the Pale of Settlement 1791 1917 within Russia the territory where they could live or immigrate to Alexander III escalated anti Jewish policies Beginning in the 1880s waves of anti Jewish pogroms swept across different regions of the empire for several decades More than two million Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920 mostly to the United States and what is today the State of Israel The Pale of Settlement took away many of the rights that the Jewish people of the late 17th century Russia had enjoyed At this time the Jewish people were restricted to an area of what is current day Belarus Lithuania eastern Poland and Ukraine 12 Where Western Europe was experiencing emancipation at this time in Russia the laws for the Jewish people were getting more strict They were allowed to move further east towards a less crowded region though it was only a minority of Jews who took to this migration option 12 The sporadic and often impoverished communities formed were known as Shtetls 12 Before 1917 there were 300 000 Zionists in Russia while the main Jewish socialist organization the Bund had 33 000 members Only 958 Jews had joined the Bolshevik Party before 1917 thousands joined after the Revolution 13 565 The chaotic years of World War I the February and October Revolutions and the Russian Civil War had created social disruption that led to anti Semitism Some 150 000 Jews were killed in the pogroms of 1918 1922 125 000 of them in Ukraine 25 000 in Belarus 14 The pogroms were mostly perpetrated by anti communist forces sometimes Red Army units engaged in pogroms as well 15 Anton Denikin s White Army was a bastion of anti Semitism using Strike at the Jews and save Russia as its motto 16 The Bolshevik Red Army although individual soldiers committed anti Semitic abuses had a policy of opposing anti Semitism and as a result it won the support of much of the Jewish population After a short period of confusion the Soviets started executing guilty individuals and even disbanding the army units whose men had attacked Jews Although pogroms were still perpetrated after this in general the Jews regarded the Red Army as the only force which was able and willing to defend them The Russian Civil War pogroms shocked world Jewry and rallied many Jews to the Red Army and the Soviet regime strengthening the desire for the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people 15 In August 1919 the Soviet government arrested many rabbis seized Jewish properties including synagogues and dissolved many Jewish communities 17 The Jewish section of the Communist Party labeled the use of the Hebrew language reactionary and elitist and the teaching of Hebrew was banned 18 Zionists were persecuted harshly with Jewish communists leading the attacks 13 567 Following the civil war however the new Bolshevik government s policies produced a flourishing of secular Jewish culture in Belarus and western Ukraine in the 1920s The Soviet government outlawed all expressions of anti Semitism with the public use of the ethnic slur zhid Yid being punished by up to one year of imprisonment 19 and tried to modernize the Jewish community by establishing 1 100 Yiddish language schools 40 Yiddish language daily newspapers and by settling Jews on farms in Ukraine and Crimea the number of Jews working in the industry had more than doubled between 1926 and 1931 13 567 At the beginning of the 1930s the Jews were 1 8 percent of the Soviet population but 12 15 percent of all university students 20 In 1934 the Soviet state established the Jewish Autonomous Oblast in the Russian Far East This region never came to have a majority Jewish population 21 The JAO is Russia s only autonomous oblast 22 and outside of Israel the world s only Jewish territory with an official status 23 The observance of the Sabbath was banned in 1929 13 567 foreshadowing the dissolution of the Communist Party s Yiddish language Yevsektsia in 1930 and worse repression to come Numerous Jews were victimized in Stalin s purges as counterrevolutionaries and reactionary nationalists although in the 1930s the Jews were underrepresented in the Gulag population 13 567 24 The share of Jews in the Soviet ruling elite declined during the 1930s but was still more than double their proportion in the general Soviet population According to Israeli historian Benjamin Pinkus We can say that the Jews in the Soviet Union took over the privileged position previously held by the Germans in tsarist Russia 25 83 In the 1930s many Jews held high rank in the Red Army High Command Generals Iona Yakir Yan Gamarnik Yakov Smushkevich Commander of the Soviet Air Forces and Grigori Shtern Commander in Chief in the war against Japan and Commander at the front in the Winter War 25 84 During World War Two an estimated 500 000 soldiers in the Red Army were Jewish about 200 000 were killed in battle About 160 000 were decorated and more than a hundred achieved the rank of Red Army general 26 Over 150 were designated Heroes of the Soviet Union the highest award in the country 27 More than two million Soviet Jews are believed to have died during the Holocaust in warfare and in Nazi occupied territories In the late 1980s and early 1990s many Soviet Jews took the opportunity of liberalized emigration policies with more than half of the population leaving most for Israel and the West Germany the United States Canada and Australia For many years during this period Russia had a higher rate of immigration to Israel than any other country 28 Russia s Jewish population is still the third biggest in Europe after France and United Kingdom 29 In November 2012 the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center one of the world s biggest museums of Jewish history opened in Moscow 30 Early history Edit The Khazar Khaganate 650 850 Jews have been present in contemporary Armenia and Georgia since the Babylonian captivity Records exist from the 4th century showing that there were Armenian cities possessing Jewish populations ranging from 10 000 to 30 000 along with substantial Jewish settlements in the Crimea 31 The presence of Jewish people in the territories corresponding to modern Belarus Ukraine and the European part of Russia can be traced back to the 7th 14th centuries CE 32 33 Under the influence of the Caucasian Jewish communities Bulan the Khagan Bek of the Turkic Khazars and the ruling classes of Khazaria located in what is now Ukraine southern Russia and Kazakhstan may have adopted and or converted to Judaism at some point in the mid to late 8th or early 9th centuries After the conquest of the Khazarian kingdom by Sviatoslav I of Kiev 969 the Khazar Jewish population may have assimilated or migrated in part Kievan Rus EditIn the 11th and 12th centuries the Jewish population may have been restricted to a separate quarter in Kiev known as the Jewish Town Old East Slav Zhidove Zhidovye i e The Jews the gates probably leading to which were known as the Jewish Gates Old East Slavic Zhidovskaya vorota Zhidovskaya vorota The Kievan community was oriented towards Byzantium the Romaniotes Babylonia and Palestine in the 10th and 11th centuries but appears to have been increasingly open to the Ashkenazim from the 12th century on Few products of Kievan Jewish intellectual activity exist however 34 Other communities or groups of individuals are known from Chernigov and probably Volodymyr Volynskyi At that time Jews were probably found also in northeastern Russia in the domains of Prince Andrei Bogolyubsky 1169 1174 although it is uncertain to which degree they would have been living there permanently 34 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Edit Number of Jews in Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth per voivodeship in 1764 Although northeastern Russia had a low Jewish population countries just to its west had rapidly growing Jewish populations as waves of anti Jewish pogroms and expulsions from the countries of Western Europe marked the last centuries of the Middle Ages a sizable portion of the Jewish populations there moved to the more tolerant countries of Central and Eastern Europe as well as the Middle East Expelled en masse from England France Spain and most other Western European countries at various times and persecuted in Germany in the 14th century many Western European Jews migrated to Poland upon the invitation of Polish ruler Casimir III the Great to settle in Polish controlled areas of Eastern Europe as a third estate although restricted to commercial middleman services in an agricultural society for the Polish king and nobility between 1330 and 1370 during the reign of Casimir the Great After settling in Poland later Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and Hungary later Austria Hungary the population expanded into the lightly populated areas of Ukraine and Lithuania which were to become part of the expanding Russian Empire In 1495 Alexander the Jagiellonian expelled Jewish residents from Grand Duchy of Lithuania but reversed his decision in 1503 In the shtetls populated almost entirely by Jews or in the middle sized town where Jews constituted a significant part of population Jewish communities traditionally ruled themselves according to halakha and were limited by the privileges granted them by local rulers See also Shtadlan These Jews were not assimilated into the larger eastern European societies and identified as an ethnic group with a unique set of religious beliefs and practices as well as an ethnically unique economic role Tsardom of Russia Edit Peter Shafirov vice chancellor of Russia under Peter the Great Documentary evidence as to the presence of Jews in Muscovite Russia is first found in the chronicles of 1471 The relatively small population of them were subject to discriminatory laws but these laws do not appear to have been enforced at all times Jews residing in Russian and Ukrainian towns suffered numerous religious persecutions Converted Jews occasionally rose to important positions in the Russian State for example Peter Shafirov vice chancellor under Peter the Great Shafirov came as most Russian Jews after the fall of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795 from a Jewish family of Polish origin He had extraordinary knowledge of foreign languages and served as the chief translator in the Russian Foreign Office subsequently he began to accompany Tsar Peter on his international travels Following this he was raised to the rank of vice chancellor because of his many diplomatic talents and skills but was later imprisoned sentenced to death and eventually banished Russian Empire EditSee also Anti Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire Chișinău pogrom Antisemitism in the Russian Empire Jews in Udmurtia and Tatarstan and List of Jews born in the former Russian Empire Shneur Zalman of Liadi founder of Chabad Lubavitch 1775 Map of the Pale of Settlement showing percentage of Jewish populations Their situation changed radically during the reign of Catherine II when the Russian Empire acquired rule over large Lithuanian and Polish territories which historically included a high proportion of Jewish residents especially during the second 1793 and the third 1795 Partitions of Poland Under the Commonwealth s legal system Jews endured economic restrictions euphemised as disabilities which also continued following the Russian occupation Catherine established the Pale of Settlement which included Congress Poland Lithuania Ukraine and the Crimea the latter was later excluded Jewish people were restricted to residence within the Pale and were required to obtain special permission to immigrate into other parts of Russia Within the Pale the Jewish residents were given right of voting in municipal elections but their vote was limited to one third of the total number of voters even though their proportion in many areas was much higher even a majority This served to provide an aura of democracy while institutionalizing conflict amongst ethnic groups on a local level Jewish communities in Russia were governed internally by local administrative bodies called the Councils of Elders Qahal Kehilla constituted in every town or hamlet possessing a Jewish population The Councils of Elders had jurisdiction over Jews in matters of internal litigation as well as fiscal transactions relating to the collection and payment of taxes poll tax land tax etc Later this right of collecting taxes was much abused in 1844 the civil authority of the Councils of Elders over its Jewish population was abolished 35 Under Alexander I and Nicholas I decrees were put forth requiring a Russian speaking member of a Jewish community to be named to act as an intermediary between his community and the Imperial government to perform certain civil duties such as registering births marriages and divorces This position came to be known as the crown rabbi although they were not always rabbis and often were not respected by members of their own communities because their main job qualification was fluency in Russian and they often had no education in or knowledge of Jewish law 36 37 38 The beginning of the 19th century was marked by intensive movement of Jews to Novorossiya where towns villages and agricultural colonies rapidly sprang up Forcible conscription of Jewish cantonists Edit See also Cantonist Cantonist Herzel Yankel Tsam After 1827 Jewish boys were forcibly conscripted to military service at the age of twelve and placed in cantonist schools 39 40 Kalonimus Wolf Wissotzky founded Wissotzky Tea in 1849 what would become the largest tea manufacturer in the Russian Empire and the world 41 In response to the pogroms of the 1880s he funded the Hovevei Zion movement to encourage immigration to Ottoman Palestine The family tea company itself was seized and confiscated by the Bolsheviks after 1917 The decree of August 26 1827 made Jews liable for military service and allowed their conscription between the ages of twelve and twenty five Each year the Jewish community had to supply four recruits per thousand of the population However in practice Jewish children were often conscripted as young as eight or nine years old 42 At the age of twelve they would be placed for their six year military education in cantonist schools They were then required to serve in the Imperial Russian army for 25 years after the completion of their studies often never seeing their families again Strict quotas were imposed on all communities and the qahals were given the unpleasant task of implementing conscription within the Jewish communities Since the merchant guild members agricultural colonists factory mechanics clergy and all Jews with secondary education were exempt and the wealthy bribed their way out of having their children conscripted fewer potential conscripts were available the adopted policy deeply sharpened internal Jewish social tensions Seeking to protect the socio economic and religious integrity of Jewish society the qahals did their best to include non useful Jews in the draft lists so that the heads of tax paying middle class families were predominantly exempt from conscription whereas single Jews as well as heretics Haskalah influenced individuals paupers outcasts and orphaned children were drafted They used their power to suppress protests and intimidate potential informers who sought to expose the arbitrariness of the qahal to the Russian government In some cases communal elders had the most threatening informers murdered such as the Ushitsa case 1836 The zoning rule was suspended during the Crimean War when conscription became annual During this period the qahals leaders would employ informers and kidnappers Russian lovchiki lovchiki Yiddish khappers as many potential conscripts preferred to run away rather than voluntarily submit In the case of unfulfilled quotas younger Jewish boys of eight and even younger were frequently taken The official Russian policy was to encourage the conversion of Jewish cantonists to the state religion of Orthodox Christianity and Jewish boys were coerced to baptism As kosher food was unavailable they were faced with the necessity of abandoning of Jewish dietary laws Polish Catholic boys were subject to similar pressure to convert and assimilate as the Russian Empire was hostile to Catholicism and Polish nationalism Haskalah in the Russian Empire Edit See also Haskalah Samuel Polyakov nicknamed the most famous railroad king of the 19th century He co founded the World ORT in the 1880s the largest Jewish education organization in the Russian Empire perpetuating a vocational education program influenced by the values of Haskalah The cultural and habitual isolation of the Jews gradually began eroding An ever increasing number of Jewish people adopted Russian customs and the Russian language Russian education was spread among the Jewish population A number of Jewish Russian periodicals appeared Alexander II was known as the Tsar liberator for the 1861 abolition of serfdom in Russia Under his rule Jewish people could not hire Christian servants could not own land and were restricted in travel 43 Alexander III was a staunch reactionary and an antisemite 44 influenced by Pobedonostsev 45 who strictly adhered to the old doctrine of Orthodoxy Autocracy and Nationality His escalation of anti Jewish policies sought to ignite popular antisemitism which portrayed the Jews as Christ killers and the oppressors of the Slavic Christian victims Victim of fanaticism Painting by Mykola Pymonenko 1899 The painting does not depict a pogrom but actually documents an event in Ukraine that the artist read about a Jewish woman was attacked by members of her community for falling in love with a Christian man The townspeople are raising sticks and objects and her parents are shown to the right denouncing her A large scale wave of anti Jewish pogroms swept Ukraine in 1881 after Jews were scapegoated for the assassination of Alexander II In the 1881 outbreak there were pogroms in 166 Ukrainian towns thousands of Jewish homes were destroyed many families reduced to extremes of poverty citation needed large numbers of men women and children were injured and some killed Disorders in the south once again recalled the government attention to the Jewish question A conference was convened at the Ministry of Interior and on May 15 1882 so called Temporary Regulations were introduced that stayed in effect for more than thirty years and came to be known as the May Laws The repressive legislation was repeatedly revised Many historians noted the concurrence of these state enforced antisemitic policies with waves of pogroms 46 that continued until 1884 with at least tacit government knowledge and in some cases policemen were seen inciting or joining the mob The systematic policy of discrimination banned Jewish people from rural areas and towns of fewer than ten thousand people even within the Pale assuring the slow death of many shtetls In 1887 the quotas placed on the number of Jews allowed into secondary and higher education were tightened down to 10 within the Pale 5 outside the Pale except Moscow and Saint Petersburg held at 3 even though the Jewish population was a majority or plurality in many communities It was possible to evade these restrictions upon secondary education by combining private tuition with examination as an outside student Accordingly within the Pale such outside pupils were almost entirely young Jews The restrictions placed on education traditionally highly valued in Jewish communities resulted in ambition to excel over the peers and increased emigration rates Special quotas restricted Jews from entering profession of law limiting number of Jews admitted to the bar In 1886 an Edict of Expulsion was enforced on the historic Jewish population of Kiev Most Jews were expelled from Moscow in 1891 except few deemed useful and a newly built synagogue was closed by the city s authorities headed by the Tsar s brother Tsar Alexander III refused to curtail repressive practices and reportedly noted But we must never forget that the Jews have crucified our Master and have shed his precious blood 47 In 1892 new measures banned Jewish participation in local elections despite their large numbers in many towns of the Pale The Town Regulations prohibited Jews from the right to elect or be elected to town Dumas Only a small number of Jews were allowed to be members of a town Duma through appointment by special committees Distribution of Jews in Europe around 1900 During the late 19th and early 20th centuries the Russian Empire had not only the largest Jewish population in the world but actually a majority of the world s Jews living within its borders 48 In 1897 according to Russian census of 1897 the total Jewish population of Russia was 5 189 401 persons of both sexes 4 13 of total population Of this total 93 9 lived in the 25 provinces of the Pale of Settlement The total population of the Pale of Settlement amounted to 42 338 367 of these 4 805 354 11 5 were Jews About 450 000 Jewish soldiers served in the Russian Army during World War I 49 and fought side by side with their Slavic fellows When hundreds of thousands of refugees from Poland and Lithuania among them innumerable Jews fled in terror before enemy invasion the Pale of Settlement de facto ceased to exist Most of the education restrictions on the Jews were removed with the appointment of count Pavel Ignatiev as Minister of Education Mass emigration Edit See also Beilis trial Jewish gauchos and Galveston Movement Joseph Trumpeldor the most decorated Jewish soldier in the Imperial Russian Army for his bravery in the Russo Japanese War before conducting operations in the Ottoman Empire Even though the persecutions provided the impetus for mass emigration there were other relevant factors that can account for the Jews migration After the first years of large emigration from Russia positive feedback from the emigrants in the U S encouraged further emigration Indeed more than two million 50 Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920 While a large majority emigrated to the United States some turned to Zionism In 1882 members of Bilu and Hovevei Zion made what came to be known the First Aliyah to Palestine then a part of the Ottoman Empire The Tsarist government sporadically encouraged Jewish emigration In 1890 it approved the establishment of The Society for the Support of Jewish Farmers and Artisans in Syria and Palestine 51 known as the Odessa Committee headed by Leon Pinsker dedicated to practical aspects in establishing agricultural Jewish settlements in Palestine Jewish emigration from Russia 1880 1928 52 Destination NumberAustralia 5 000Canada 70 000Europe 240 000Palestine modern day Israel 45 000South Africa 45 000South America 111 000United States 1 749 000Jewish members of the Duma Edit Osip Gunzburg founder of the Society for the Promotion of Culture among the Jews of Russia and the father of Horace Gunzburg In total there were at least twelve Jewish deputies in the First Duma 1906 1907 falling to three or four in the Second Duma February 1907 to June 1907 two in the Third Duma 1907 1912 and again three in the fourth elected in 1912 Converts to Christianity like Mikhail Herzenstein and Ossip Pergament were still considered as Jews by the public and antisemitic opinion and are most of the time included in these figures At the 1906 elections the Jewish Labour Bund had made an electoral agreement with the Lithuanian Labourers Party Trudoviks which resulted in the election to the Duma of two non Bundist candidates in the Lithuanian provinces Dr Shmaryahu Levin for the Vilnius province and Leon Bramson for the Kaunas province 53 Among the other Jewish deputies were Maxim Vinaver chairman of the League for the Attainment of Equal Rights for the Jewish People in Russia Folksgrupe and cofounder of the Constitutional Democratic Party Kadets Dr Nissan Katzenelson Courland province Zionist Kadet Dr Moisei Yakovlevich Ostrogorsky Grodno province attorney Simon Yakovlevich Rosenbaum Minsk province Zionist Kadet Mikhail Isaakovich Sheftel Ekaterinoslav province Kadet Dr Grigory Bruk Dr Benyamin Yakubson Zakhar Frenkel Solomon Frenkel Meilakh Chervonenkis 54 There was also a Crimean Karaim deputy Salomon Krym 55 Three of the Jewish deputies Bramson Chervonenkis and Yakubson joined the Labour faction nine others joined the Kadet fraction 54 According to Rufus Learsi five of them were Zionists including Dr Shmaryahu Levin Dr Victor Jacobson and Simon Yakovlevich Rosenbaum 56 Two of them Grigori Borisovich Iollos Poltava province and Mikhail Herzenstein b 1859 d 1906 in Terijoki both from the Constitutional Democratic Party were assassinated by the Black Hundreds antisemite terrorist group The Russkoye Znamya declares openly that Real Russians assassinated Herzenstein and Iollos with knowledge of officials and expresses regret that only two Jews perished in crusade against revolutionaries 57 The Second Duma included seven Jewish deputies Shakho Abramson Iosif Gessen Vladimir Matveevich Gessen Lazar Rabinovich Yakov Shapiro all of them Kadets and Avigdor Mandelberg Siberia Social Democrat 58 plus a convert to Christianity the attorney Ossip Pergament Odessa 59 The two Jewish members of the Third Duma were the Judge Leopold Nikolayevich or Lazar Nisselovich Courland province Kadet and Naftali Markovich Friedman Kaunas province Kadet Ossip Pergament was reelected and died before the end of his mandate 60 Friedman was the only one reelected to the Fourth Duma in 1912 joined by two new deputies Meer Bomash and Dr Ezekiel Gurevich 58 Jews in the revolutionary movement Edit Kampf un kempfer a Yiddish pamphlet published by the PSR exile branch in London 1904 Many Jews were prominent in Russian revolutionary parties The idea of overthrowing the Tsarist regime was attractive to many members of the Jewish intelligentsia because of the oppression of non Russian nations and non Orthodox Christians within the Russian Empire For much the same reason many non Russians notably Latvians or Poles were disproportionately represented in the party leaderships In 1897 General Jewish Labour Bund The Bund was formed Many Jews joined the ranks of two principal revolutionary parties Socialist Revolutionary Party and Russian Social Democratic Labour Party both Bolshevik and Menshevik factions A notable number of Bolshevik party members were ethnically Jewish especially in the leadership of the party and the percentage of Jewish party members among the rival Mensheviks was even higher Both the founders and leaders of Menshevik faction Julius Martov and Pavel Axelrod were Jewish Because some of the leading Bolsheviks were Ethnic Jews and Bolshevism supports a policy of promoting international proletarian revolution most notably in the case of Leon Trotsky many enemies of Bolshevism as well as contemporary antisemites draw a picture of Communism as a political slur at Jews and accuse Jews of pursuing Bolshevism to benefit Jewish interests reflected in the terms Jewish Bolshevism or Judeo Bolshevism citation needed The original atheistic and internationalistic ideology of the Bolsheviks See proletarian internationalism bourgeois nationalism was incompatible with Jewish traditionalism Bolsheviks such as Trotsky echoed sentiments dismissing Jewish heritage in place of internationalism Soon after seizing power the Bolsheviks established the Yevsektsiya the Jewish section of the Communist party in order to destroy the rival Bund and Zionist parties suppress Judaism and replace traditional Jewish culture with proletarian culture 61 Genrikh Grigoryevich Yagoda on police information card from 1912 In March 1919 Vladimir Lenin delivered a speech On Anti Jewish Pogroms 62 on a gramophone disc Lenin sought to explain the phenomenon of antisemitism in Marxist terms According to Lenin antisemitism was an attempt to divert the hatred of the workers and peasants from the exploiters toward the Jews Linking antisemitism to class struggle he argued that it was merely a political technique used by the tsar to exploit religious fanaticism popularize the despotic unpopular regime and divert popular anger toward a scapegoat The Soviet Union also officially maintained this Marxist Leninist interpretation under Joseph Stalin who expounded Lenin s critique of antisemitism However this did not prevent the widely publicized repressions of Jewish intellectuals during 1948 1953 when Stalin increasingly associated Jews with cosmopolitanism and pro Americanism Jews were prominent in the Russian Constitutional Democrat Party Russian Social Democratic Party Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionary Party The Russian Anarchist movement also included many prominent Jewish revolutionaries In Ukraine Makhnovist anarchist leaders also included several Jews 63 The attempts of the socialist Bund to be the sole representative of the Jewish worker in Russia had always conflicted with Lenin s idea of a universal coalition of workers of all nationalities Like some other socialist parties in Russia the Bund was initially opposed to the Bolsheviks seizing of power in 1917 and to the dissolution of the Russian Constituent Assembly Consequently the Bund suffered repressions in the first months of the Soviet regime citation needed However the antisemitism of many Whites during the Russian Civil War caused many if not most Bund members to readily join the Bolsheviks and most of the factions eventually merged with the Communist Party The movement did split in three the Bundist identity survived in interwar Poland while many Bundists joined the Mensheviks Dissolution and seizure of Jewish properties and institutions Edit Samara Choral Synagogue in Samara It was shut down by the Soviet Government in 1929 In August 1919 Jewish properties including synagogues were seized and many Jewish communities were dissolved The anti religious laws against all expressions of religion and religious education were imposed upon the Jewish population just like on other religious groups Many Rabbis and other religious officials were forced to resign from their posts under the threat of violent persecution This type of persecution continued on into the 1920s 64 In 1921 a large number of Jews opted for Poland as they were entitled by the peace treaty in Riga to choose the country they preferred Several hundred thousand joined the already numerous Jewish population of Poland The chaotic years of World War I the February and October Revolutions and the Civil War were fertile ground for the antisemitism that was endemic to tsarist Russia During the World War Jews were often accused of sympathizing with Germany and often persecuted Pogroms were unleashed throughout the Russian Civil War perpetrated by virtually every competing faction from Polish and Ukrainian nationalists to the Red and White Armies 65 31 071 civilian Jews were killed during documented pogroms throughout the former Russian Empire the number of Jewish orphans exceeded 300 000 A majority of pogroms in Ukraine during 1918 1920 were perpetrated by the Ukrainian nationalists miscellaneous bands and anti Communist forces 66 Perpetrator Number of pogroms or excesses Number murdered 66 Hryhoriv s bands 52 3 471Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic 493 16 706White army 213 5 235Miscellaneous bands 307 4 615Red Army 106 725Others 33 185Polish army 32 134Total 1 236 31 071Soviet Union EditMain article History of the Jews in the Soviet Union See also Pogroms of the Russian Civil War Antisemitism in the Soviet Union and Stalin and antisemitism Before World War II Edit Bolshevik revolutionaries Leon Trotsky Lev Kamenev and Grigory Zinoviev later executed or assassinated on Stalin s orders Continuing the policy of the Bolsheviks before the Revolution Lenin and the Bolshevik Party strongly condemned the pogroms including official denunciations in 1918 by the Council of People s Commissars Opposition to the pogroms and to manifestations of Russian antisemitism in this era were complicated by both the official Bolshevik policy of assimilationism towards all national and religious minorities and concerns about overemphasizing Jewish concerns for fear of exacerbating popular antisemitism as the White forces were openly identifying the Bolshevik regime with Jews 67 68 69 Lenin recorded eight of his speeches on gramophone records in 1919 Only seven of these were later re recorded and put on sale The one suppressed in the Nikita Khrushchev era recorded Lenin s feelings on antisemitism 70 The Tsarist police in alliance with the landowners and the capitalists organized pogroms against the Jews The landowners and capitalists tried to divert the hatred of the workers and peasants who were tortured by want against the Jews Only the most ignorant and downtrodden people can believe the lies and slander that are spread about the Jews It is not the Jews who are the enemies of the working people The enemies of the workers are the capitalists of all countries Among the Jews there are working people and they form the majority They are our brothers who like us are oppressed by capital they are our comrades in the struggle for socialism Among the Jews there are kulaks exploiters and capitalists just as there are among the Russians and among people of all nations Rich Jews like rich Russians and the rich in all countries are in alliance to oppress crush rob and disunite the workers Shame on accursed Tsarism which tortured and persecuted the Jews Shame on those who foment hatred towards the Jews who foment hatred towards other nations 71 Despite the Soviet state s official opposition to antisemitism the spring of 1918 saw widespread anti Jewish violence perpetrated by members of the Red Guard in the former Pale of Settlement In February 1918 as Russian forces advanced on the capital of Petrograd the Soviet government signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk which stipulated that Russia would withdraw from World War I and cede large swaths of territory in eastern Russia to the German Empire Even after the signing of the treaty however the Germans continued to advance and seize territory as the Soviets had no choice but to retreat across the Ukraine At this point in the war the Red Guard comprised mostly untrained workers and peasants with no overarching command structure leaving the state with virtually no control over the volunteer forces 72 Between March and May 1918 various Red Guard squadrons embittered by their military defeat and animated by revolutionary sentiment attacked Jews in cities and towns across the Chernihiv region of the Ukraine One of the most brutal instances of this violence occurred in the city of Novhorod Siverskyi where it was reported that 88 Jews were killed and 11 injured in a pogrom incited by Red Guard soldiers 73 Similarly after the successful capture of the city of Hlukhiv the Red Guard murdered at least 100 Jews whom the soldiers accused of being exploiters of the proletariat 74 In all Jewish activist Nahum Gergel estimated that the Red forces were responsible for about 8 6 of pogroms during the years 1918 1922 while Ukrainian and White Army forces were responsible for 40 and 17 2 respectively 75 Soviet politician and administrator Lazar Kaganovich in 1936 Lenin was supported by the Labor Zionist Poale Zion movement then under the leadership of Marxist theorist Ber Borochov which was fighting for the creation of a Jewish workers state in Palestine and also participated in the October Revolution and in the Soviet political scene afterwards until being banned by Stalin in 1928 While Lenin remained opposed to outward forms of antisemitism and all forms of racism allowing Jewish people to rise to the highest offices in both party and state certain historians such as Dmitri Volkogonov argue that the record of his government in this regard was highly uneven A former official Soviet historian turned staunch anti communist Volkogonov claims that Lenin was aware of pogroms carried out by units of the Red Army during the war with Poland particularly those carried out by Semyon Budyonny s troops 76 though the whole issue was effectively ignored Volkogonov writes that While condemning anti Semitism in general Lenin was unable to analyze let alone eradicate its prevalence in Soviet society 77 Likewise the hostility of the Soviet regime towards all religion made no exception for Judaism and the 1921 campaign against religion saw the seizure of many synagogues whether this should be regarded as antisemitism is a matter of definition since Orthodox churches received the same treatment In any event there was still a fair degree of tolerance for Jewish religious practice in the 1920s in the Belarusian capital Minsk for example of the 657 synagogues existing in 1917 547 were still functioning in 1930 78 A Jewish kolkhoz To promote Jewish agriculture in 1925 the CPSU set up a government committee the Komzet and a public society the OZET According to Zvi Gitelman Never before in Russian history and never subsequently has a government made such an effort to uproot and stamp out antisemitism 79 According to the census of 1926 the total number of Jews in the USSR was 2 672 398 of whom 59 lived in Ukrainian SSR 15 2 in Byelorussian SSR 22 in Russian SFSR and 3 8 in other Soviet republics Russian Jews were long considered to be a non native Semitic ethnic group among the Slavic Russians and such categorization was solidified when ethnic minorities in the Soviet Union were categorized according to ethnicity nacionalnost In his 1913 theoretical work Marxism and the National Question Stalin described Jews as not a living and active nation but something mystical intangible and supernatural For I repeat what sort of nation for instance is a Jewish nation which consists of Georgian Daghestanian Russian American and other Jews the members of which do not understand each other since they speak different languages inhabit different parts of the globe will never see each other and will never act together whether in time of peace or in time of war 80 According to Stalin who became the People s Commissar for Nationalities Affairs after the revolution to qualify as a nation a minority was required to have a culture a language and a homeland Prosecutor General Vyshinsky centre reading the 1937 indictment against Karl Radek during the 2nd Moscow Trial Yiddish rather than Hebrew would be the national language and proletarian socialist literature and arts would replace Judaism as the quintessence of culture The use of Yiddish was strongly encouraged in the 1920s in areas of the USSR with substantial Jewish populations especially in the Ukrainian and Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republics Yiddish was one of the Belarusian SSR s four official languages alongside Belarusian Russian and Polish The equality of the official languages was taken seriously A visitor arriving at main train station of the Belarusian capital Minsk saw the city s name written in all four languages above the main station entrance Yiddish was a language of newspapers magazines book publishing theater radio film the post office official correspondence election materials and even a Central Jewish Court Yiddish writers like Sholem Aleichem and Mendele Mocher Seforim were celebrated in the 1920s as Soviet Jewish heroes Minsk had a public state supported Yiddish language school system extending from kindergarten to the Yiddish language section of the Belarusian State University Although Jewish students tended to switch to studying in Russian as they moved on to secondary and higher education 55 3 percent of the city s Jewish primary school students attended Yiddish language schools in 1927 81 At its peak the Soviet Yiddish language school system had 160 000 students in it 82 Such was the prestige of Minsk s Yiddish scholarship that researchers trained in Warsaw and Berlin applied for faculty positions at the university All this leads historian Elissa Bemporad to conclude that this very ordinary Jewish city was in the 1920s one of the world capitals of Yiddish language and culture 83 Jews also played a disproportionate role in Belarusian politics through the Bolshevik Party s Yiddish language branch the Yevsekstsia Because there were few Jewish Bolsheviks before 1917 with a few prominent exceptions like Zinoviev and Kamenev the Yevsekstia s leaders in the 1920s were largely former Bundists who pursued as Bolsheviks their campaign for secular Jewish education and culture Although for example only a bit over 40 percent of Minsk s population was Jewish at the time 19 of its 25 Communist Party cell secretaries were Jewish in 1924 84 Jewish predominance in the party cells was such that several cell meetings were held in Yiddish In fact Yiddish was spoken at citywide party meetings in Minsk into the late 1930s Jewish Autonomous Oblast on the map of Russia To offset the growing Jewish national and religious aspirations of Zionism and to successfully categorize Soviet Jews under Stalin s definition of nationality an alternative to the Land of Israel was established with the help of Komzet and OZET in 1928 The Jewish Autonomous Oblast with its center in Birobidzhan in the Russian Far East was to become a Soviet Zion 85 Despite a massive domestic and international state propaganda campaign however the Jewish population in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast never reached 30 in 2003 it was only about 1 2 86 The experiment ground to a halt in the mid 1930s during Stalin s first campaign of purges In fact the Bolshevik Party s Yiddish language Yevsekstia was dissolved in 1930 as part of the regime s overall turn away from encouraging minority languages and cultures and towards Russification Many Jewish leaders especially those with Bundist backgrounds were arrested and executed in the purges later in the 1930s citation needed and Yiddish schools were shut down The Belasusian SSR shut down its entire network of Yiddish language schools in 1938 In his January 12 1931 letter Antisemitism Reply to an Inquiry of the Jewish News Agency in the United States published domestically by Pravda in 1936 Stalin officially condemned antisemitism In answer to your inquiry National and racial chauvinism is a vestige of the misanthropic customs characteristic of the period of cannibalism Antisemitism as an extreme form of racial chauvinism is the most dangerous vestige of cannibalism Antisemitism is of advantage to the exploiters as a lightning conductor that deflects the blows aimed by the working people at capitalism Antisemitism is dangerous for the working people as being a false path that leads them off the right road and lands them in the jungle Hence Communists as consistent internationalists cannot but be irreconcilable sworn enemies of antisemitism In the U S S R antisemitism is punishable with the utmost severity of the law as a phenomenon deeply hostile to the Soviet system Under U S S R law active antisemites are liable to the death penalty 87 1938 NKVD arrest photo of the poet Osip Mandelstam who died in a Gulag The Molotov Ribbentrop pact the 1939 non aggression pact with Nazi Germany created further suspicion regarding the Soviet Union s position toward Jews According to the pact Poland the nation with the world s largest Jewish population was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union in September 1939 While the pact had no basis in ideological sympathy as evidenced by Nazi propaganda about Jewish Bolshevism Germany s occupation of Western Poland was a disaster for Eastern European Jews Evidence suggests that some at least of the Jews in the eastern Soviet zone of occupation welcomed the Russians as having a more liberated policy towards their civil rights than the preceding antisemitic Polish regime 88 Jews in areas annexed by the Soviet Union were deported eastward in great waves citation needed as these areas would soon be invaded by Nazi Germany this forced migration deplored by many of its victims paradoxically also saved the lives of several hundred thousand Jewish deportees The NKVD photo of writer Isaac Babel made after his arrest during Stalin s Great Purge Jews who escaped the purges include Lazar Kaganovich who came to Stalin s attention in the 1920s as a successful bureaucrat in Tashkent and participated in the purges of the 1930s Kaganovich s loyalty endured even after Stalin s death when he and Molotov were expelled from the party ranks in 1957 due to their opposition to destalinization Beyond longstanding controversies ranging from the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact to anti Zionism the Soviet Union did grant official equality of all citizens regardless of status sex race religion and nationality The years before the Holocaust were an era of rapid change for Soviet Jews leaving behind the dreadful poverty of the Pale of Settlement Forty percent of the population in the former Pale left for large cities within the USSR Emphasis on education and movement from countryside shtetls to newly industrialized cities allowed many Soviet Jews to enjoy overall advances under Stalin and to become one of the most educated population groups in the world Yakov Kreizer field commander of the Red Army Because of Stalinist emphasis on its urban population interwar migration inadvertently rescued countless Soviet Jews Nazi Germany penetrated the entire former Jewish Pale but were kilometers short of Leningrad and Moscow The migration of many Jews farther East from the Jewish Pale which would become occupied by Nazi Germany saved at least 40 percent of the Pale s original Jewish population By 1941 it was estimated that the Soviet Union was home to 4 855 million Jews around 30 of all Jews worldwide However the majority of these were residents of rural western Belarus and Ukraine populations that suffered greatly due to the German occupation and the Holocaust Only around 800 000 Jews lived outside the occupied territory and 1 200 000 to 1 400 000 Jews were eventually evacuated eastwards 89 Of the three million left in occupied areas the vast majority is thought to have perished in German extermination camps World War II and the Holocaust Edit Main articles Eastern Front World War II History of the Jews during World War II The Holocaust The Holocaust in Russia and The Holocaust in the Soviet Union Lieutenant General Semyon Krivoshein one of the Red Army s most influential tank commanders Artisans Synagogue in Rostov on Don Burned down in 1942 during the Great Patriotic War Soviet writer and journalist Ilya Ehrenburg with Soviet soldiers in 1942 Over two million Soviet Jews are believed to have died during the Holocaust second only to the number of Polish Jews who fell victim to Hitler see The Holocaust in Poland Among some of the larger massacres which were committed in 1941 were 33 771 Jews of Kiev shot in ditches at Babi Yar 100 000 Jews and Poles of Vilnius killed in the forests of Ponary 20 000 Jews killed in Kharkiv at Drobnitzky Yar 36 000 Jews machine gunned in Odessa 25 000 Jews of Riga killed in the woods at Rumbula and 10 000 Jews slaughtered in Simferopol in the Crimea citation needed Although mass shootings continued through 1942 most notably 16 000 Jews shot at Pinsk Jews were increasingly shipped to concentration camps in German Nazi occupied Poland Local residents of German occupied areas especially Ukrainians Lithuanians and Latvians sometimes played key roles in the genocide of other Latvians Lithuanians Ukrainians Slavs Romani homosexuals and Jews alike Under the Nazi occupation some members of the Ukrainian and Latvian Nazi police carried out deportations in the Warsaw Ghetto and Lithuanians marched Jews to their death at Ponary Even as some assisted the Germans a significant number of individuals in the territories under German control also helped Jews escape death see Righteous Among the Nations In Latvia particularly the number of Nazi collaborators was only slightly more than that of Jewish saviours It is estimated that up to 1 4 million Jews fought in Allied armies 40 of them in the Red Army 90 In total at least 142 500 Soviet soldiers of Jewish nationality lost their lives fighting against the German invaders and their allies 91 1946 The official response to an inquiry by JAC about the military decorations of Jews during the war 1 8 of the total number Some antisemites attempted to accuse Jews of lack of patriotism and of hiding from military service The typical Soviet policy regarding the Holocaust was to present it as atrocities against Soviet citizens not emphasizing the genocide of the Jews For example after the liberation of Kiev from the Nazi occupation the Extraordinary State Commission Chrezvychajnaya Gosudarstvennaya Komissiya Chrezv chaynaya Gosudarstvennaya Komissiya was set out to investigate Nazi crimes The description of the Babi Yar massacre was officially censored as follows 92 Draft report December 25 1943 Censored version February 1944 The Hitlerist bandits committed brutal mass extermination of the Jewish population They announced that on September 29 1941 all Jews were required to arrive to the corner of Melnikov and Dokterev streets and bring their documents money and valuables The butchers herded them to Babi Yar took away their valuables then shot them The Hitlerist bandits herded thousands of Soviet citizens to the corner of Melnikov and Dokterev streets The butchers marched them to Babi Yar took away their valuables then shot them See also Vasily Grossman Jewish Anti Fascist Committee and Black Book World War II Stalinist antisemitic campaigns Edit Main articles Stalin and antisemitism and Antisemitism in the Soviet Union The revival of Jewish identity after the war stimulated by the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 was cautiously welcomed by Stalin as a means to put pressure on Western imperialism in the Middle East but when it became evident that many Soviet Jews expected the revival of Zionism to enhance their own aspirations for separate cultural and religious development in the Soviet Union a wave of repression was unleashed 93 In January 1948 Solomon Mikhoels a popular actor director of the Moscow State Jewish Theater and the chairman of the Jewish Anti Fascist Committee was killed in a suspicious car accident 94 Mass arrests of prominent Jewish intellectuals and suppression of Jewish culture followed under the banners of campaign against rootless cosmopolitans and anti Zionism On August 12 1952 in the event known as the Night of the Murdered Poets thirteen of the most prominent Yiddish writers poets actors and other intellectuals were executed on the orders of Joseph Stalin among them Peretz Markish Leib Kvitko David Hofstein Itzik Feffer and David Bergelson 95 In the 1955 United Nations General Assembly s session a high Soviet official still denied the rumors about their disappearance The Doctors Plot allegation in 1953 was a deliberately antisemitic policy Stalin targeted corrupt Jewish bourgeois nationalists eschewing the usual code words like rootless cosmopolitans or cosmopolitans Stalin died however before this next wave of arrests and executions could be launched in earnest A number of historians claim that the Doctors Plot was intended as the opening of a campaign that would have resulted in the mass deportation of Soviet Jews had Stalin not died on March 5 1953 Days after Stalin s death the plot was declared a hoax by the Soviet government These cases may have reflected Stalin s paranoia rather than state ideology a distinction that made no practical difference as long as Stalin was alive but which became salient on his death In April 1956 the Warsaw Yiddish language Jewish newspaper Folkshtimme published sensational long lists of Soviet Jews who had perished before and after the Holocaust The world press began demanding answers from Soviet leaders as well as inquiring about the current condition of the Jewish education system and culture The same autumn a group of leading Jewish world figures publicly requested the heads of Soviet state to clarify the situation Since no cohesive answer was received their concern was only heightened The fate of Soviet Jews emerged as a major human rights issue in the West The Soviet Union and Zionism Edit Main articles Soviet Union and the Arab Israeli conflict and Soviet Anti Zionism See also Anti Zionist committee of the Soviet public Itzik Feffer left Albert Einstein and Solomon Mikhoels in the United States in 1943 Feffer was executed on the Night of the Murdered Poets and rehabilitated posthumously in 1955 after Stalin s death Marxist anti nationalism vague and anti clericalism had a mixed effect on Soviet Jews Jews were the immediate benefactors but they were also long term victims of the Marxist notion that any manifestation of nationalism is socially retrogressive On one hand Jews were liberated from the religious persecution of the Tsarist years of Orthodoxy Autocracy and Nationality On the other this notion was threatening to Jewish cultural institutions the Bund Jewish autonomy Judaism and Zionism Political Zionism was officially stamped out as a form of bourgeois nationalism during the entire history of the Soviet Union Although Leninism emphasizes the belief in self determination this fact did not make the Soviet state more accepting of Zionism Leninism defines self determination by territory or culture rather than by religion which allowed Soviet minorities to have separate oblasts autonomous regions or republics which were nonetheless symbolic until its later years Jews however did not fit such a theoretical model Jews in the Diaspora did not even have an agricultural base as Stalin often asserted when he attempted to deny the existence of a Jewish nation and they certainly did not have a territorial unit Marxist notions even denied the existence of a Jewish identity beyond the existence of a religion and caste Marx defined Jews as a chimerical nation A giant menorah dominating the main square in Birobidzhan in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast founded in the Russian Far East in 1936 Lenin who claimed to be deeply committed to egalitarian ideals and the universality of all humanity rejected Zionism as a reactionary movement bourgeois nationalism socially retrogressive and a backward force that deprecates class divisions among Jews Moreover Zionism entailed contact between Soviet citizens and westerners which was dangerous in a closed society Soviet authorities were likewise fearful of any mass movement which was independent of the monopolistic Communist Party and not tied to the state or the ideology of Marxism Leninism Without changing his official anti Zionist stance from late 1944 until 1948 Joseph Stalin adopted a de facto pro Zionist foreign policy apparently believing that the new country would be socialist and hasten the decline of British influence in the Middle East 96 In a May 14 1947 speech during the UN Partition Plan debate published in Izvestiya two days later the Soviet ambassador Andrei Gromyko announced As we know the aspirations of a considerable part of the Jewish people are linked with the problem of Palestine and of its future administration This fact scarcely requires proof During the last war the Jewish people underwent exceptional sorrow and suffering The United Nations cannot and must not regard this situation with indifference since this would be incompatible with the high principles proclaimed in its Charter The fact that no Western European State has been able to ensure the defence of the elementary rights of the Jewish people and to safeguard it against the violence of the fascist executioners explains the aspirations of the Jews to establish their own State It would be unjust not to take this into consideration and to deny the right of the Jewish people to realize this aspiration 97 Soviet approval in the United Nations Security Council was critical to the UN partitioning of the British Mandate of Palestine which led to the founding of the State of Israel Three days after Israel declared its independence the Soviet Union legally recognized it de jure In addition the USSR allowed Czechoslovakia to continue supplying arms to the Jewish forces during the 1948 Arab Israeli War even though this conflict took place after the Soviet supported Czechoslovak coup d etat of 1948 At the time the U S maintained an arms embargo on both sides in the conflict See Arms shipments from Czechoslovakia to Israel 1947 1949 By the end of 1957 the USSR switched sides in the Arab Israeli conflict and throughout the course of the Cold War unequivocally supported various Arab regimes against Israel The official position of the Soviet Union and its satellite states and agencies was that Zionism was a tool used by the Jews and Americans for racist imperialism A Soviet birth certificate from 1972 indicating the person s parents ethnicity as Jew As Israel was emerging as a close Western ally the specter of Zionism raised fears of internal dissent and opposition During the later parts of the Cold War Soviet Jews were suspected of being possible traitors Western sympathisers or a security liability The Communist leadership closed down various Jewish organizations and declared Zionism an ideological enemy Synagogues were often placed under police surveillance both openly and through the use of informers citation needed As a result of the persecution both state sponsored and unofficial antisemitism was ingrained in the society and remained for years ordinary Soviet Jews often suffered hardships epitomized by often not being allowed to enlist in universities work in certain professions or participate in government However it should be mentioned that this was not always the case and this kind of persecution varied depending on the region Still many Jews felt compelled to hide their identities by changing their names The word Jew was also avoided in the media when criticising undertakings by Israel which the Soviets often accused of racism chauvinism etc Instead of Jew the word Israeli was used almost exclusively so as to paint its harsh criticism not as antisemitism but anti Zionism More controversially the Soviet media when depicting political events sometimes used the term fascism to characterise Israeli nationalism e g calling Jabotinsky a fascist and claiming new fascist organisations were emerging in Israel in the 1970s etc 1967 1985 Edit Main article Aliyah From the Soviet Union and post Soviet states In a 1965 letter in the New York Times Nobel Physics laureate Lev Landau above and Evsei Liberman said that as Soviet Jews they opposed the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry 98 According to the census of 1959 the Jewish population of the city Leningrad numbered 169 000 and the Great Choral synagogue was open in the 1960s with some 1 200 seats The rabbi was Avraham Lubanov This synagogue has never been closed The great majority of the Leningrad Jews were not religious but several thousand used to visit the synagogue on great holidays mostly on Simchat Torah 99 A mass emigration was politically undesirable for the Soviet regime As increasing numbers of Soviet Jews applied to emigrate to Israel in the period following the 1967 Six Day War many were formally refused permission to leave A typical excuse given by the OVIR OViR the MVD department responsible for the provisioning of exit visas was that persons who had been given access at some point in their careers to information vital to Soviet national security could not be allowed to leave the country After the Dymshits Kuznetsov hijacking affair in 1970 and the crackdown that followed strong international condemnations caused the Soviet authorities to increase the emigration quota From 1960 to 1970 only 4 000 people left the USSR in the following decade the number rose to 250 000 100 In 1972 the USSR imposed the so called diploma tax on would be emigrants who received higher education in the USSR 101 In some cases the fee was as high as twenty annual salaries This measure was possibly designed to combat the brain drain caused by the growing emigration of Soviet Jews and other members of the intelligentsia to the West Although Jews now made up less than 1 of the population some surveys have suggested that around one third of the emigrating Jews had achieved some form of higher education Furthermore Jews holding positions requiring specialized training tended to be highly concentrated in a small set of specialties including medicine mathematics biology and music 102 Following international protests the Kremlin soon revoked the tax but continued to sporadically impose various limitations Besides an unofficial Jewish quota was introduced in the leading institutions of higher education by subjecting Jewish applicants to harsher entrance examinations 103 104 105 106 At first almost all of those who managed to get exit visas to Israel actually made aliyah but after the mid 1970s most of those allowed to leave for Israel actually chose other destinations most notably the United States Glasnost and end of the USSR Edit In 1989 a record 71 000 Soviet Jews were granted exodus from the USSR of whom only 12 117 immigrated to Israel At first American policy treated Soviet Jews as refugees and allowed unlimited numbers to emigrate but this policy eventually came to an end As a result more Jews began moving to Israel as it was the only country willing to take them unconditionally In the 1980s the liberal government of Mikhail Gorbachev allowed unlimited Jewish emigration and the Soviet Union itself collapsed in 1991 As a result a mass emigration of Jews from the former Soviet Union took place Since the 1970s over 1 1 million Russians of Jewish origin immigrated to Israel of whom 100 000 emigrated to third countries such as the United States and Canada soon afterward and 240 000 were not considered Jewish under Halakha but were eligible under the Law of Return due to Jewish ancestry or marriage Since the adoption of the Jackson Vanik amendment over 600 000 Soviet Jews have emigrated Modern day Russia Edit Tomsk Choral Synagogue the oldest synagogue in Siberia The Grand Choral Synagogue of Saint Petersburg among the largest synagogues in Europe and the world President Putin lighting a Hannukah Menorah with Russia s Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar Judaism is officially designated as one of Russia s four state religions 107 Saint Petersburg Mathematician Grigory Perelman Arkady Rotenberg a billionaire businessman and co owner of Stroygazmontazh He is considered a close confidant of Vladimir Putin Sergey Kiriyenko the youngest Prime Minister of Russia Russian opposition politician Yevgeny Roizman who served as the Mayor of Yekaterinburg from 2013 to 2018 Judaism today is officially designated as one of Russia s four traditional religions alongside Orthodox Christianity Islam and Buddhism 107 However the Jewish community continues to decrease rapidly going from 232 267 people in the 2002 census to 83 896 in 2021 not counting 500 Crimean Karaites of which 28 119 lived in Moscow and 5 111 lived in the surrounding Moscow Oblast for a total of 33 230 or 39 61 of the entire Russian Jewish population A further 9 215 lived in Saint Petersburg with 851 in the surrounding Leningrad Oblast for a total of 10 066 or 12 00 of the entire Russian Jewish population thus Russia s two largest cities and surrounding areas hosted 51 61 of the total Russian Jewish population The third most populous community was Crimea which had a population of 2 522 of which 864 Krymchaks in the Autonomous Republic in addition to 517 including 35 Krymchaks in Sevastopol for a total of 3 039 of which 29 58 Krymchaks not counting 215 Crimean Karaites This amounts to 3 62 of the total Russian Jewish population After Crimea the most numerically significant populations were Sverdlovsk with 2 354 2 81 and Samara with 2 266 2 70 followed by Tatarstan with 1 792 2 14 Rostov Oblast with 1 690 2 01 Chelyabinsk with 1 677 2 00 Krasnodar Krai with 1 620 1 93 Stavropol with 1 614 1 92 Nizhny Novgorod with 1 473 1 76 Bashkortostan with 1 209 1 44 Saratov with 1 151 1 37 and Novosibirsk with 1 150 1 37 The remaining 20 565 24 52 of Russian Jews lived in regions with communities numbering fewer than 1 000 Jews Despite being designated as a Jewish oblast the Jewish Autonomous Oblast has only 837 self identifying Jews or 0 56 of the total population of the Autonomous Oblast This is down 64 03 from the 2 327 recorded in the 2002 census or 1 22 of the Oblast s population at the time As of the 2021 census most Russian Jews are Ashkenazi 82 644 of the 83 896 total or 98 51 The second largest community are the Krymchaks who numbered 954 or 1 14 of the Jewish population There were 266 Mountain Jews 0 32 and only remnants of the formerly significant Bukharan and Georgian communities who numbered 18 0 02 and 14 0 02 respectively In addition to this there were 500 Crimean Karaites who have historically not identified as Jews Most Crimean Karaites lived in Crimea 215 or 43 00 or Moscow 60 most Krymchaks lived in Crimea 864 or 90 57 of the total or Sebastopol 35 or 3 68 meaning 899 or 94 23 of the Russian Krymchak population still lives on the Crimean peninsula largely rurally The Crimean Karaite population in Crimea has declined by well over 50 since the Ukrainian census of 2001 Conversely most Juhurim have left the Caucasus region and the largest single community still in Russia 84 31 58 is found in Moscow Of the Jewish populations remaining in the northern Caucasus most are now Ashkenazi with only a few being Mountain Jews There are still 145 Mountain Jews scattered throughout the northern Caucasus of which 60 are in Dagestan amounting to 6 49 of the republic s Jewish population 47 are in Kabardino Balkaria 6 02 29 are in Stavropol 1 80 6 are in Krasnodar 0 37 and 3 are in Adygea 2 24 There are no Mountain Jews remaining in Chechnya Ingushetia North Ossetia Alania or Karachay Cherkessia Apart from the Krymchaks all Jewish communities were heavily urbanised 100 of Bukharan and Georgian Jew 95 39 of Ashkenazim 94 74 of Mountain Jews and 91 00 of Crimean Karaites lived in urban areas whereas only 34 91 of Krymchaks did Most Russian Jews are secular and identify themselves as Jews via ethnicity rather than religion although interest about Jewish identity as well as practice of Jewish tradition amongst Russian Jews is growing citation needed The Lubavitcher Jewish Movement has been active in this sector setting up synagogues and Jewish kindergartens in Russian cities with Jewish populations In addition most Russian Jews have relatives who live in Israel There are several major Jewish organizations in the territories of the former USSR The central Jewish organization is the Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS under the leadership of Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar 108 A linguistic distinction remains to this day in the Russian language where there are two distinct terms that correspond to the word Jew in English The word evrej yevrey Hebrew typically denotes a Jewish ethnicity as Hebrew did in English up until the early 20th century The word iudej iudey Judean etymologically related to the English Jew is reserved for denoting a follower of the Jewish religion whether he or she is ethnically Jewish or ethnically Gentile this term has largely fallen out of use in favor of the equivalent term iudaist iudaist Judaist For example according to a 2012 Russian survey evrei account for only 32 2 of iudaisty in Russia with nearly half 49 8 being Ethnic Russians russkie 109 An ethnic slur zhid borrowed from the Polish Zyd Jew also remains in widespread use in Russia Antisemitism is one of the most common expressions of xenophobia in post Soviet Russia even among some groups of politicians 110 Despite stipulations against fomenting hatred based on ethnic or religious grounds Article 282 of Russian Federation Penal Code 111 In 2002 the number of anti Semitic neo Nazi groups in the republics of the former Soviet Union led Pravda to declare in 2002 that Anti Semitism is booming in Russia 112 In January 2005 a group of 15 Duma members demanded that Judaism and Jewish organizations be banned from Russia 113 In 2005 500 prominent Russians including some 20 members of the nationalist Rodina party demanded that the state prosecutor investigate ancient Jewish texts as anti Russian and ban Judaism An investigation was in fact launched but halted after an international outcry 114 115 Overall in recent years particularly since the early 2000s levels of anti semitism in Russia have been reportedly low and steadily decreasing 116 117 In 2019 Ilya Yablogov wrote that many Russians were keen on antisemitic conspiracy theories in 1990s but it declined after 2000 and many high ranking officials were forced to apologize for the antisemitic behavior 118 In Russia both historical and contemporary antisemitic materials are frequently published For example a set called Library of a Russian Patriot consisting of twenty five antisemitic titles was recently published including Mein Kampf translated to Russian 2002 which although was banned in 2010 119 The Myth of Holocaust by Jurgen Graf a title by Douglas Reed Protocols of the Elders of Zion and others Antisemitic incidents are mostly conducted by extremist nationalist and Islamist groups Most of the antisemitic incidents are against Jewish cemeteries and building community centers and synagogues such as the assault against the Jewish community s center in Perm in March 2013 120 and the attack on Jewish nursery school in Volgograd in August 2013 121 Nevertheless there were several violent attacks against Jews in Moscow in 2006 when a neo Nazi stabbed 9 people at the Bolshaya Bronnaya Synagogue 122 the failed bomb attack on the same synagogue in 1999 123 Attacks against Jews made by extremist Islamic groups are rare in Russia although there has been increase in the scope of the attacks mainly in Muslim populated areas On July 25 2013 the rabbi of Derbent was attacked and badly injured by an unknown person near his home most likely by a terrorist The incident sparked concerns among the local Jews of further acts against the Jewish community 124 After the passage of some anti gay laws in Russia in 2013 and the incident with the Pussy riot band in 2012 causing a growing criticism on the subject inside and outside Russia a number of verbal anti Semitic attacks were made against Russian gay activists by extremist activists and anti Semitic writers such as Israel Shamir who viewed the Pussy riot incident as the war of Judaism on the Christian Orthodox church 125 126 127 Today the Jewish population of Russia is shrinking due to small family sizes and high rates of assimilation and intermarriage This shrinkage has been slowed by some Russian Jewish emigrants having returned from abroad especially from Germany The great majority of up to 90 of children born to a Jewish parent are the offspring of mixed marriages and most Jews have only one or two children 128 The EuroStars young adults program provides Jewish learning and social activities in 32 cities across Russia 129 130 131 Some have described a renaissance in the Jewish community inside Russia since the beginning of the 21st century 10 Historical demographics EditJewish of the population in each SSR 1939 1959 1989Demographic data for Russian Empire Soviet Union and Post Soviet states Jews Year Jewish population including Tats Notes1914 More than 5 250 000 Russian Empire1926 132 2 672 499 First All Union Census of the Soviet Union A result of border change secession of Poland and union of Bessarabia with Romania emigration and assimilation 1939 133 3 028 538 A result of natural growth emigration assimilation and repressionsEarly 1941 5 400 000 A result of the annexation of Western Ukraine and Belarus Baltic republics and inflow of Jewish refugees from Poland1959 2 279 277 See the Holocaust and immigration to Israel 1970 2 166 026 A result of natural population decline death rates being greater than birth rates emigration and assimilation such as intermarriage 1979 1 830 317 Decline for the same reason as for 19701989 1 479 732 Soviet Census Final census in the entire Soviet Union Decline for the same reason as for 1970 2002 233 439 A result of border changes namely the fall of Soviet Union with only Russia considered in the 2002 census rather than the entire USSR mass emigration natural population decline and assimilation 2010 159 348 Further mass emigration natural population decline and assimilation 2021 83 896 Decline for the same reason as 2010 However this census included Crimea which including Sevastopol had 3 039 Jews this means the population increased in one respect due to border changes The population as compared to 2010 was thus only 80 857 a drop of around 50 Jewish population in each SSR and former SSR by year using 1989 SSR borders 134 a SSR 1897 1926 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 1999 2001 2009 2011 2019 2022Russian SFSR Russia 250 000 135 539 037 891 147 880 443 816 668 713 399 570 467 233 439 159 348 83 896Ukrainian SSR Ukraine 2 680 000 136 2 720 000 137 2 700 000 138 139 c 840 446 777 406 634 420 487 555 106 600 71 500 45 000 140 Byelorussian SSR Belarus 690 000 141 c 150 090 148 027 135 539 112 031 24 300 12 926 13 705 142 Uzbek SSR Uzbekistan 37 896 50 676 94 488 103 058 100 067 95 104 40 000 15 000 9 865 143 Azerbaijan SSR Azerbaijan 59 768 41 245 46 091 49 057 44 345 41 072 8 916 9 084 144 9 500Latvian SSR Latvia 95 675 145 b 95 600 146 36 604 36 686 28 338 22 925 9 600 6 454 8 094 147 Kazakh SSR Kazakhstan 3 548 19 240 28 085 27 676 23 601 20 104 6 823 3 578 148 2 500 140 Lithuanian SSR Lithuania 263 000 146 24 683 23 566 14 703 12 398 4 007 3 050 2 256 149 e Estonian SSR Estonia 4 309 146 5 439 5 290 4 993 4 653 2 003 1 738 1 852 150 Moldavian SSR Moldova 250 000 151 95 107 98 072 80 124 65 836 5 500 3 628 1 597 152 d Georgian SSR Georgia 30 389 42 300 51 582 55 382 28 298 24 795 2 333 2 000 1 405 153 f Kirghiz SSR Kyrgyzstan 318 1 895 8 607 7 677 6 836 6 005 1 571 604 433 154 Turkmen SSR Turkmenistan 2 045 3 037 4 102 3 530 2 866 2 509 1 000 155 700 156 200Armenian SSR Armenia 335 512 1 042 1 049 962 747 109 127 150Tajik SSR Tajikistan 275 5 166 12 435 14 627 14 697 14 580 197 36 157 25Soviet Union Former Soviet Union 5 250 000 2 672 499 3 028 538 2 279 277 2 166 026 1 830 317 1 479 732 460 000 280 678 180 478Historical Russian Jewish populationYearPop 1897250 000 1926539 037 115 6 1939891 147 65 3 1959880 443 1 2 1970816 668 7 2 1979713 399 12 6 1989570 467 20 0 2002233 439 59 1 2010159 348 31 7 202183 896 47 4 Source 134 158 159 135 The Jewish population data includes Mountain Jews Georgian Jews Bukharan Jews or Central Asian Jews Krymchaks all per the 1959 Soviet census and Tats 160 Jewish population in each SSR and former SSR by year using 1989 SSR borders as a percent of the total population 134 a SSR 1926 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 158 2010 159 Russian SFSR Russia 0 58 0 81 0 75 0 63 0 52 0 39 0 18 0 11 Ukrainian SSR Ukraine 6 55 161 c 2 01 1 65 1 28 0 95 0 20 0 16 Byelorussian SSR Belarus 6 55 162 c 1 86 1 64 1 42 1 10 0 24 0 14 163 Moldavian SSR Moldova 3 30 2 75 2 03 1 52 0 13 0 11 0 06 Estonian SSR Estonia 0 38 146 0 45 0 39 0 34 0 30 0 14 0 13 Latvian SSR Latvia 5 19 145 b 4 79 146 1 75 1 55 1 13 0 86 0 40 0 31 164 Lithuanian SSR Lithuania 9 13 146 0 91 0 75 0 43 0 34 0 10 0 10 165 Georgian SSR Georgia 1 15 1 19 1 28 1 18 0 57 0 46 0 10 0 08 Armenian SSR Armenia 0 04 0 04 0 06 0 04 0 03 0 02 lt 0 01 lt 0 01 Azerbaijan SSR Azerbaijan 2 58 1 29 1 25 0 96 0 74 0 58 0 10 0 10 144 Turkmen SSR Turkmenistan 0 20 0 24 0 27 0 16 0 10 0 07 0 01 lt 0 01 Uzbek SSR Uzbekistan 0 80 0 81 1 17 0 86 0 65 0 48 0 02 0 02 Tajik SSR Tajikistan 0 03 0 35 0 63 0 50 0 39 0 29 lt 0 01 lt 0 01 Kirghiz SSR Kyrgyzstan 0 03 0 13 0 42 0 26 0 20 0 14 0 02 0 01 Kazakh SSR Kazakhstan 0 06 0 31 0 30 0 22 0 16 0 12 0 03 0 02 Soviet Union Former Soviet Union 1 80 1 80 1 09 0 90 0 70 0 52 0 16 0 10 a The Jewish population data for all of the years includes Mountain Jews Georgian Jews Bukharan Jews or Central Asian Jews Krymchaks all per the 1959 Soviet census and Tats 166 b The data is from 1925 c The data is from 1941 d The data is from 2014 e Does not include 192 Karaim Russian Jewish aliyah and immigration to countries outside Israel EditIsrael Edit Main articles Russian Jews in Israel Russian immigration to Israel in the 1970s Russian immigration to Israel in the 1990s and Jackson Vanik amendment Yuli Edelstein one of the Soviet Union s most prominent refuseniks who served as Speaker of the Knesset Israel s parliament from 2013 to 2020 Year TFR2000 1 5441999 1 6121998 1 6321997 1 7231996 1 7431995 1 7311994 1 7561993 1 7071992 1 6041991 1 3981990 1 390In present times the largest number of Russian Jews are olim עו לים and sabras In 2011 Russians were around 15 of Israel s 7 7 million population including Halakhally non Jews who constituted about 30 of immigrants from the former Soviet Union 167 The Aliyah in the 1990s accounts for 85 90 of this population The population growth rate for Former Soviet Union FSU born olim were among the lowest for any Israeli groups with a Fertility rate of 1 70 and natural increase of just 0 5 per year 168 The increase in Jewish birth rate in Israel during the 2000 2007 period was partly due to the increasing birth rate among the FSU olim who now form 20 of the Jewish population of Israel 169 170 96 5 of the enlarged Russian Jewish population in Israel either belong to Judaism or are non religious while 3 5 35 000 belong to other religions mostly Christianity and about 10 000 identifying as Messianic Jews separate from Jewish Christians 171 The Total Fertility Rate for FSU born olim in Israel is given in the table below The TFR increased with time peaking in 1997 then slightly decreased after that and then again increased after 2000 168 In 1999 about 1 037 000 FSU born olim lived in Israel of whom about 738 900 made aliyah after 1989 172 173 The second largest oleh עו ל ה group Moroccan Jews numbered just 1 000 000 From 2000 to 2006 142 638 FSU born olim moved to Israel while 70 000 of them emigrated from Israel to countries like the U S and Canada bringing the total population to 1 150 000 by January 2007 1 The natural increase was around 0 3 in the late 1990s For example 2 456 in 1996 7 463 births to 5 007 deaths 2 819 in 1997 8 214 to 5 395 2 959 in 1998 8 926 to 5 967 and 2 970 in 1999 9 282 to 6 312 In 1999 the natural growth was 0 385 Figures only for FSU born olim moved in after 1989 174 An estimated 45 000 illegal immigrants from the Former Soviet Union lived in Israel at the end of 2010 but it is not clear how many of them are actually Jews 175 In 2013 7 520 people nearly 40 of all olim made aliyah from the Former Soviet Union 176 177 178 179 In 2014 4 685 Russian citizens relocated to Israel more than double than usual in any of the previous 16 years 180 In 2015 nearly 7 000 or just over twenty percent of all olim came from the former Soviet Union 181 182 Recent olim and olot עו לות from the Former Soviet Union include notables such as Anna Zak Natan Sharansky Yuri Foreman Yuli Yoel Edelstein Ze ev Elkin Nachman Dushanski Boris Gelfand Natasha Mozgovaya Avigdor Lieberman Roman Dzindzichashvili Anastassia Michaeli Haim Megrelashvili Victor Mikhalevski Evgeny Postny Maxim Rodshtein Tatiana Zatulovskaya Maria Gorokhovskaya Katia Pisetsky Aleksandr Averbukh Anna Smashnova Jan Talesnikov Vadim Alexeev Michael Kolganov Alexander Danilov Evgenia Linetskaya Marina Kravchenko David Kazhdan Leonid Nevzlin Vadim Akolzin Roman Bronfman Michael Cherney Arcadi Gaydamak Sergei Sakhnovski Roman Zaretski Alexandra Zaretski Larisa Trembovler Boris Tsirelson Ania Bukstein and Margarita Levieva United States Edit American singer Regina Spektor who cites poets such as Pasternak in her songs The second largest Russian Jewish population is in the United States According to RINA there is a core Russian Jewish population of 350 000 in the U S The enlarged Russian Jewish population in the U S is estimated to be 700 000 2 Notable Russia Imperial Russia Soviet Union and former Soviet Union born Jewish Americans living and deceased include Alexei Abrikosov Isaac Asimov Leonard Blavatnik Sergey Brin Joseph Brodsky Sergei Dovlatov Anthony Fedorov Israel Gelfand Emma Goldman Vladimir Horowitz Gregory Kaidanov Avi Kaplan Anna Khachiyan Jan Koum Savely Kramarov Mila Kunis Leonid Levin Lev Loseff Alexander Migdal Eugene Mirman Alla Nazimova Ayn Rand Markus Rothkovich Mark Rothko Dmitry Salita Menachem Mendel Schneerson Yakov Sinai Mikhail Shifman Mikhail Shufutinsky Regina Spektor Willi Tokarev and Arkady Vainshtein Large Russian Jewish communities include Brighton Beach and Sheepshead Bay in the Brooklyn Borough of New York City Fair Lawn and nearby areas in Bergen County New Jersey Bucks and Montgomery Counties near Philadelphia Pikesville Maryland a predominantly Jewish suburb of Baltimore Washington Heights in the Sunny Isles Beach neighborhood of South Florida Skokie and Buffalo Grove suburbs of Chicago and West Hollywood California Germany Edit The fourth largest Russian Jewish community exists in Germany with a core Russian Jewish population of 119 000 and an enlarged population of 250 000 183 184 185 In the 1991 2006 period approximately 230 000 ethnic Jews from the FSU immigrated to Germany In the beginning of 2006 Germany tightened the immigration program A survey conducted among approximately 215 000 enlarged Russian Jewish population taking natural decrease into consideration indicated that about 81 of the enlarged population was religiously Jewish or Atheist while about 18 5 identified as Christian That gives a core Russian Jewish population of 111 800 religiously Jewish 52 or 174 150 religiously Jewish or Atheist 186 187 Notable Russian Jews in Germany include Valery Belenky Maxim Biller Friedrich Gorenstein Wladimir Kaminer Lev Kopelev Elena Kuschnerova Alfred Schnittke Vladimir Voinovich and Lilya Zilberstein Canada Edit The fifth largest Russian Jewish community is in Canada The core Russian Jewish population in Canada numbers 30 000 and the enlarged Russian Jewish population numbered 50 000 mostly in Montreal and Toronto 188 Notable Russian Jewish residents include judoka Mark Berger ice hockey player Eliezer Sherbatov voice actress Tara Strong 189 and the musical group Tasseomancy Australia Edit Jews from the former Soviet Union settled in Australia in two migration waves in the 1970s and 1990s About 5 000 immigrated in the 1970s and 7 000 to 8 000 in the 1990s 190 The estimated population of Jews from the former Soviet Union in Australia is 10 000 to 11 000 constituting about 10 of the Australian Jewish population About half of the Jews from the former Soviet Union are from Ukraine and a third from the Russian Federation 191 Finland Edit Hundreds of Russian Jews have moved to Finland since 1990 and have helped to stem the negative population growth of the Jewish community there 192 The total number of Jews in Finland have grown from 800 in 1980 to 1 200 in 2006 Of all the schoolgoing Jewish children 75 have at least one Russian born parent Other countries Edit Maya Plisetskaya receives a governmental award from President of Russia Vladimir Putin on 20 November 2000 Austria Belgium Britain Italy Netherlands New Zealand and Switzerland also have small populations of Russian Jews The addition of Russian Jews have neutralized the negative Jewish population trends in some European countries like the Netherlands and Austria Notable Russian Jews in France include Leon Bakst Marc Chagall Leon Poliakov Evgeny Kissin Alexandre Koyre Ida Rubinstein Lev Shestov and Anatoly Vaisser Some other notable Russian Jews are Roman Abramovich Vladimir Ashkenazy Boris Berezovsky and Maxim Vengerov United Kingdom Gennadi Sosonko Netherlands Viktor Korchnoi Switzerland and Maya Plisetskaya Spain Russian Prime Ministers of Jewish origin EditSergey Kiriyenko Prime Minister of Russia 1998 Yevgeny Primakov Prime Minister of Russia 1998 1999 Mikhail Fradkov Prime Minister of Russia 2004 2007 Mikhail Mishustin Prime Minister of Russia 2020 present See also Edit Judaism portal Russia portalAntisemitism in Russia History of the Jews in Central Asia History of the Jews in Armenia History of the Jews in Azerbaijan History of the Jews in Georgia History of the Jews in Ukraine History of the Jews in Belarus History of the Jews in Estonia History of the Jews in Latvia History of the Jews in Lithuania Jewish Autonomous Oblast Jews and Judaism in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast Jewish CossacksNotes EditReferences Edit a b 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Depopulation of Jewish Community Has Begun by Pavel Polian Demoscope in Russian Novoe o evrejskih immigrantah iz b SSSR v Germaniyu Rezultaty gosudarstvennogo obsledovaniya Archived October 22 2007 at the Wayback Machine New About Jewish Immigrants from FSU to Germany by Pavel Polyan Demoscope http jewishtoronto org getfile asp id 13787 permanent dead link Headapohl Jackie May 17 2018 Hero In Disguise Detroit Jewish News Gruzman Emmanuel May 12 2018 Russian speaking Jews in Australia more difficulties at first but more satisfied at last plus61j net au May 12 2018 Retrieved June 8 2018 Australian Bureau of Statistics abs gov au Archived from the original on February 23 2011 Retrieved June 8 2018 Matt Siegel March 12 2007 In Finland immigrants from FSU revitalize a dying Jewish community Jewishtoronto net Archived from the original on March 10 2008 Retrieved April 14 2013 Further reading EditArad Yitzhak 2010 In the Shadow of the Red Banner Soviet Jews in the War Against Nazi Germany Jerusalem Gefen Publishing House ISBN 978 9652294876 Bemporad Elissa 2013 Becoming Soviet Jews The Bolshevik Experiment in Minsk The Modern Jewish Experience Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 00822 0 Gitelman Zvi A Century of Ambivalence The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union 1881 to the Present 2001 Goldenweiser E A Economic Conditions of the Jews in Russia Publications of the American Statistical Association 9 70 1905 pp 238 248 online Archived November 30 2018 at the Wayback Machine Overy Richard 2004 The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 02030 4 Petrovsky Shtern Yohanan 2014 The Golden Age Shtetl A New History of Jewish Life in East Europe Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16074 0 Pinkus Benjamin 1990 The Jews of the Soviet Union The History of a National Minority Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38926 6 Polonsky Antony The Jews in Poland and Russia A Short History 2013 Shneer David 2004 Yiddish and the Creation of Soviet Jewish Culture 1918 1930 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82630 3 Levin Nora 1988 The Jews in the Soviet Union since 1917 Paradox of Survival I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 85043 249 4 External links EditFederation of Jewish Communities of the CIS Chabad Lubavitch centers in Russia Russian Jews Face Continual Challenges As Country Seeks To Be A Global Player by Karina Ioffee The Huffington Post July 13 2009 RJCF Russian Jewish Community Foundation Genesis Philanthropy Group s movie Russian Jews Trilogy by Leonid Parfenov English Subtitles on YouTube Collected news and commentary at The Times of Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in Russia amp oldid 1154346476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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