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Eastern European Jewry

The expression 'Eastern European Jewry' has two meanings. Its first meaning refers to the current political spheres of the Eastern European countries and its second meaning refers to the Jewish communities in Russia and Poland. The phrase 'Eastern European Jews' or 'Jews of the East' (from German: Ostjuden) was established during the 19th century in the German Empire and in the western provinces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, aiming to distinguish the integrating Jews in Central Europe from those Jews who lived in the East. This feature deals with the second meaning of the concept of Eastern European Jewry- the Jewish groups that lived in Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Romania, Hungary and modern-day Moldova in collective settlement (from Hebrew: Kibbutz- קיבוץ). Many of whom spoke Yiddish.

The density of the Jewish settlement in the Moshav in 1905
The Hebrew text: The yellow area covers the distribution of the Jews of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, their original places of residence and their immigration areas.

At the beginning of the 20th century, over 6 million Jews lived in Eastern Europe. They were organized into large and small communities, living in big cities such as Warsaw (with a population of about 300,000 Jews) as well as in small towns with populations of only tens or hundreds of Jews.

Before the 18th century

 
Polish Jews in typical clothing - 17th century (top), 18th century (bottom)

At the beginning of the 16th century, the number of Jews who lived in Eastern Europe was estimated to be between 10,000 and 30,000. Some of their communities spoke Leshon Knaan and they observed various Non-Ashkenazi traditions and customs.[1] In parts of Eastern Europe, before the arrival of the Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe, some non-Ashkenazi Jews were present who spoke Leshon Knaan and held various other non-Ashkenazi traditions and customs.[1] As early as the beginning of the 17th century, it was known that there were Jews living in cities of Lithuania who spoke "Russiany" (from Hebrew: רוסיתא) and did not know the "Ashkenaz tongue", i.e. German-Yiddish. In 1966, the historian Cecil Roth questioned the inclusion of all Yiddish speaking Jews as Ashkenazim in descent, suggesting that upon the arrival of Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe to Eastern Europe, from the Middle Ages to the 16th century, there were already a substantial number of Jews there who later abandoned their original culture in favor of Ashkenazi culture.[2][3] However, according to more recent research, mass migrations of Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi Jews occurred to Eastern Europe from the west who increased due to high birth rates and absorbed and/or largely replaced the preceding non-Ashkenazi Jewish groups of Eastern Europe (the latter groups' numbers are estimated by demographer Sergio DellaPergola to have been small). In the mid-18th century, the number of Jews increased to about 750,000. During this period only one-third of East European Jews lived in areas with a predominantly Polish population. The rest of the Jews lived among other peoples, mainly in the Ukrainian and Russian-Lithuanian environments. The numerical increase was due to mass migration of Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe to Eastern Europe beginning from the Middle Ages to the 16th century, as well as a high birth rate among these immigrants.[4] Genetic evidence also indicates that Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jews largely descended from Ashkenazi Jews who migrated from central Europe and subsequently experienced high birthrates and genetic isolation.[5]

In the mid-18th century, two-thirds of the Jewish population of Eastern Europe lived in cities or towns, and a third of it lived in villages - a unique phenomenon that hardly existed in Western Europe. In every village where Jews lived, there were only two Jewish families on average, and each family usually consisted of no more than ten Jews. In most of the urban localities in which they lived, the Jewish population comprised half the number of residents on average. It follows that in many towns, there was a Jewish majority. This reality has been intensified over the years, with the percentage of Jews in cities and towns increasing, and thus the "shtetl" phenomenon was created - the "Jewish town", a large part of which was Jewish, and whose Jewish cultural character was prominent.

Economics and commerce

The Jews engaged in trade and various crafts, such as tailoring, weaving, leather processing and even agriculture. The economic activity of Eastern European Jewry was different from that of Central and Western European Jews: in Eastern Europe, the Jews developed specializations in trade, leasing, and crafts, which were hardly found in Western Europe. The Eastern European Jewry also had a great deal of involvement in economic matters that Jews in Central and Western Europe did not deal with at all.

Until the mid-17th century with the 1648 Cossack riots on Jewish population, eastern European Jews lived in a relatively comfortable environment that enabled them to thrive. The Jews, for the most part, enjoyed extensive economic, personal and religious freedom. Thus, for example, deportations, foreclosure of Jewish property, and the removal of financial debts of non-Jews to Jews, which were common in Western Europe, hardly existed in the East. Despite the privileges, there were also hatred expressions towards the Jews. This phenomenon was described by a Jewish sage named Shlomo Maimon:

"It is possible that there is no country other than Poland, where freedom of religion and hatred of religion are found in equal measure. The Jews are allowed to preserve their religion with absolute freedom, and the rest of the civil rights have been assigned to them, and they have even their own courts. And in opposite to that, you find that religion hatred is so great there to the extent of that matter, the word 'Jew' is an abomination."

Traditional life

The amount of Torah study among Eastern European Jews at the beginning of their settlement was little. As a result, many halakhic (from Hebrew: הלכתיות) questions and problems were addressed to rabbis and Torah scholars in Germany and Bohemia which were close to them. From the 16th century, luxurious study centers were established in Eastern Europe, where the Hassidic movement also began to develop.

Social Structure

The Jewish social structure in Eastern Europe was built of communities and from the mid-16th century to 1764, central institutions, including communal ones, of self-leadership in Eastern Europe were running. The two main institutions were the Four-State Committee and the Lithuanian State Council. The committees' role was to collect taxes from the Jewish communities and deliver them to the authorities. Later they took it upon themselves to represent the Jewish community to the foreign rulers of those countries. In addition, the committee had judicial authority over internal laws and Halachot (from Hebrew: הלכות) within the Jewish communities.

The Council of Four Lands was the highest institution among the committees. The committee was composed out of seven rabbinic judges when the head of them was always a representative of the Lublin community. The other members of the committee were representatives of the cities of Poznan, Krakow and Lvov. Historical documents bearing the Committee's signature indicate that in certain periods the committee was expanded to represent all the important communities in the kingdom, and then the number of representatives was close to thirty. At first, the committee met in Lublin, giving the city the status of a top-notch Jewish center. The conference, which lasted about two weeks, was held once a year during the winter, when the city's largest trade fair was coordinated. In a later period, the conference was held twice a year: a winter gathering in Lublin and a summer conference in the city of Yaroslav in Galicia.

From the late 18th century to the beginning of the 20th century

In the late 18th century, the Jews of Eastern Europe were divided into two major geographic regions: a settlement controlled by the Russian Empire, and a Galicia under the control of the Austria-Hungarian Empire.

The settlement

The three divisions of Poland (first in 1772, then in 1793, and finally in 1795) left the Aryan part of the Polish Jewry under the authority of the Russian Empire. The Russian government turned out to be less tolerant towards Jews, and more restrictions were imposed on Jews than the rest of the Polish people. In 1791 Czarina Yekaterina the Great established the region of the Settlement (the 'Moshav') in the western fringes of the empire, where only Jews were allowed to live. The Moshav included most of the former territories of Poland and Lithuania, which were populated by concentrations of Jews. Limiting those boundaries led to the uprooting and deportation of Moscow and St. Petersburg Jews to the eastern border of the country, which was one of the main goals of the authorities. Later, the Jews of Kiev were also forbidden to live in their own city, even though Kiev itself was included in the "region of the Settlement."

At the beginning of the 20th century, more than five million Jews lived in Czarist Russia, with 90% of them concentrated in the region of the Settlement and about three million Jews lived in the former borders of Poland. According to various estimates, Eastern European Jewry at the beginning of the 20th century constituted 80% of world Jewry.

Galicia

Another large Jewish community in Eastern Europe was Galicia, the territory that was given to Austria in the partition of Poland. Towards the end of the 19th century, Emperor Franz Joseph intended to "acculturate" the Jews by establishing a network of schools for general studies. Some Jews supported this goal, but most of them opposed it. Further resistance arose when an attempt was made to settle the Jews on the land.

The Jews in Galicia were known for their religious piety, and they fought hard against the Enlightenment and against attempts to "assimilate" them culturally. There was also a sharp confrontation between supporters of Hasidism and those opposed to it (Misnagdim). Eventually Hasidism won and became the dominant movement among the Jews of Galicia.

In 1867, the Jews of Galicia were granted full equality of rights, and thus were the first among the Jews of Eastern Europe to be emancipated. The Zionist movement flourished in Galicia. During the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, before World War I the Jewish community flourished in Galicia. A large number of books and poems were published there, many Torah sages were engaged in it and Zionism and Yiddish culture also emerged. At the beginning of the 20th century, the number of Jews in Galicia reached more than 800,000.[citation needed]

Antisemitism

Antisemitism in Switzerland in the years between the First and Second World Wars was mostly directed towards the so-called Ostjuden who were perceived as having a foreign dress and culture. In fact, Ostjuden were explicitly mentioned by Heinrich Rothmund, the head of the Swiss federal Alien Police: "...we are not such horrible monsters after all. But we do not let anyone walk all over us, especially Eastern Jews, who, as it is well known, try and try again to do just that, because they think a straight line is crooked, here our position is probably in complete agreement with our Swiss people."[6]

As antisemitism in Germany escalated after the First World War, German Jews were divided with regard to how they felt about the Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jews. Some German Jews, who were wrestling with the notion of their own German identity, became more accepting of a shared identity with Eastern Jewry. The Austrian novelist Joseph Roth depicted the misfortunes of Eastern European Jewry in the aftermath of the First World War in his novel The Wandering Jews. After the Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935, Roth said that the archetype of the "Wandering Jew" now extended to the identity of the German Jews, who he described as being "more homeless than even his cousin in Lodz".[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Israel Bartal, "The Eastern European Jews Prior to the Arrival of the Ashkenazim", The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, May 29th, 2016.
  2. ^ Cecil Roth, "The World History of the Jewish People. Vol. XI (11): The Dark Ages. Jews in Christian Europe 711-1096 [Second Series: Medieval Period. Vol. Two: The Dark Ages", Rutgers University Press, 1966. Pp. 302-303.
  3. ^ Edgar C. Polomé, Werner Winter, Reconstructing Languages and Cultures, Walter de Gruyter, 2011-06-24, ISBN 978-3-11-086792-3.
  4. ^ Sergio DellaPergola, Some Fundamentals of Jewish Demographic History, in "Papers in Jewish Demography 1997", Jerusalem, The Hebrew University, 2001.
  5. ^ Gladstein AL, Hammer MF (March 2019). "Substructured population growth in the Ashkenazi Jews inferred with Approximate Bayesian Computation". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 36 (6): 1162–1171. doi:10.1093/molbev/msz047. PMID 30840069.
  6. ^ Wallace, Max (2018). In the Name of Humanity. New York: Penguin. ISBN 978-1-5107-3497-5.
  7. ^ "The End of German-Jewish Life: Ostjuden as a Metaphor for All Jews". The University of Chicago Library.

Sources

  • Jared Diamond (1993). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved November 8, 2010.
  • Hammer, MF; Redd, AJ; Wood, ET; et al. (June 2000). "Jewish and Middle Eastern non-Jewish populations share a common pool of Y-chromosome biallelic haplotypes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 97 (12): 6769–6774. doi:10.1073/pnas.100115997. PMC 18733. PMID 10801975.
  • Wade, Nicholas (9 May 2000). "Y Chromosome Bears Witness to Story of the Jewish Diaspora". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  • "Germany: Virtual Jewish History Tour". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  • Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopaedia 2007. . Archived from the original on 28 October 2009. Retrieved 27 December 2007.

eastern, european, jewry, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, j. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Eastern European Jewry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The expression Eastern European Jewry has two meanings Its first meaning refers to the current political spheres of the Eastern European countries and its second meaning refers to the Jewish communities in Russia and Poland The phrase Eastern European Jews or Jews of the East from German Ostjuden was established during the 19th century in the German Empire and in the western provinces of the Austro Hungarian Empire aiming to distinguish the integrating Jews in Central Europe from those Jews who lived in the East This feature deals with the second meaning of the concept of Eastern European Jewry the Jewish groups that lived in Poland Ukraine Belarus Latvia Lithuania Estonia Russia Romania Hungary and modern day Moldova in collective settlement from Hebrew Kibbutz קיבוץ Many of whom spoke Yiddish The density of the Jewish settlement in the Moshav in 1905 The Hebrew text The yellow area covers the distribution of the Jews of the Polish Lithuanian Union their original places of residence and their immigration areas At the beginning of the 20th century over 6 million Jews lived in Eastern Europe They were organized into large and small communities living in big cities such as Warsaw with a population of about 300 000 Jews as well as in small towns with populations of only tens or hundreds of Jews Contents 1 Before the 18th century 1 1 Economics and commerce 1 2 Traditional life 1 3 Social Structure 2 From the late 18th century to the beginning of the 20th century 2 1 The settlement 2 2 Galicia 3 Antisemitism 4 See also 5 References 6 SourcesBefore the 18th century Edit Polish Jews in typical clothing 17th century top 18th century bottom At the beginning of the 16th century the number of Jews who lived in Eastern Europe was estimated to be between 10 000 and 30 000 Some of their communities spoke Leshon Knaan and they observed various Non Ashkenazi traditions and customs 1 In parts of Eastern Europe before the arrival of the Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe some non Ashkenazi Jews were present who spoke Leshon Knaan and held various other non Ashkenazi traditions and customs 1 As early as the beginning of the 17th century it was known that there were Jews living in cities of Lithuania who spoke Russiany from Hebrew רוסיתא and did not know the Ashkenaz tongue i e German Yiddish In 1966 the historian Cecil Roth questioned the inclusion of all Yiddish speaking Jews as Ashkenazim in descent suggesting that upon the arrival of Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe to Eastern Europe from the Middle Ages to the 16th century there were already a substantial number of Jews there who later abandoned their original culture in favor of Ashkenazi culture 2 3 However according to more recent research mass migrations of Yiddish speaking Ashkenazi Jews occurred to Eastern Europe from the west who increased due to high birth rates and absorbed and or largely replaced the preceding non Ashkenazi Jewish groups of Eastern Europe the latter groups numbers are estimated by demographer Sergio DellaPergola to have been small In the mid 18th century the number of Jews increased to about 750 000 During this period only one third of East European Jews lived in areas with a predominantly Polish population The rest of the Jews lived among other peoples mainly in the Ukrainian and Russian Lithuanian environments The numerical increase was due to mass migration of Yiddish speaking Ashkenazi Jews from Central Europe to Eastern Europe beginning from the Middle Ages to the 16th century as well as a high birth rate among these immigrants 4 Genetic evidence also indicates that Yiddish speaking Eastern European Jews largely descended from Ashkenazi Jews who migrated from central Europe and subsequently experienced high birthrates and genetic isolation 5 In the mid 18th century two thirds of the Jewish population of Eastern Europe lived in cities or towns and a third of it lived in villages a unique phenomenon that hardly existed in Western Europe In every village where Jews lived there were only two Jewish families on average and each family usually consisted of no more than ten Jews In most of the urban localities in which they lived the Jewish population comprised half the number of residents on average It follows that in many towns there was a Jewish majority This reality has been intensified over the years with the percentage of Jews in cities and towns increasing and thus the shtetl phenomenon was created the Jewish town a large part of which was Jewish and whose Jewish cultural character was prominent Economics and commerce Edit The Jews engaged in trade and various crafts such as tailoring weaving leather processing and even agriculture The economic activity of Eastern European Jewry was different from that of Central and Western European Jews in Eastern Europe the Jews developed specializations in trade leasing and crafts which were hardly found in Western Europe The Eastern European Jewry also had a great deal of involvement in economic matters that Jews in Central and Western Europe did not deal with at all Until the mid 17th century with the 1648 Cossack riots on Jewish population eastern European Jews lived in a relatively comfortable environment that enabled them to thrive The Jews for the most part enjoyed extensive economic personal and religious freedom Thus for example deportations foreclosure of Jewish property and the removal of financial debts of non Jews to Jews which were common in Western Europe hardly existed in the East Despite the privileges there were also hatred expressions towards the Jews This phenomenon was described by a Jewish sage named Shlomo Maimon It is possible that there is no country other than Poland where freedom of religion and hatred of religion are found in equal measure The Jews are allowed to preserve their religion with absolute freedom and the rest of the civil rights have been assigned to them and they have even their own courts And in opposite to that you find that religion hatred is so great there to the extent of that matter the word Jew is an abomination Traditional life Edit The amount of Torah study among Eastern European Jews at the beginning of their settlement was little As a result many halakhic from Hebrew הלכתיות questions and problems were addressed to rabbis and Torah scholars in Germany and Bohemia which were close to them From the 16th century luxurious study centers were established in Eastern Europe where the Hassidic movement also began to develop Social Structure Edit The Jewish social structure in Eastern Europe was built of communities and from the mid 16th century to 1764 central institutions including communal ones of self leadership in Eastern Europe were running The two main institutions were the Four State Committee and the Lithuanian State Council The committees role was to collect taxes from the Jewish communities and deliver them to the authorities Later they took it upon themselves to represent the Jewish community to the foreign rulers of those countries In addition the committee had judicial authority over internal laws and Halachot from Hebrew הלכות within the Jewish communities The Council of Four Lands was the highest institution among the committees The committee was composed out of seven rabbinic judges when the head of them was always a representative of the Lublin community The other members of the committee were representatives of the cities of Poznan Krakow and Lvov Historical documents bearing the Committee s signature indicate that in certain periods the committee was expanded to represent all the important communities in the kingdom and then the number of representatives was close to thirty At first the committee met in Lublin giving the city the status of a top notch Jewish center The conference which lasted about two weeks was held once a year during the winter when the city s largest trade fair was coordinated In a later period the conference was held twice a year a winter gathering in Lublin and a summer conference in the city of Yaroslav in Galicia From the late 18th century to the beginning of the 20th century EditIn the late 18th century the Jews of Eastern Europe were divided into two major geographic regions a settlement controlled by the Russian Empire and a Galicia under the control of the Austria Hungarian Empire The settlement Edit The three divisions of Poland first in 1772 then in 1793 and finally in 1795 left the Aryan part of the Polish Jewry under the authority of the Russian Empire The Russian government turned out to be less tolerant towards Jews and more restrictions were imposed on Jews than the rest of the Polish people In 1791 Czarina Yekaterina the Great established the region of the Settlement the Moshav in the western fringes of the empire where only Jews were allowed to live The Moshav included most of the former territories of Poland and Lithuania which were populated by concentrations of Jews Limiting those boundaries led to the uprooting and deportation of Moscow and St Petersburg Jews to the eastern border of the country which was one of the main goals of the authorities Later the Jews of Kiev were also forbidden to live in their own city even though Kiev itself was included in the region of the Settlement At the beginning of the 20th century more than five million Jews lived in Czarist Russia with 90 of them concentrated in the region of the Settlement and about three million Jews lived in the former borders of Poland According to various estimates Eastern European Jewry at the beginning of the 20th century constituted 80 of world Jewry Galicia Edit Further information Galician Jews Another large Jewish community in Eastern Europe was Galicia the territory that was given to Austria in the partition of Poland Towards the end of the 19th century Emperor Franz Joseph intended to acculturate the Jews by establishing a network of schools for general studies Some Jews supported this goal but most of them opposed it Further resistance arose when an attempt was made to settle the Jews on the land The Jews in Galicia were known for their religious piety and they fought hard against the Enlightenment and against attempts to assimilate them culturally There was also a sharp confrontation between supporters of Hasidism and those opposed to it Misnagdim Eventually Hasidism won and became the dominant movement among the Jews of Galicia In 1867 the Jews of Galicia were granted full equality of rights and thus were the first among the Jews of Eastern Europe to be emancipated The Zionist movement flourished in Galicia During the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century before World War I the Jewish community flourished in Galicia A large number of books and poems were published there many Torah sages were engaged in it and Zionism and Yiddish culture also emerged At the beginning of the 20th century the number of Jews in Galicia reached more than 800 000 citation needed Antisemitism EditAntisemitism in Switzerland in the years between the First and Second World Wars was mostly directed towards the so called Ostjuden who were perceived as having a foreign dress and culture In fact Ostjuden were explicitly mentioned by Heinrich Rothmund the head of the Swiss federal Alien Police we are not such horrible monsters after all But we do not let anyone walk all over us especially Eastern Jews who as it is well known try and try again to do just that because they think a straight line is crooked here our position is probably in complete agreement with our Swiss people 6 As antisemitism in Germany escalated after the First World War German Jews were divided with regard to how they felt about the Yiddish speaking Eastern European Jews Some German Jews who were wrestling with the notion of their own German identity became more accepting of a shared identity with Eastern Jewry The Austrian novelist Joseph Roth depicted the misfortunes of Eastern European Jewry in the aftermath of the First World War in his novel The Wandering Jews After the Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935 Roth said that the archetype of the Wandering Jew now extended to the identity of the German Jews who he described as being more homeless than even his cousin in Lodz 7 See also EditAshkenazi Jews History of the Jews in Poland History of the Jews in Russia History of the Jews in Ukraine Council of Four Lands Shtetl Pale of SettlementReferences Edit a b Israel Bartal The Eastern European Jews Prior to the Arrival of the Ashkenazim The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities May 29th 2016 Cecil Roth The World History of the Jewish People Vol XI 11 The Dark Ages Jews in Christian Europe 711 1096 Second Series Medieval Period Vol Two The Dark Ages Rutgers University Press 1966 Pp 302 303 Edgar C Polome Werner Winter Reconstructing Languages and Cultures Walter de Gruyter 2011 06 24 ISBN 978 3 11 086792 3 Sergio DellaPergola Some Fundamentals of Jewish Demographic History in Papers in Jewish Demography 1997 Jerusalem The Hebrew University 2001 Gladstein AL Hammer MF March 2019 Substructured population growth in the Ashkenazi Jews inferred with Approximate Bayesian Computation Molecular Biology and Evolution 36 6 1162 1171 doi 10 1093 molbev msz047 PMID 30840069 Wallace Max 2018 In the Name of Humanity New York Penguin ISBN 978 1 5107 3497 5 The End of German Jewish Life Ostjuden as a Metaphor for All Jews The University of Chicago Library Sources EditJared Diamond 1993 Who are the Jews PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved November 8 2010 Hammer MF Redd AJ Wood ET et al June 2000 Jewish and Middle Eastern non Jewish populations share a common pool of Y chromosome biallelic haplotypes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97 12 6769 6774 doi 10 1073 pnas 100115997 PMC 18733 PMID 10801975 Wade Nicholas 9 May 2000 Y Chromosome Bears Witness to Story of the Jewish Diaspora The New York Times Retrieved 10 October 2012 Germany Virtual Jewish History Tour Jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 2013 07 19 Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopaedia 2007 Europe Archived from the original on 28 October 2009 Retrieved 27 December 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eastern European Jewry amp oldid 1094339957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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