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Anti-Jewish Violence: Rethinking the Pogrom in East European History PDF

239 Pages·2010·2.52 MB·English
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Dekel-Chen JuDAICA • RuSSIA & EAStERN EuRoPE Gaunt - Meir Anti Jewish and Bartal Jonathan Dekel-Chen “Some of the newest and most innovative A V is a s.enior work on the sources of, reactions to, and lecturer in modern history at the He- iolence representations of anti-Jewish violence and bDraevwid U Gnaivuenrstity of Jerusalem lthough overshadowed in his- . pogroms in eastern Europe.” torical memory by the Holocaust, the is Professor of History anti-Jewish pogroms of the late 19th Nata Stöadne Mrtö. Mrne Uirniversity in Sweden A and early 20th centuries were at the Q Jewish Public Culture in the time unrivaled episodes of ethnic vio- n holds. the Lorry I. Late Russian Empire lence. Incorporating newly available Lokey Chair in Judaic Studies at Port- —Jeffrey Veidlinger, author of t Rethinking the PogRom in primary sources, this collection of Q Ilasnrda eSlt aBtae rUtanilversity i groundbreaking essays by research- east euRoPean histoRy - ers from Europe, the United States, J and Israel investigates the phenome- is Professor of History “A significant advance in the literature on the e non of anti-Jewish violence, the local and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and transnational responses to po- at the Hebrew University of Jerusa- w roots and character of pogroms groms, and instances where violence lem. was averted. Focusing on the period i in late Imperial Russia and the early from World War I through Russia’s s early revolutionary years, the studies Soviet Union.” h include Poland, Ukraine, Belorussia, Lithuania, Crimea, and Siberia. V Stalin’s Forgotten Zion: Birobidzhan and Inspired by the work of the late John the Making of a Soviet Jewish Homeland —Robert Weinberg, author of i KIslrieare, lt hBea vrotalul me includes contribu- o Q tViolandsi bmyi:r P. Buldakov l Jonathan Dekel-Chen e David Engel David Gaunt n Peter Holquist Lilia Kalmina c Claire Le Foll e Vladimir Levin Eric Lohr Natan M. Meir EditEd by Vladas Sirutavičius INDIANA Darius Staliūnas Pogrom Jonathan Dekel-Chen, David gaunt, in Kiev, 1919 University Press Arkadi Zeltser Jacket illustration: Issachar Ber Ryback, INDIANA natan m. meir, and israel Bartal , collection of the Mishkan LeOmanut, Bloomington & Indianapolis Museum of Art, Ein Harod, Israel. www.iupress.indiana.edu 1-800-842-6796 AntiJewishViolence MECH.indd 1 9/7/10 9:35 AM Anti-Jewish Violence Anti-Jewish Violence Rethinking the Pogrom in East European History Edited by JONATHAN DEKEL-CHEN DAVID GAUNT NATAN M. MEIR ISRAEL BARTAL INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bloomington and Indianapolis CONTENTS Preface: A Tribute to John D. Klier ix Ac know ledg ments xiii List of Abbreviations xv Map: Sites of Major Pogroms xviii Introduction 1 David Gaunt, Jonathan Dekel- Chen, Natan M. Meir, and Israel Bartal 1 What’s in a Pogrom? Eu ro pe an Jews in the Age of Violence 19 David Engel Part 1. Twentieth- Century Pogroms 2 1915 and the War Pogrom Paradigm in the Rus sian Empire 41 Eric Lohr 3 The Role of Personality in the First (1914– 1915) Rus sian Occupation of Galicia and Bukovina 52 Peter Holquist 4 Freedom, Shortages, Violence: The Origins of the “Revolutionary Anti- Jewish Pogrom” in Rus sia, 1917– 1918 74 Vladimir P. Buldakov Part 2. Responses to Pogroms 5 Preventing Pogroms: Patterns in Jewish Politics in Early Twentieth- Century Rus sia 95 Vladimir Levin 6 “The Sword Hanging over Their Heads”: The Signifi cance of Pogrom for Rus sian Jewish Everyday Life and Self- Understanding (The Case of Kiev) 111 Natan M. Meir vi CONTENTS Part 3. Regional Perspectives 7 The Possibility of the Impossible: Pogroms in Eastern Siberia 131 Lilia Kalmina 8 Was Lithuania a Pogrom- Free Zone? (1881– 1940) 144 Vladas Sirutavicius and Darius Stalivnas 9 The Missing Pogroms of Belorus sia, 1881– 1882: Conditions and Motives of an Absence of Violence 159 Claire Le Foll 10 Ethnic Confl ict and Modernization in the Interwar Period: The Case of Soviet Belorus sia 174 Arkadi Zeltser 11 Defusing the Ethnic Bomb: Resolving Local Confl ict through Philanthropy in the Interwar USSR 186 Jonathan Dekel- Chen Glossary 205 List of Contributors 207 Index 209 John Doyle Klier (1944– 2007) PREFACE: A TRIBUTE TO JOHN DOYLE KLIER (1944– 2007) John Doyle Klier was the Sidney and Elizabeth Corob Professor of Mod- ern Jewish History at University College, London. He began his univer- sity teaching career at Fort Hays State University, Kansas. John moved to University College, London in 1990 and r ose to the rank of Professor in 1996. For anyone engaged in the study of modern Eu ro pe an history during the past two dec ades, familiarity with John Klier’s scholarship was a rite of passage. His seminal works—Russia Gathers Her Jews (DeKalb, 1986) and Imperial Russ ia’s Jewish Question, 1855–1 881 (Cambridge, 1995)—a re re- quired reading in university courses around the globe. Scholars in the fi eld had been waiting anxiously for the publication of his newest (and tragi- cally, last) monograph. In the last few months of his life, John neared the completion of the manuscript for this book, titled “Rus sians, Jews and the Pogroms of 1881-1 882,” to be published by Cambridge University Press. Following his death, Lars Fischer, François Guesnet and John’s widow, Helen Klier, took up the completion of that long- awaited project. John was fond of saying that the work of Hans Rogger sparked the reassessment of relations between the late Imperial Russ ian state and its Jews. It is equally true for anyone who knew his work that John Klier gave this revision its scholarly “teeth.” He was among the fi rst pioneering West- ern scholars to work in the Soviet archives in the 1980s. As a result, John quite literally reshaped the way that scholars and laypeople thought about the behavior of the Russ ian state and its peoples toward their Jewish sub- jects and neighbors during the nineteenth century. Most notably, he helped to change the way recurring anti- Jewish violence was understood and allowed other scholars to question many assumptions about the con- nection between the Imperial Rus sian regime and the pogroms. The im- portance of this cannot be overstated, given the centrality of anti- Jewish violence in the varieties of national narratives of the Jewish people and the mark these have left on the popu l ar memory about the Russ ian Empire. John helped to turn the study of pogroms and anti-J ewish violence into a fi eld of study in its own right. For anyone who had the good fortune to know him, from the fi rst meeting it was obvious that John was much more than a brilliant scholar. His unique blend of intellect, earthly common sense, and warmth made it

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