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The Velizh Affair

Page 35

by Eugene M. Avrutin


  St. Petersburg: Jewish colony in, 108;

  Serafinovich, Kazimir, 25

  Russian State Historical Archive

  servants, Christian: in Jewish

  in, xi, xvi

  households, 65– 67; role in

  Strakhov, Vasilii Ivanovich: ambitions

  ritual murder libel, 72, 181n38;

  of, 104– 5, 136; arrests by, 80,

  testimonies in Velizh ritual

  90, 101, 103, 161– 62; assistants

  murder case, 67– 69, 72– 77

  to, 77; association with women

  Shkurin (Velizh investigator), 77, 129,

  off ill repute, 79; career of, 60;

  130, 142, 143

  complaints against, 82– 83, 101,

  shtadlanut (lobbying of

  104, 108– 10, 112, 113– 14; expansion

  authorities), 106

  of investigation by, 117– 31; houses

  shtibls (social and recreational centers),

  converted into prisons by, 79– 80,

  in Velizh, 39

  90– 91; illness and death of, 143;

  Shubinskaia, Khasia, 162

  interrogation of suspects, 80– 90,

  Siberia, exile to, 146; during Nicholas

  96– 99, 121– 31, 135; interrogation

  I’s reign, 155; as punishment

  of witnesses, 61– 64, 67– 69, 71,

  for conversion to Judaism, 144;

  119– 29; Khovanskii’s confidence

  as punishment in Velizh ritual

  in, 103, 104; and presumption of

  murder case, 145– 46

  Jews’ guilt, 61, 70, 104– 5, 136– 37;

  Index

  223

  reports to Khovanskii, 70, 72,

  Maksimova, 61, 64, 125, 127; new

  118, 137, 138, 182n2; response to

  revelations by, 119– 29; old score

  complaints against, 102– 3, 105–

  with Tsetlina, 25– 26, 29, 30;

  6, 135; techniques used to extract

  questioning of testimonies of,

  confessions, 134– 35; torture used

  123– 24, 149– 50; reputation of, 23,

  by, allegations of, 109, 110; and

  88, 124; residence of, 88; role in

  Velizh investigation, 60– 61, 66–

  Velizh ritual murder, confession

  77; wider conspiracy suspected by,

  regarding, 72– 74, 76, 77; societal

  118, 119

  anxieties reflected in story of, 66;

  strappado, 133

  Strakhov’s interrogation of, 61–

  Subbotin, Andrei, 52

  64, 119; testimonies of, 23, 61– 64,

  Subbotniks (Sabbatarians), 66

  67, 69, 71, 72– 77, 132; visits to

  suicide: famines in East European

  Fedor’s house, 16, 17

  borderlands and, 47; during

  testimonies. See witness testimonies

  Velizh ritual murder investigation, Thomas of Monmouth, 2– 3

  100, 121, 136

  Tommaso (Father), alleged murder

  supernatural. See magic

  of, 111

  swamps, around Velizh, 32, 33; Fedor’s

  torture: confessions extracted through,

  body discovered in, 17– 18

  133, 134– 35, 140; contemporary

  synagogues, in Velizh: closing of, 77,

  practices of, 191n9; limits on use

  117. See also Great Synagogue

  of, in imperial Russia, 133– 34;

  Mordvinov’s criticism of, 148;

  Talmud, quotations from, as proof of

  use in Velizh ritual murder

  ritual murder, 138

  investigation, 109, 110, 133

  Tarashkevich, Markelom, 71, 121, 129

  town(s), small market, 2; belief in

  tavern(s): Jewish lease- holders for,

  supernatural in, 54– 56; filth and

  restrictions on, 45; in Velizh, 19,

  disease in, 52– 53; interethnic

  21, 24, 36– 37, 40, 50

  relations in, 10– 11; poverty in,

  Tel’shi: Napoleon’s invasion of, 44;

  47, 48– 49; Velizh as, 10, 20, 20;

  ritual murder case in, 131,

  vitality of blood libel in, 2,

  154, 190n48

  6, 10; in western borderlands,

  Terenteeva, Maria, 21, 22– 23; appellate

  vs. in Ukraine and Russian

  court verdict and, 28; arrest

  heartland, 48

  of, 70; complaint addressed

  trial: in inquisitorial process, 27. See

  to Alexander I, 58, 59, 63– 64,

  also ritual murder trials

  179n2; complaints about

  tsaddikim (righteous individuals),

  Jews, 64– 65; confession of,

  46, 47; tales told by,

  72, 105; confrontations with

  supernatural in, 55

  accused, 81, 82, 83, 87– 88, 89,

  Tsetlin, Evzik, 21; arrest of, 103, 161;

  122– 24; divination by, 16; and

  complaint to governor- general,

  Eremeeva, 70; exile to Siberia, 152;

  101– 2, 108; confrontations

  forced conversion to Judaism,

  with accusers, 124, 126, 130;

  testimony regarding, 74– 75; on

  emotional toll on, 135; Fratka’s

  host desecration, 126, 127; and

  testimony against, 98; on host

  24

  224

  Index

  Tsetlin, Evzik ( cont. )

  Vatican, on ritual murder libel, 148

  desecration, 127; house of, 15;

  Velizh, 34; Alexander I’s stop in, 57– 58;

  interrogations of, 84– 85, 121,

  beggar women in, 1, 16, 21– 23,

  126, 127; Jewish community’s

  25– 26; Belarusian population

  defense of, 25; as primary suspect,

  of, 35, 50; buildings in, 35– 40;

  23, 72; prison conditions for, 105,

  Christian places of worship in,

  114– 15; and Shmerka Berlin, 84;

  38, 39– 40; filth and diseases in,

  Terenteeva’s testimonies against,

  48– 49, 52; first ritual murder

  17, 72, 124; testimony of, 26

  investigation in (1805), 7; history

  Tsetlin, Itsko, 162

  of region, 33– 34; houses converted

  Tsetlin, Sheftel, petitions by, 103– 4,

  into prisons in, 79– 80, 90– 91;

  113, 114

  Il’inskaia Street in, 19, 21, 39, 41;

  Tsetlina, Itka: confrontation with

  interethnic relations in, 21, 34–

  Maksimova, 86; emotional toll

  35, 50; Jewish economic activities

  on, 135; secret communication

  in, 50; Jewish educational and

  with father, 91, 95; Terenteeva’s

  religious institutions in, 38– 39, 50;

  testimony against, 72

  Jewish inhabitants of, 19– 21, 25,

  Tsetlina, Khanna, 21; appellate court

  34, 40, 47, 49– 50, 80; maps of,

  verdict and, 28; arrest of, 80,

  14– 15, 36– 37; marketplace in,

  101, 161; confrontations with

  20, 35, 40; Napoleon’s invasion

  accusers, 130; domestic servant

  and, 44; population growth

  of, 24, 67; emotional toll on, 135;

  in, 49; poverty in, 47, 48– 49;

  Fratka’s testimony against, 98;

  Smolensk Street in, 22, 40;

  on host desecration, 127;

  synagogues in, closing of, 77, 117;

  house of, 15; initial testimonies

  tales of Jewish ritua
l murder

  regarding, 24; interrogations of,

  in, 56; today, 34, 35– 38, 38;

  86, 121, 126, 127; Kasachevskaia’s

  topography of region, 32– 33; town

  testimony against, 24;

  hall in, 22, 35; town jail in, 40, 79

  Maksimova’s testimony against,

  Velizh archive, 12

  67– 68, 75, 129; as primary

  Velizh Museum, 38, 39

  suspect, 23, 72; in prison, 92, 105; Velizh ritual murder case: anxieties

  proclamation of innocence,

  about religious sectarianism

  25, 26; tavern of, 21; Terenteeva’s

  and, 77; charges in, 80, 144;

  old score with, 25– 26, 29, 30;

  crime scene in, report on, 18;

  Terenteeva’s testimony against, 17,

  Dal’ report on, 157; dismissal of,

  23, 61– 62, 63, 72, 73; testimony

  151– 52; divination in, 16– 17, 22;

  of, 25– 26, 85

  first investigation of, 17, 18– 19,

  Turnovskii, Iosel’, 80, 161

  23– 27, 28; forensic evidence

  in, 18– 19, 104; international

  Ukraine, market towns in, 48

  response to, 111; lack of publicity

  Uniate Church, 35. See also St. Il’insk

  regarding, 158; material evidence

  Uniate Church (Velizh)

  in, 69– 70, 99, 185n71; Ministry

  Uniate priest, role in Velizh ritual

  of Justice on, 112, 113; Nicholas

  murder investigation, 71, 121, 129

  I on, 153; presumption of guilt in,

  Index

  225

  61, 70, 104– 5; primary suspects

  William of Norwich, 2– 3

  in, 23– 27; punishments in, 152;

  witchcraft prosecution: decline in,

  reconstruction of events in,

  factors responsible for, 4, 156;

  confessions leading to, 72– 77;

  inquisitorial procedure used

  reopening of, 60; ritual murder

  in, 9; Jewish ritual murder cases

  accusations preceding, 1, 7– 8;

  compared to, 11, 29– 30, 117,

  ritual murder trials following,

  132, 136; refusal of charity and,

  153– 54; rumors and, 2, 17, 23– 24,

  29– 30; rumors and, 131

  103, 121; Senate review of, 144–

  witches: belief in, in Belarusian folk

  47; State Council on, 147– 52;

  traditions, 12; heretics compared

  Vitebsk provincial court on, 28,

  to, 156; ritual of, description of

  29, 60. See also under criminal

  forced conversion to Judaism

  investigation

  and, 74

  Vezmenskaia, Genia, 25

  witness testimonies, inquisitorial

  Vil’na (Wilno): Jews in, 34, 173n14;

  procedure and, 9

  Napoleon’s invasion of, 43, 44;

  witness testimonies, in Velizh ritual

  ritual murder cases in, 6

  murder case, 23– 24, 61– 64, 67–

  Vitebsk: economy of, 47, 48, 175n51;

  69, 71, 119– 29; contradictions

  famines in, 42, 44, 47; filth and

  in, 69, 70, 122, 125, 126, 127,

  diseases in, 52– 53; Jews in, 46;

  149– 50; vs. forensic evidence,

  medical services in, lack of basic

  150, 151; questioning of veracity

  infrastructure for, 53; mortality

  of, 149– 50; role of Uniate priest

  rates in, 52; Napoleon’s invasion

  in, 71, 121, 129; shaping of

  and, 43; province of, origins

  corroboration in, 71– 72; story

  of, 34; ritual murder cases in, 6;

  line in, 72– 77

  transportation revolution and, 49

  written statements: inquisitorial

  Vul’fson, Feiga, 162

  techniques used to extract, 134;

  Vul’fson, Itsko, 162

  Velizh ritual murder investigation

  and demand for, 82, 84, 85, 89

  Walsh, Robert, 139

  Walter, Jacob, 43

  Zaikovskii (Velizh investigator), 77

  Wengeroff, Pauline, 55

  Zalman, Shneur, 46– 47

  western borderlands. See East

  Zaretskii, Leizar’, 162

  European borderlands

  Zarkha, Berka, 99

  Western Dvina: bodies found in, 7, 8;

  Zaslav, ritual murder case in, 6, 154– 55

  transportation revolution and, 49

  Ze’ev- Wolf, R. Hillel b., 106

  Western Europe: history of

  Zhelnova, Melania, 70, 136

  ritual murder libel in, 2– 5;

  Zhitomir: restrictions on Jewish

  humanitarian intervention in,

  residence in, 173n14; ritual murder

  110– 11; inquisitorial system in,

  trial in, 138

  9, 168n30; sensationalization of

  Zonnenberg, Zundel’, 107, 108

  crime in, 8, 9; witch- hunts in, 11

  Zwierki, ritual murder case in, 7

  26

  28

  Document Outline

  Cover

  The Velizh Affair

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Contents

  Preface

  Acknowledgments

  Introduction

  1. Fedor Goes for a Walk

  2. Small-Town Life

  3. Tsar Alexander Pays a Visit

  4. The Confrontations

  5. Grievances

  6. The Investigation Widens

  7. Boundaries of the Law

  Epilogue

  Appendix: Jewish Prisoners Held in the Town of Velizh

  Notes

  Selected Bibliography

  Index

 

 

 


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