Pogrom

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by Steven J. Zipperstein

Chinese Americans, 101–3, 186

  Chinese Theater, New York City, 101, 104

  Chirikov, Evgenii, 190–92

  Chişinău (Kishinev’s current and pre-Russian name), xiii, 21, 38, 64, 207–8

  Chomsky, Noam, 18–19

  Choral Synagogue, Kishinev, 55

  Chosen People, The (Chirikov), 190–92

  Christianity:

  contempt for Russian Orthodoxy, 186, 188

  Jewish threat to, 174, 177, 183

  see also blood libel

  “Christian socialism,” 22, 148

  Chto takoe Rossiia (What Is Russia?), Krushevan, 159

  Ciuflea Church, Kishinev, 61, 63

  Civil-Military Conflict in Imperial Russia, 1881–1914 (Fuller), 222n54

  civil rights, black, 188, 194–95

  NAACP, xv, xix, 14, 188, 194, 198, 200–203

  Cleveland Gazette, 194

  Cohn, Norman, 146–47

  Collier’s, 200

  Committee for the Advancement of the Negro, 202–3

  see also National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)

  Communism, Transdniestria, 21

  conservatism:

  Russian, 12, 15, 22, 37, 95, 157

  Zionist, 114, 175–76

  see also antisemitism; Black Hundreds

  conspiracy theory, 167

  constitutional crisis (1905–6), Russia, 4, 17, 192–93

  Correspondence Regarding the Treatment of Jews in Russia (British Parliament), 5

  cowardice:

  Jewish male, xviii, 83, 89, 109, 117–18, 130–38, 141, 142

  “sheep to the slaughter,” 141

  Crane, Stephen, 109

  Crimean War (1856), 30

  Crown Heights riots (1991), Brooklyn, 3

  Darwin, Charles, 163

  Davidic kingdom, Jewish restoration of, 169, 174

  see also Zionists

  Da Vinci Code, 167

  Davitt, Michael, 106, 119–24

  Bernstein-Kogan and, 181–82

  The Boer War for Freedom, 120–21

  Kishineff character modeled on, 105

  on Kishinev pogrom, 68, 73, 76–77, 98, 103, 105, 133–38, 189

  Kishinev stay, 44, 52, 109, 119–20, 123–24, 134, 164

  newspaper writing, 103, 105–6, 120, 136, 138, 189

  relief collections, 180

  Within the Pale, xviii, 105–7

  deaths:

  Kishinev pogrom, xiv

  yizkor (memorial for the dead), 103

  see also ritual murder accusations

  Delo Artabanova (Krushevan), 150

  De Michelis, Cesare G., 149, 153, 170

  Democratic Party platform (1892), U.S., 186

  Dialogue aux enfers entre Machiavelli et Montesquieu (Joly), 168–69, 171

  Diaspora, Bialik and, 108, 115, 125, 131, 140–42

  Dinkins, David, 3

  Dinur, Ben-Zion, xiii–xiv, 140–41

  Dizengoff, Meir, 113, 122–23, 181

  Dniester River, xvi, 32, 42, 43, 56, 154

  Doiben, David, 67, 68

  “Dom nomer 13” (“The House at Number 13”), Korolenko, 77–78, 81

  Dostoevsky, Fyodor, 11

  dress, Jewish, 82

  Dreyfus Affair, 10

  Dubnow, Simon, 107, 114–17, 137

  Dubrossary killing, 56–58, 97

  Dveste let vmeste (Two Hundred Years Together), Solzhenitsyn, 20–21

  earthquake, Kishinev (1940), 208

  East Africa, English-sponsored Jewish settlement, 14, 177

  Eco, Umberto, 150

  economics:

  Bessarabia, 33–35, 43

  fundraising for relief, 102, 104, 149

  Jewish characteristic, 5, 6, 7, 15, 122, 162–63, 207

  Kishinev, 34–35, 42–53, 149, 207

  Eichmann, Adolf, 141

  Eichmann in Jerusalem (Arendt), 2, 141

  elder, Jewish, 168, 182

  see also Protocols of the Elders of Zion

  Enemies of the Human Race, The (Butmi), 171–72

  England:

  Ahad Ha’am model, 112

  Irish vs., 119–20

  synagogue ritual, 103

  see also British; London

  ethnic and religious groups:

  Bessarabia, 32–33, 36–37

  see also race; religion

  European nationalism, 111

  Evansville, Illinois, the American Kishineff, 193–94

  feathers, in pogroms, 10, 131

  Fein, Yisroel ben Yehudah, 103

  Feldman, Herman, 65–66, 67

  Fishman, Yudel, 66

  forgery, 206

  Plehve letter, 15, 96, 183

  Protocols of the Elders of Zion, xvi–xvii, 99, 168–69

  For Two Thousand Years (Sebastian), 145

  Forverts (Yiddish daily), 11, 104, 158, 187, 189

  Foundations of the Nineteenth Century, The (Chamberlain), 148

  France, synagogue ritual, 103

  Frankel, Jonathan, xx, 103–4

  Frankfurter, Felix, 1

  Frederic, Harold, 5

  “Free Russia” movement (1890s), 186

  Friends of Russian Freedom, American, 188–89, 196

  Frug, Shimen, 103, 107

  Fuller, William C., Jr, 222n54

  fundraising, for relief, 102, 104, 149, 180

  Gandhi, Mohandas, 120

  Gaster, Moses, 181

  Gaza war (2014), 21

  gentiles, 73, 143, 171

  Kishinev, 24, 45, 47–48, 66, 69, 71–75, 79, 84, 88, 97, 117–18, 128, 208

  U.S., 122

  Ghetto, The (Wirth), 185

  Ginzberg, Asher, see Ahad Ha’am

  Giuliani, Rudy, 3

  Glazer, Nathan, 205

  Gluzman, Michael, 125

  Goldman, Emma, xix, 189–92

  Golinkin, M., 113

  Golovinskii, Matvei, 169, 170

  Gomel:

  Jewish self-defense, 18, 86, 89–90

  pogrom, 198–99

  Gorky, Maxim, 180, 191

  government responsibility, belief in, 18

  for Kishinev pogrom, xvi, 10–12, 15–16, 18, 90–97, 117–19, 137–38, 198

  Governor General of Bessarabia:

  Raaben, 44–45, 48, 68, 71, 87, 90–91

  see also Urussov, Sergei S.

  gravestones, Bessarabia, 53–54, 54

  Greenschopin, Mordecai Mottel, 81

  Gringmut, V., 144

  Haganah, xv, xx, 13, 86

  Hagemeister, Michael, 149, 153, 170

  Har ha-keramim (The Mountain of Vineyards), Hillels, 35, 154

  Harshav, Benjamin, 6

  Ha-Shiloach journal, 124

  Hasidism, 53, 57, 128

  Ha-Tsofeh, 140

  “Have Pity” (Frug), 103, 107

  Ha-Zeman (St. Petersburg Hebrew daily), 117

  Hearst, William Randolph/Hearst press, 13, 76, 103, 104, 120, 123, 180–82, 189

  Hebrew language, 55, 108, 111, 113, 115, 125

  Hebrew literature, 118

  Ahad Ha’am, 111

  Bialik, 108, 115, 125

  school role, 55

  Hebrew opera, 113

  Hebrew press, 117, 147

  Hebron riot, 2

  Hemon, Aleksandar, 24

  Herald Square Theater, New York City, 190

  Herzl, Theodor, 14, 92, 111, 167, 175–78, 180–81

  Hilfsverein der deutschen Juden, Berlin, 180

  Hillels, Shlomo, 35, 154

  history:

  Jews in, 175

  Kishinev (1700s and 1800s), 38–40

  made and remade, 23

  memory preferred over, 132–33

  truth and fiction, 24–25

  History of a Lie, The (Bernstein), 146–47

  History of the Jews of Russia and Poland (Dubnow), 107

  Hitler, A., xiii, 148

  Holocaust:

  Kishinev anticipating, xiii–xiv

 
; pogrom term compared, 3

  Homage to Catalonia (Orwell), 61

  Homeland (TV Show), 3

  Horowitz, M., 105

  Hyndman, Henry, 121–22

  Illinois State Journal, 200–201

  immigration:

  Jewish, 92, 103–4, 122, 123

  restrictions on, 92, 102–3

  Independent, The, 200

  Independent Order, The, 106–7

  industry:

  Bessarabia, 33–34

  Kishinev, 52, 84

  riots rising from disputes in, 91

  insularity, 149

  intelligentsia, Jewish:

  Odessa, 110–17, 113

  responsibility of, 163

  “In the City of Killing” (Bialik’s best-known pogrom poem), xviii, 13, 107–9, 116, 124, 128–43, 206

  Dubnow’s admiration for, 116, 137

  in Israeli schools, 107, 128, 140–43

  Jabotinsky translation into Russian, 7, 86, 140

  on Jewish male cowardice, xviii, 85–86, 89, 109, 130–38, 141, 142

  nationalism, 114–15, 132–33

  Netanyahu referencing, 21

  weather, 61, 70, 129

  Ireland:

  Davitt, 119–20, 121, 122, 136

  vs. England, 119–20

  Limerick riot and boycott (1904), 122

  nationalists, 121, 135

  Iskra (Spark), 45

  isolation, 112, 163, 164

  Israel:

  ambassador to the U.S., 3

  armed forces, xv, 86

  Bialik in school curriculum, 107, 128, 140–43

  Bialik veneration, 140

  birth of State of, 20

  land of, 111–12

  Prime Minister Ben-Gurion, 140, 141

  and Sabra-Shatilla massacre, 3, 19

  Supreme Court, 3

  university qualifying exams (bagrut), 142

  Zionist goal, 111

  Jabotinsky, Vladimir, 7, 86, 114, 140

  Jan, Ira (Esfir Yeselevich), 126–28, 127

  Jassy, 179, 180

  Jerusalem:

  Eichmann trial (1961), 141

  temple destruction, 112, 114, 175

  Jesenská, Milena, 2

  “The Jewbird” (Malamud), 1–2, 3

  Jewish aggression, Kishinev pogrom (1903), 89, 132, 149, 182

  Jewish characteristics, 5–7, 15, 22, 123, 149

  economic, 5, 6, 7, 15, 122, 162–63, 207

  Jewish Chronicle, 205

  Jewish Masonic Lodge of the Free Sons of Israel, 106

  Jewish passivity, 89, 118, 141–42

  see also cowardice

  Jewish press:

  Bikher-velt (Book World), 16

  Crane, 109

  Davitt’s Within the Pale, 107

  Forverts (Yiddish daily), 11, 104, 158, 187, 189

  Ha-Shiloach journal, 124

  Ha-Tsofeh, 140

  Ha-Zeman (St. Petersburg Hebrew daily), 117

  The Independent Order, 106–7

  Jewish Chronicle, 205

  on Kishinev pogrom, 11, 106–7, 189

  on Krushevan family, 158

  postpogrom, 90

  Jewish Publication Society of America, 106–7

  Jewish responsibility:

  for Russian anti-Jewish violence, 5, 117–19

  Jewish separatism, 162–63, 205

  Jewish Socialist Labor Bund, xx, 13–14, 18, 83, 104, 131, 199

  Jewish Territorial Organization, 205

  Jewish water carrier, 49

  Joly, Maurice, 168–69, 171

  Journey from London to Odessa, A (Moore), 8–9

  “Journey to Iceland” (Auden), 101

  Joyce, James, 120

  Judaism:

  first-century, 114

  Odessa intelligentsia and, 110–15

  “Judaism in Music” (Wagner), 204

  Jungle, The (Sinclair), 120

  Kafka, Franz, 2

  Kahal, 175n

  Kahan Commission, 3, 19

  Kariv, Avraham, 139

  Kaufman, Melekh, 85

  Kazioshner, Chaim, 88

  Kempton-Wace Letters, The (London and Strunsky), 196

  Kennan, George, 186

  Khazin, Mikhail, 151–52

  Kiev, 28, 30, 43, 163

  Kigel, Moshe, 82–83, 103

  Kiserman, Yehiel, 86

  Kishineff plays, 104–5

  Kishinev, 27–60

  agriculture, 34–35, 38

  Alexandrov neighborhood, 40–41

  Alexandrovskaia Street, xxii, 40–41, 43, 44, 48

  Bernstein-Kogan, 178–82

  Bolgarskaia Street, 88

  burned down by invading Russians (1748), 38

  as Chişinău (current and pre-Russian name), xiii, 21, 38, 64, 207–8

  Chuflinskii Square, 63, 64, 67

  city duma, 155, 156

  Ciuflea Church, 61, 63

  correspondence bureau, 179–80

  Davitt stay, 44, 52, 109, 119–20, 123–24, 134, 164

  earthquake (1940), 208

  economics, 34–35, 42–53, 149, 207

  extremes of wealth and poverty, 42

  gentiles, 24, 45, 47–48, 66, 69, 71–75, 79, 84, 88, 97, 117–18, 128, 208

  history (1700s and 1800s), 38–40

  Jewish religious and cultural institutions, 54–55

  Krushevan, 155–56, 159, 182–83

  Manchester Way/Muncheshtskii Street, 76, 83–85, 90

  maps, 25, 29, 39

  moral laxity, 44–45

  Museum of Ethnography and National History, 51, 207

  neighbor relations before pogrom, 79–80, 82, 83

  New Market, 50, 65–71, 87–89

  Nikolaevskii Street, 69, 73, 75

  photos, 26, 40, 41, 42, 55

  physical characteristics, 29–30, 207

  population, 37, 40, 43, 50

  powder keg, 46

  Pushkin on, 28

  rabbis, 53

  refugees from, 117, 187

  residences, 41–42, 50–51, 65–66

  Schmidt (Karl), 29, 42, 45, 46, 49–50, 65, 98, 123

  seminary, 39

  urban qualities, 28

  Yiddish-language commercial guide (1901), 52–53

  see also Bessarabets (Kishinev newspaper); Governor General of Bessarabia; Lower Kishinev

  Kishinev pogrom (1903), 45–46, 61–100, 185–208

  American black mistreatment compared with, 187–88, 192–94

  Bernstein-Kogan spreading word of, 178–83

  Bialik interviews of victims, 73–76, 80, 85–86, 88, 115–16, 124–25, 128–29, 132, 137

  buildings targeted, 65–67, 70–71

  Christian framework, 188

  Davitt on, 68, 73, 76–77, 98, 103, 105, 133–38, 189

  extent of devastation, 72–73, 81–82, 100

  first day, 44, 61–71, 77, 89, 129

  government responsibility for (belief in), xvi, 10–12, 15–16, 18, 90–97, 117–19, 137–38, 198

  impact, 10–26, 82, 206–8

  Jewish aggression, 89, 132, 149, 182

  Jewish male cowardice, xviii, 83, 89, 109, 117–18, 130–38, 141, 142

  Jewish self-defense and, 13, 85–90, 132, 179–80

  justifications, 22, 58, 64–65, 119

  Kigel’s martyrdom, 82–83, 103

  Krushevan role, 64, 66, 90, 97–99, 135, 137, 145–46, 153

  number of rioters, 65, 68, 134, 137

  plays inspired by, 104–5, 189–92, 203–5

  rapes, xiv, 68, 73–79, 85, 125, 132, 134, 135

  relief campaigns for victims of, xix, 12, 101–4, 117, 149, 180, 189

  seminarian rioters, 64–65, 69, 80, 84, 90, 96, 137

  sources on, xvii–xviii

  synagogue liturgies highlighting, 5–6, 83, 103

  trials of the accused, 132, 137

  victims, 85, 134

  weather, 17, 61, 63, 70, 129

  world’s press on, 17–18, 91, 149, 183


  see also “In the City of Killing” (Bialik’s best-known pogrom poem); press

  Klausner, Joseph, 108, 124, 140

  Koestler, Arthur, 2–3

  Kogen pharmacy, 50–51

  Korolenko, Vladimir, 77–78, 81

  Kresilchik, Mitya, 74

  Kristallnacht, 2, 10

  Kropotkin, Prince Peter, 186, 190

  Krushevan, Anastasia (Pavel’s sister, Jewish name Sarah Borenstein), 155, 156, 158–59

  Krushevan, Pavel, 144, 149–79, 157, 166, 207

  antisemitism, 145–65, 172–76, 198

  assassination attempt on (June 1903), 147

  Bernstein-Kogan known to, 182–83

  Bessarabia guide, xvi, 46, 150, 152, 165

  Chto takoe Rossiia (What Is Russia?), 159

  Davitt seeking out, 123

  death (1909), 147

  debts, 165–66

  Delo Artabanova, 150

  favored themes, 155

  Jewish stepmother, 155–56

  Kishinev pogrom role, 64, 66, 90, 97–99, 135, 137, 145–46, 153

  personal papers, 150–61

  Protocols of the Elders of Zion version, xvi–xvii, xviii–xix, 16, 22, 99, 146–50, 153, 159, 167–71, 183

  sexuality, 154

  Shornikov study, 22–23

  Znamia (St. Petersburg newspaper), 146–47, 165–67, 171, 172–74

  see also Bessarabets (Kishinev newspaper)

  Krushevan, Pavel Epiminovdovich (Pavel’s nephew), 151, 155–56, 175

  Krushevans, 145

  Landauer, Gustav, 19

  Language at a Time of Revolution (Harshav), 6

  languages:

  Hebrew, 55, 108, 111, 113, 115, 125

  Moldavian, 33, 39

  Protocols of the Elders of Zion, 167

  Romanian, 33

  Russian, 36, 195

  Ukrainian, 171

  Yiddish, 52–53, 123, 125, 156, 195

  The Lazarus Project (Hemon), 24

  Lebanon, Sabra-Shatilla massacre, 3, 19

  Left:

  and Black Hundreds, 37

  Jews, xix, xx, 10

  London, 186

  U.S., xix, xx, 185–97

  see also Marxists; socialism

  Lenin, Vladimir, 13–14, 145

  Leonard, Oscar, 187

  Levandal, Baron L. M., 104

  liberalism:

  American, 185–86, 190

  “Christian socialism” and, 148

  Israeli, 20

  Krushevan and, 23, 155, 156

  Liber, Mark, 199

  libraries, set up by Jews, 7

  Lilien, Ephraim Moses, 83

  Limmerick riot and boycott (1904), 122

  Lindbergh nomination, 1

  liquor’s allure:

  Jews able to resist, 6–7

  liquor stores:

  Kishinev pogrom targeting, 64–65, 84, 135

  Soroki, 156

  Lis, Mordecai Zvi, 86

  literacy rates, Bessarabia, 37

  literature:

  of lamentation, 133

  see also Hebrew literature; plays; poetics

  Litvak, Mordecai ben Aaron, 86

  Living My Life (Goldman), 191

  London, England:

 

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