Pogrom

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Pogrom Page 24

by Steven J. Zipperstein


  Left, 186

  Times, 9, 10, 94, 168

  London, Jack, 195–96

  Lopukhin, Aleksei A., 95, 177–78

  Lower East Side, New York City, xx, 1–2, 3, 103–4, 187–92, 195–96

  Lower Kishinev (Old Town), xv, 40–42, 77–83, 208

  Asia Street 13/Aziatskaia Street, 23–24, 48, 77–79, 81, 208

  Davitt tour, 134

  photos (1880s), 26, 40, 41, 42

  pogrom, 68, 77–83, 88, 130

  Pushkin, 40–41

  residences, 41–42

  synagogues, 78, 82–83

  Urussov visit, 48–50, 101

  Lydda, Arabs of, 19–21

  lynchings, of blacks, xix, 186, 187–88, 192–94

  Malamud, Bernard, 1–2, 3

  male cowardice:

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

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

  Mandate period, British, 2–3, 19

  martyrdom:

  holy, 130

  Kigel’s, 82–83, 103

  Marx, Karl, 121, 122

  Marxists:

  Hyndman, 121, 122

  Russian, 14

  Socialist Labor Bund, xx, 14

  Zionist, 18

  see also Bolshevism

  McCarthy, Mary, 2

  McKinley, William, 171, 189

  medical conditions, Bessarabia, 43

  Mein Kampf (Hitler), 148

  The Melting Pot (Zangwill), 12, 203–5

  memory, preferred over history, 132–33

  Mendelsohn, Ezra, 206

  Menshikov, Mikhail Osipovich, 168, 175

  militarization:

  Russia, 91

  see also armies; self-defense; war

  Miller, Henry, 191

  Minsk, 156

  Minsk conference (1902):

  Zionist, 176–77

  Miron, Dan, 108, 109, 115, 130

  modernity, 17–18, 112

  Moldavian language, 33, 39

  Moldavians:

  Lower Kishinev, 77

  Manchester Way, 76, 84

  rioters, 68, 122

  Moldova:

  independent, xviii, 207

  Krushevan’s vision embraced in, 148

  Transdniestria at edge of, 21–23

  Mon Lay Won (Pell Street eatery), New York City, 102–3, 102

  Moore, John, 8–9

  Morgenthau, Henry, 1

  Moskowitz, Henry, 198

  Mother Earth magazine, 192

  Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 205

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

  murder:

  of three Israeli teenagers on West Bank, 21

  see also ritual murder accusations

  Museum of Ethnography and National History, Kishinev, 51, 207

  My Promised Land (Shavitt), 19–21

  mythology, 18, 29

  National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), xv, xix, 14, 188, 194, 198, 200–203

  nationalism:

  European, 111

  Irish, 121, 136

  Jewish, 114–15, 132–33, 199, 204

  Romanian, 37

  Russian, 21, 37, 144

  see also Zionists

  National Negro Conference, 202, 203

  National Public Radio, 19

  Native Americans, 186

  Nazis, xiii, 140

  Netanyahu, Benjamin, xiv, 21, 24

  New Exodus, The (Frederic), 5

  New Market, Kishinev, 50, 65–71, 87–89

  newspapers:

  Iskra (Spark), 45

  London Times, 9, 10, 94, 168

  Odesskie Novosti, 71

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

  see also American newspapers; Bessarabets (Kishinev newspaper)

  New Star Theater, New York City, 104

  New York American, 103, 105, 120

  New York City:

  Broadway theater, 12, 190–92, 205

  Chinese Theater, 101, 104

  Crown Heights riots (Brooklyn), 3

  Herald Square Theater, 190

  Lower East Side, xx, 1–2, 3, 103–4, 187–92, 195–96

  Mon Lay Won (Pell Street eatery), 102–3, 102

  newspapers, 5, 10, 29–30, 101, 103–5, 120

  New York Times, 5, 10, 29–30, 101, 104

  Nicholas II, Tsar, 46, 92

  Night (Wiesel), 108

  Nikolaevskii Street, Kishinev, 69, 73, 75

  Non-Existent Manuscript, The (De Michelis), 170

  Odessa, 34, 112–14

  anti-Jewish violence, 96, 198

  Bernstein-Kogan, 181–82

  Bialik, 110–14, 113, 140

  British consul general, 67

  Davitt, 122–23, 181–82

  Jewish intelligentsia, 110–17, 113

  Kishinev comparisons, 28–29, 42, 51–52, 55, 82, 156

  Klausner, 108

  Krushevan, 153, 155

  map, 29

  Pushkin and, 28

  refugees from Kishinev in, 117

  Odesskie Novosti (newspaper), 71

  Okhrana (Russia’s secret police), 22, 104–5, 147, 169, 170

  Old Town, see Lower Kishinev (Old Town)

  O’Neill, Eugene, 192

  Orlenev, Pavel, 190, 192

  Orthodoxy, Russian, 186, 188

  Orwell, George, 61

  Ottoman Empire:

  Bessarabia acquired from, 30

  Palestine, 128

  Out of Kishineff (Stilles), 188

  Ovington, Mary White, 198, 202

  Pale of Settlement, 6

  Jewish occupations, 7

  Kishinev pogrom defining, 30

  Krushevan, 156, 161–64

  map, 160

  Minsk, 156

  Vilna, 2, 110, 142, 156, 177

  see also Kishinev; Odessa

  Palestine:

  Bernstein-Kogan, 178

  Bialik, 113, 126–28

  Bialik veneration, 140

  Dizengoff, 113, 123

  first female Jewish artist, 126

  Haganah, xv, xx, 13, 86

  Herzl’s Zionism focused on, 111

  Jewish migration to, 122

  Mandate period, 2–3, 19

  Raskin sketches, 113

  riots (1937), 18

  Palestinophile movement, 7

  Parnell, Charles Stewart, 120

  passivity, Jewish, 89, 118, 141–42

  see also cowardice

  Peniel, Noah, 141–43

  Perlman, Shmuel, 109

  Pesker, Yehiel, 87

  petition, Americans calling on Russia to investigate pogrom, 189, 193–94

  Philadelphia Ledger, 186

  Pinsker, Leon, 7

  plays:

  Broadway theater, 12, 190–92, 205

  inspired by Kishinev pogrom, 104–5, 189–92, 203–5

  Plehve, Vyacheslav Konstantinovich, 92–96, 93

  assassinated, 93

  Herzl and, 175, 177, 180–81

  Kishineff play, 104

  letter, 15, 92–96, 117, 146, 182–83, 188–89

  minister of the interior, 15, 92–94

  Plot Against America, The (Roth), 1

  poetics:

  Bialik’s, 107–9, 133, 140–41

  of violence, 82–83, 133

  pogroms, 145

  black mistreatment compared with, 187–88, 192–94, 202

  Gomel, 198–99

  permanent, 62

  Russia’s pogrom wave (1905–6), 4–5, 185, 187

  term, xvii, 1–6, 9–15

  wave (1881–82), 45

  see also Kishinev pogrom (1903)

  Poland, 6, 160

  police:

  Lopukhin, 95, 177–78

  during pogrom, 63, 66, 88–89

  Russian secret police (Okhrana), 22, 104–5, 147, 169, 170

  politics:

  activists stir
ring up riots, 96–97

  anarchists, 19, 186, 189

  Bolshevism, 4, 13–14, 21, 145, 149, 167–68

  Kishinev pogrom impact, 6, 20, 21

  see also civil rights; conservatism; Left; liberalism; radicalism; Right; Social Democratic Party; socialism; Zionists

  Popov (local activist), 97

  population/numbers:

  Bessarabia, 34, 36, 37

  Jewish immigrants from Russian empire to U.S., 103

  Kishinev, 37, 40, 43, 50

  Kishinev rioters, 65, 68, 134, 137

  pogrom rapes, 73, 135

  Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, The (Joyce), 120

  Prague Cemetery, The (Eco), 150

  prayer:

  dried up value, 141

  Moldavian outlawed (1870s), 36

  press:

  Berkeley Russian Review, 196

  Kishinev pogrom, 11, 17–18, 91, 149, 178–83

  Mother Earth magazine, 192

  Odessa, 114

  responsibility for violence, 201

  see also Jewish press; Krushevan, Pavel; newspapers; Protocols of the Elders of Zion

  Pridnestrovian Moldavan Republic (Transdniestria), 21–23

  Principles of Sociology (Spencer), 91

  “Program of World Conquest by Jews, The” (World Union of Freemasons and Sages of Zion), 167, 172–74

  Pronin, Georgi A., 62, 97, 98, 182

  Prophecy and Politics (Frankel), xx, 103–4

  “Prophet, The” (Pushkin), 109–10

  Protestants, contempt for Russian Orthodoxy, 186, 188

  protest meetings, U.S., 12, 189

  Protocols of the Elders of Zion, The, xv, 147, 167–72

  Bernstein-Kogan and, 182

  Bern trial and, 147, 169

  Butmi version, 171–72

  De Michelis annotated translation, 170

  Die Protokolle der Weisen von Zion (Segel), 170

  Egyptian television series, 148

  forgery, xvi–xvii, 99, 168–69

  Krushevan version, xvi–xvii, xviii–xix, 16, 22, 99, 146–50, 153, 159, 167–71, 183

  Die Protokolle der Weisen von Zion (Segel), 170

  Purishkevich, V., 144

  Pushkin, Alexander, xi, 28, 40–41, 109–10

  Raaben, R. S. von (Governor General of Bessarabia), 44–45, 48, 68, 71, 87, 90–91

  rabbis, Kishinev, 53

  race:

  Davitt and, 120–22

  U.S. and, xix, 14, 186–88, 192–94, 200

  see also antisemitism; blacks; ethnic and religious groups

  Rachkovsky, Piotr, 169, 170

  radicalism:

  American, 189, 194–95

  Russian, 6, 157, 176–78, 186, 189, 190, 194–95, 197–98

  Radziwill, Catherine, 170

  rapacity of Jews, 15, 22, 123

  rapes:

  anti-Jewish violence in Russia (1918–1920), 4

  divorce requests after, 73, 135

  Kishinev pogrom, xiv, 68, 73–79, 85, 125, 132, 134, 135

  Lower Kishinev, 73–79, 83

  numbers of, 73, 135

  Schiff, 73–76, 125, 132

  Raskin, Saul, 113

  Rasputin, 7

  Reed, John, xix, 27, 194–95

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

  religion:

  Bessarabia ethnic and religious groups, 32–33, 36–37

  Jewish characteristic, 6

  Kishinev, 39

  see also Christianity; Judaism

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

  residences:

  Kishinev, 41–42, 50–51, 65–66

  pogrom targeting, 65–66

  Pronin’s, 98

  restrictions against Jews, 50

  responsibility:

  of Jewish intelligentsia, 163

  responsibility for violence:

  blacks, 200–201

  Jewish, 5, 117–19

  press, 201

  see also government responsibility, belief in

  revolution (1905), Russia, 190, 191, 195

  revolution (1917), Russia, 4, 95, 194–95, 199

  Revolutionary Lives (Strunsky), 197–98, 199, 203

  Rhodes, Cecil, 121

  Right:

  Bessarabia, 37

  Russian, 15–16, 22, 95, 97, 147, 155, 169, 170, 175–79, 182

  Zionist, 7, 140

  see also Black Hundreds; conservatism

  rights, see civil rights

  riots:

  antiblack, 14, 186, 187, 193, 200–201

  anti-Jewish, 2, 4–5

  Crown Heights, Brooklyn (1991), 3

  industrial disputes, 91

  Limerick riot and boycott (1904), 122

  Palestinian (1937), 18

  Springfield, Illinois (1908), xix, 200–202

  see also pogroms

  ritual murder accusations, xiv, 10, 47–48, 56–58, 84, 97

  Beilis, 7–8, 95

  in Bessarabets, 47–48, 62, 145

  Dubrossary, 56–58, 97

  Rogger, Hans, xx

  Romania:

  Bernstein-Kogan, 178

  and Bessarabia, xvii, 30, 32, 36, 37

  border at Jassy, 179

  Romanian language, 33

  Romanov Russia, 95, 149, 195, 206

  tsars, 45, 46, 79, 92

  see also Russian empire

  Roosevelt, Franklin, 1

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 12, 189, 203–4

  Roskies, David G., 132–33

  Rossman, Yisrael, 69–71, 72, 87

  Roth, Philip, 1

  Russian empire, xix, 49, 52, 148–49

  antisemitism, 4–5, 8–10, 15–16, 95–96, 186, 198, 205

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

  besporiaki/”southern storms,” 5

  Bessarabia, 17, 30, 36, 39

  Bolshevism, 4, 13–14, 21, 145, 149, 167–68

  censorship restrictions, 191

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

  Jewish immigration from, 103–4, 123

  Jewish integration, 7–8, 157, 206

  Kigel’s martyrdom, 82–83

  Kishinev pogrom impact, 21–22

  nationalism, 21, 37, 144

  Okhrana (secret police), 22, 104–5, 147, 169, 170

  pogrom wave (1905–6), 4–5, 185, 187

  revolution (1905), 190, 191, 195

  revolution (1917), 4, 95, 194–95, 199

  Right, 15–16, 22, 95, 97, 147, 155, 169, 170, 175–79, 182

  Russo-Turkish War (1878), 32–33

  theatrical troupe touring U.S., 189–92

  tsars, 45, 46, 79, 92

  unification, 164

  Western Provinces map, 160

  White Army, 4, 19, 90

  Zionist preoccupation with domestic reform in, 176–77

  Russian Orthodoxy, 186, 188

  Russian Review, Berkeley, 196

  Russia’s Message (Walling), xix, 195, 198, 199–200, 202

  Russo-Turkish War (1878), 32–33

  Sabra-Shatilla massacre, Lebanon, 3, 19

  Schiff, Rivka, 73–76, 125, 132

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

  schools:

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

  Kishinev Jewish, 54–55

  for Kishinev pogrom orphans, 180

  Krushevan, 155

  Tarbut (Hebrew school system), 142

  Toulouse school massacre (2012), 21

  Sebastian, Mihail, 145

  secret police, Russian (Okhrana), 22, 104–5, 147, 169, 170

  Segel, Benjamin, 170

  self-defense:

  anti-Jewish, 22, 58, 97

  Jewish, 13, 18, 85–90, 132, 179–80

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

  separatism:

  Je
wish, 162–63, 205

  Transdniestria, 21

  Serebrenick, Naftoli, 81

  Shapira, Anita, 10

  Shapiro, Lamed, 4

  Shavitt, Ari, 19–21

  Shevchenko Transnistria State University, 22

  Sholem Aleichem, 153

  Shornikov, Igor Petrovich, 22–23

  Siberia and the Exile System (Kennan), 186

  Sinclair, Upton, 120

  Singleton, Joseph (Chew Mon Sing), 101–2

  Sirota, Yeshaya, 80

  smuggling:

  Bessarabia, 33

  Kishinev, 45, 180

  Sobelman (pogrom victim), 71–72

  Social Democratic Party:

  Iskra (Spark), 45

  Second Party Congress (July 1903), 13

  socialism:

  “Christian socialism,” 22, 148

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

  and male cowardice, 131

  New York City Jews, 104

  Strunsky, 196, 198, 203

  Socialist Revolutionary Party:

  Bernstein-Kogan brother, 178

  Plehve assassination, 93

  Walling, 196n

  Social Revolutionary Party, 126

  Soiuz Russkogo Naroda (Black Hundreds), 4, 37, 147, 172, 187

  Solzhenitsyn, Alexander, 20–21

  “The Song of the Suffering Jews,” 104

  Soroka, Bessarabia, 154, 156

  South Africa, 121, 122

  “southern storms,” 5

  Spencer, Herbert, 91

  Springfield, Illinois, race riot (1908), xix, 200–202

  Stansell, Christine, 187, 192

  Steinberg, Yisroel Hayyim, 73

  Steinfels, Peter, 10

  Stilles, W. C., 188

  St. Louis, race riot (1917), 187

  Story of Kishineff, The (Horowitz), 105

  St. Petersburg:

  assassination attempt on Krushevan (June 1903), 147

  Bernstein-Kogan, 180–81

  Ha-Zeman (Hebrew daily), 117

  Herzl meeting Plehve, 175, 177, 180–81

  Kishinev pogrom report, 123

  Krushevan apartment, 147

  Orlenev’s St. Petersburg Dramatic Company, 190

  Znamia, 146–47, 165–67, 171, 172–74

  Strunsky, Anna, 194–203, 197

  The Kempton-Wace Letters, 196

  NAACP, xix, 14, 194, 198, 200–203

  “Pogrom” book, 14–15

  Revolutionary Lives, 197–98, 199, 203

  Violette of Pere Lachaise, 198

  Supreme Court:

  Israeli, 3

  U.S., 1

  synagogues:

  American, 5–6, 83, 103

  liturgies highlighting Kishinev pogrom, 5–6, 83, 103

  Lower Kishinev (Old Town), 78, 82–83

  Talmud i evrei (Talmud and Jews), 171

  Tarbut (Hebrew school system), 142

  Taylor, A. J. P., 27, 176

  Tchernowitz, Chaim, 110

  Tel Aviv:

  Ahad Ha’am, 113

  Bialik home, 76, 140

  Mayor Dizengoff, 113, 123

  temples:

  destruction, 112, 114, 175

  second, 112, 175

  Ten Days that Shook the World (Reed), xix, 27, 194–95

 

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