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Enregistrement individuel de : Dora Finegold (feminin)
Événement |
Date |
Détails |
Birth |
ABT 1876 |
Lieu : Rechitsa District, Belarus (Minsk Gubernia)
|
Death |
1917 |
Lieu : Rechitsa District, Belarus (Minsk Gubernia)
|
- Image :
- Simon and Dorothy Blumin Feingold
- Note :
-
RECHITSA is a small oil-producing town, 350 km (220 miles) south of the
capital Minsk, Belarus.
A city in Gomel oblast, Belorussian SSR Rechitsa had one of the oldest
Jewish communities in Belorussia. In 1648 the rampaging Cossacks
murdered many of its Jews. The Jewish population in 1766 numbered 133,
increasing to 1,268 in 1800 (two - thirds of the total population), and 2,080 in
1847. The city was a center for Habad Hasidism, whose theological doctrine
stress the relationship between God and man. At the end of the 19th century
Rechitsa had a yeshivah and was the residence of the hasidic leader, R.
Shalom Dov Ber Schneersohn. In 1897 the 5,334 Jews of Rechitsa
constituted 57% of the population. In October 1905 the peasants of the
surrounding area participated in a pogrom which killed more than 50 Jews,
among them members of the Jewish self - defense force. On the eve of
World War I the Jewish population numbered about 7,500. Jewish
communal and religious life began to decline under Soviet rule. In 1926 there
were 7,386 Jews. On November 25, 1941, the Nazi invaders murdered
about 3,000 Jews who had remained in the city. A few Jews returned after
the war.
Today you will no longer see any visible signs of past Jewish presence in
Rechitsa. They have not been preserved in the names of streets, squares or
public gardens, there are no memorial plaques or monuments in public
places. In this, Rechitsa is no different from the other small and mediumsize
Belorussian towns which used to have rich Judaic traditions and were
deprived of their distinct identity by the Soviet national policy. Synagogues,
prayer houses and yeshivas, heders, secular Jewish schools and cultural
establishments in the town and its environs were outlawed. Private Jewish
trade and handicraft businesses meeting the demand of their Belorussian
neighbors were nationalized by the Bolsheviks as part of their effort for a
"more just world order".
Today there are 450 Jews in Rechitsa. At least 300 of them are elderly
people.
1 January 2000 : The territory of Belarus is divided into 6 regions (oblasts) -
the Brest, Vitebsk, Gomel, Grodno, Mogilev and Minsk regions, and 118
districts (rayons).
Courtesy of: "Encyclopedia Judaica" ©1972, Keter Publishing House
Jerusalem Ltd Jerusalem, Israel
See, Jewish Addresses in Rechitsa by Leonid Smilovistsky, Ph.D., Diaspora
Research Institute of Tel Aviv Uninversity
http://www.jewishgen.org/Belarus/newsletter/Rechista.pdf
THE RECHITSA POGROM (October 1905):
See, http://www.jewishgen.org/Belarus/newsletter/rechitsa_pogrom.htm
The October 21-24, 1905 Rechitsa pogrom was not an isolated episode. It
became an additional factor in the general disillusionment of the Belorussian
Jews as they assessed their future in Russia. The unwillingness and inability
of the Tzarist regime to evolve into a constitutional government and to ensure
equality before the law and equal economic opportunities for all the peoples
in the country had become evident. The result was unprecedented Jewish
emigration.
In 1904-1905 the number of Jews who emigrated to the United States alone
was 92,383, or 50% of the total number of emigrants, and in 1905-1906,
Jewish emigrants numbered 125,234, or 85% of the total. If one takes into
account those who left for Argentina, Canada, Palestine, and other countries,
this number would be doubled. See.V. Gornberg, Emigratsiia I immigratsiia
(Emigration and immigration) (Vilna, 1907), Table 1; S. Fornberg, Evreiskaia
emigratsiia (The Jewish emigration) (St. Petersberg, 1908).
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