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1905 Pogroms in Russia


October 21, 2002: The Jerusalem Post's feature "This day in history" reports on October 18, 1905, when hundreds of Jews were murdered by Russians in anti-Jewish riots. A week-long pogrom marking one of the bloodiest periods in Russian Jewish history begins, spreading to dozens of towns and villages throughout Russia. Hundreds of Jews are killed, thousands are wounded and over forty thousand homes and shops are destroyed in the rioting:

    by Julia Mazelev

"After Tsar and vodka, pogrom may well be the Russian word most widely understood and used by non-Russians," said historian Hans Rogger. The word "pogrom" became linked to anti-Semitic violence after the outbreak of three great waves of anti-Jewish rioting in the Russian Empire in 1881-82, 1903-06, and 1919-21. The violence usually consisted of looting, assault, arson, rape, and murder. According to John D. Klier, "Among the most striking features of the pogroms were their spontaneous and confused character, devoid of long-term objectives or goals...another important feature of the pogroms was their urban nature." The pogroms often began in cities and then spread to shtetles, small towns with about 1000 people, centered around a synagogue and marketplace, within the Pale of Jewish Settlement, [an area Jews were restricted to live in].

The Pale included Lithuania, Poland, the south-western provinces, and White Russia with a few variations until its end in 1917. Within the Pale, Jews were banned from most rural areas and some cities; they were prohibited from building synagogues near churches and using Hebrew in official documents; barred from agriculture, they earned a living as petty traders, middlemen, shopkeepers, peddlers, and artisans, often working with women and children. After 1861, "the Pale became choked by a huge, pauperized mass of unskilled or semiskilled Jewish laborers, whose economic condition steadily worsened," said Klier. "Often repeated," said historian Shlomo Lambroza, "the official view was that Jews were a parasitic element in the Russian Empire who lived off the hard earned wages of the narod [people]."

By the time the term "anti-Semitism" was first used in the late 1870s, Jews in Europe were seen by many as alien to the nation or the people. The peasants in Russia viewed Jews as aliens; their religion, language, food, clothing, and manners were all different, strange, and mysterious—even the government discriminated against them. Russian bureaucrats believed that the teachings of Judaism itself, especially as conveyed by the Tulmud, lead Jews into unproductive, parasitical, and exploitative commercial activities. During the decade before the pogroms of 1881, a growing atmosphere of crisis surrounded the Jewish Question in Russia. Prompted by an increasingly militant Judeophobe press, Russian statesmen held their old prejudiced view of the Jews as a serious economic and social problem.

The assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881 threw the Russian government into chaos and directly preceded the first major outbreak of pogroms. Rumors that Tsar Alexander III had issued a decree instructing the people to beat and plunder the Jews for having murdered his father and for exploiting the people encouraged the pogromists. Beginning with Elizabetgrad, a wave of pogroms spread throughout the southwestern regions, totaling 200 in 1881 alone. Approximately 40 Jews were killed, many times that number wounded, and hundreds of women raped. "Once aroused to violent action, the [peasants] may have felt justified that by destroying and plundering the Jews’possessions they were merely appropriating property which did not rightly belong to the Jews," said historian Michael Aronson. The authorities condoned pogroms through their inaction and indifference, sometimes even showing sympathy for the pogromists.

The Minister of the Interior, N. P. Ignatiev, began to attribute the pogroms not to revolutionary ferment, but to the conduct of the Jews themselves. In 1882, the Ministry of the Interior passed "temporary" May Laws in an attempt to chastise and reform the Jews, which lasted until 1917. These laws prohibited new Jewish settlement outside towns and shtetles, prohibited Jews from buying property in the countryside, and banned Jews from trading on Sunday mornings or Christian holidays. Instead of preventing further pogroms, these laws ushered in a new period of anti-Jewish discrimination and severe persecution. Regular pogrom outbreaks lasted until June 7, 1884, when the last pogrom of the series occurred in Nizhnii Novgorod; this pogrom was an exceptionally vicious one with its victims killed with axes and thrown from rooftops.

The next wave of pogroms began in the spring of 1903 amid chaos and anarchy in the countryside, demonstrations and rioting in the cities, and violent anti-Semitic campaigns. Accusations of Jewish treachery in the Russo-Japanese war effort, accusations that Jews were at the forefront of the revolutionary movement and that Jews were murdering Christians all sparked the first pogrom in Kishinev. Forty-five people were murdered and 1,300 homes and shops plundered. The documentation shows that no orders were given to the police to end the riot. After the perpetrators of the Kishinev pogroms received only very light sentences, it became clear that pogroms had become an instrument of government policy, and Jews began to form self-defense units.

The Bund, a Jewish left-wing organization, organized defense networks among Jewish workers and community members. Five months later, when a pogrom broke out in Gomel, the Jewish community actively resisted. Lambroza said, "Gomel might have been significantly worse were it not for aggressive Jewish defense measures." During 1903 and 1904, 45 pogroms occurred, 95 Jews and 13 non-Jews were killed, and 4,200 people were severely injured. The total destruction of goods and property due to looting, burning, and vandalism was estimated to be more than 5.21 million rubles. However, the worst anti-Jewish violence broke out in 1905, after Tsar Nicholas II was forced to sign the October Manifesto, creating a constitutional monarchy. More than 80 percent of the pogroms of 1905-1906 occurred in the 60 days following the release of the Manifesto. Historians are still disputing what role the Russian government played in these violent attacks on Jews, and how the Russian government’s discrimination against Jews influenced their national identity and Jewish culture.

Works Cited
Aronson, Michael. "The Anti-Jewish Pogroms in Russia in 1881." Klier and Lambroza.
Klier, John D. and Shlomo Lambroza, eds. Pogroms: Anti-Jewish Violence in Modern
Russian History. Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1992.
Kniesmeyer J. and D. Brecher. "Beyond the Pale: The History of Jews in Russia." Exhibit.
(1995): n. pag. Online. Internet. 29 Jan. 1999. Available http://www.friends-
partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/english/guide-cond.html.
Ritter, Leonora. "Nineteenth Century Russia." Charles Sturt University-Mitchell. (1998): n.
pag. Online. Internet. 29 Jan. 1999. Available
http://hsc.csu.edu.au/modhist/courses/2unit/ninecent/russia/102/page122.htm#anchor519803.
Rogger, Hans. "Conclusion and Overview." Klier and Lambroza 314-372.
"The Pale of Settlement and the Pogroms of 1881 in Russia." The Zionist Exposition:
Homeward Bound. (1997): n. pag. Online. Internet. 29 Jan. 1999. Available
http://village.co.il/leumi/archives/politic/pale.htm.