Friday, December 31, 2021

Keeping The Home Customs Practiced: New Year's Resolution

 Nadene Goldfoot                                          

In this new age of 2022, I hope to make my New Year Resolution of continuing the practice of our people's customs, like all the memorable practices on a Sabbath.  To light the candles before it's dark out and say a prayer to G-d, asking for the health of all my loved ones really sets the tune of a Friday night that my parents didn't do.  More than ever before, it's these customs that keeps us well balanced and happy.  

                                                                


I've been doing it since my middle age and keep on doing it.  That's why I can say what it does for me.  I've seen the benefits.   It's a time that reminds me of who I am and what I'm here for.  It gives me purpose of life.  This, mixed with a special meal and often times the aromas arising from special home-made food, the chicken soup on the stove simmering with the aroma hitting my nostrils combined with the Challah, bread in the oven with its overwhelming good smells, making me almost dizzy with good anticipation of sitting down to a good meal, the one meal that I cook for the week. Not to mention, it's the one day of the week that is set aside for rest.  It's good as that's the day I will not cook or use my electrical cooking gadgets until night-time, after Shabbat.  I get a break!  Yeah! I'm even alone, so it doesn't matter, but I do, and I'll know,  so remain practicing customs that are special. it's my identification.                                                                    

We have the habit of sluffing off customs in this modern technical age, and we become just like everyone else, following their lead.  What makes us interesting to people is our uniqueness, whoever we are; our ideas, life style, people to consider that adds to each other's life and makes living more interesting.


Look at having New Year's Resolutions.  It's fun.  Don't you look back and remember what your family did on New Year's?  Right now some people around my house are setting off fireworks and I can hear something like a boom going off about 5 times in a minute apart from each other.  Dogs wish that this custom would be ended.  They usually hide under your bed.                                                               

                                   Enjoying every day as it comes

My mother had a custom when we went to the beach every summer.  She had to go to a certain fish restaurant where she ordered her favorite goodies.  This all makes a family and is sometimes the glue that holds it together.  

Happy New Year 2022 Everyone!!!

 

 

Making Aliyah To Israel Today and In 1980

 Nadene Goldfoot                                             

  

It's good to know that people are making Aliyah despite Corona Virus, Delta and now Omicron. Traveling to a new country must be hard, for the inspiration that comes in pushing them to leave their present homes for Israel means that something, usually anti-Semitic reasons, pushed them into this decision.  Or, it could be the situation that the world is in causing religious inspiration as well.  

To make aliyah is to move to Israel.  It literally means to rise, to go up, spiritually.  When you leave permanently, you are called a Yored, meaning to go down again.  

Israel's population grew by about 160,000 people (1.7%) in 2021, reaching about 9,450,000 including 6.98 million (73.9%) Jews, about two million (21.1%) Arab and 472,000 from other sectors. About 184,000 babies were born in Israel in 2021: 73.8% to Jewish mothers, 23.4% to Muslim mothers and 2.8% to other mothers from other sectors. About 25,000 new immigrants arrived in Israel in 2021, 5,000 more than last year. 30% of them came from Russia, 14.6% from France, 13.9% from the U.S. and 12.4% from Ukraine.

    Haifa, where our absorption center was located.  We'd walk to the beach.  We studied Hebrew for 10 months being we were teachers needing to teach for a living.  Classes were 6 days a week.  At the end we had to take a 3 hour test.  
     Haifa, I loved it;  walked for an hour every day with my German Shepherd female which we brought with us.  Everyone got excited when they saw her.  We weren't supposed to have a dog at the Center, but she was so quiet and good, and the "Mother" pretended she didn't know.  Finally, we had to board her with a young IDF soldier and his wife for a while until she got pregnant, and then we got her back again living with us until we graduated.  

I made Aliyah in September 1980. We flew in El Al.   We were taken to a hostel because a strike was going on and the cab driver couldn't take us to our hotel that we had in our plans.  We couldn't speak Hebrew and the young young man in charge that night couldn't speak English.  We wound up with one cup for some water out of the tap and no food.  The next morning I was taken to the house mother of the hostel and given a cup of tea and a cookie.  Never was anything so good!  

Finally we were taken to the Absorption Center that was to be our home for the next 10 months.  It was HOT OUTSIDE.  So hot!  We came from Oregon and to step into HOT CLIMATE was a shock to the system. We couldn't speak Hebrew and would learn it in classes here as well as live here.   The House mother didn't speak English.  Through hand motions, we were to take the elevator and go up.  We stepped in and the buttons were all in Hebrew.  Danny, who had been bar-mitzvahed, took an educated guess and got us to the right floor and to our room.  No one helped us get there, amazingly.  I collapsed on the bed and passed out.

                                             

 Apartment living in Safed, #213, our new home where I taught jr high students English as a foreign language.  Here's Blintz, our dog and after a year, our new Fiat shipped over from Italy right out of a catalog. 

I'm changing, wearing a head covering and becoming more dottee.  So did my husband.  We had been conservatives.  Dan came from Brooklyn, New York,  and me from Portland, Oregon.   

I hope that the end of 2021 and the New Year of 2022 will find Aliyah continuing when needed.  Israel is an awesome country with awesome people.  

Here's the book I wrote about my Aliyah and living in Israel. I wrote to my mother every week, and she kept my letters.  Then she gave them all back to me as she had kept them in her Gucci bag, and told me to write a book.  I did.  Publishers were 1st Books, April 1, 2003.

                                               


                                                


      
When we had first arrived in Israel, we had been given a book to read.  The writer had different experiences, of course.  It was called, Another Beginning--through the Israeli looking glass by Joan Cass, published by DVIR Katzman Publishers INC.. 1979 in Tel Aviv.  It has passports on the cover.  They were a family with children who made Aliyah, more normal than coming with a big dog.                                            

Resource:

IsraelAM

https://archive.jewishagency.org/aliyah/making-aliyah?gclid=CjwKCAiA8bqOBhANEiwA-sIlNwN8TOwGSeTu4x1ROnft_ITYml9t2AG-vO2uSLkD-biMyPSDfxZePRoCoZIQAvD_BwE

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Bird Flu Hit's Birds In Israel While Humans fight Delta, Omicron Virus

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                    

Avian influenza, for most purposes, refers to the influenza A virus.  Though influenza A is adapted to birds, it can also stably adapt and sustain person-to-person transmission. Recent influenza research into the genes of the Spanish flu virus shows it to have genes adapted from both human and avian strains. Pigs can also be infected with human, avian, and swine influenza viruses, allowing for mixtures of genes (reassortment) to create a new virus, which can cause an antigenic shift to a new influenza A virus subtype which most people have little to no immune protection against.

                                              

Influenza A/H5N1 was first isolated from a goose in China in 1996. Human infections were first reported in 1997 in Hong Kong. Since 2003, more than 700 human cases of Asian HPAI H5N1 have been reported to the WHO, primarily from 15 countries in Asia, Africa, the Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East, though over 60 countries have been affected.

                                                                        

Most human cases of the avian flu are a result of either handling dead infected birds or from contact with infected fluids. It can also be spread through contaminated surfaces and droppings. While most wild birds have only a mild form of the H5N1 strain, once domesticated birds such as chickens or turkeys are infected, H5N1 can potentially become much more deadly because the birds are often in close contact. H5N1 is a large threat in Asia with infected poultry due to low hygiene conditions and close quarters. Although it is easy for humans to contract the infection from birds, human-to-human transmission is more difficult without prolonged contact. However, public health officials are concerned that strains of avian flu may mutate to become easily transmissible between humans.

Strains of the influenza virus that primarily infect birds,  can also infect humans.
This type of flu is most often contracted by contact with sick birds. It can also be passed from person to person.
Symptoms begin within two to eight days, and can seem like the common flu. Cough, fever, sore throat, muscle aches, headache, and shortness of breath may occur.
The disease can carry a high mortality in humans. Some antiviral drugs, if taken within two days of symptoms, may help.  So in Israel, they not only have Omicron virus, but now should watch out for the Bird virus. 

Back in 2019 in Oregon, state wildlife officials announced on a Wednesday, that the mallard shot by a hunter at Fern Ridge Wildlife Area was carrying H5N2, one of more than 140 strains of the virus commonly known as avian influenza, or bird flu. The strain differs from H5N1, a mutation that appeared in the early 2000s and continues to sicken people in Europe, Asian and Africa. To date, no H5N1 infections have been reported in the United States.
                                                       

 At any given time, wild geese and ducks are likely to carry the flu in

their system, but it rarely makes them sick.

However, the H5N2 and H5N8 strains can sicken and kill falcons and domesticated poultry, making them an economic concern for poultry growers. In January 2019, in Washington's Tri-Cities, hundreds

 of chicken, turkey, ducks and guinea fowl were euthanized after members of their flocks contracted the virus.


Resource:

https://www.debka.com/mivzak/bird-flu-outbreak-in-israel-half-a-million-chickens-culled-migratory-birds-die/ 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avian_influenza

https://www.cdc.gov/flu/avianflu/index.htm

https://www.who.int/news/item/28-11-2021-update-on-omicron

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Israel's Defense Against Iranian Ammunition To Enemy Terrorism in Neighbor States

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                   

                                             Missiles in Syria pointed towards Israel

Israel's surrounding neighbors have been invaded by terrorist groups who are being used by Iran as ammunition depots and forward attacks against Israel.  Lebanon and Syria are main centers loaded with rockets to use against this tiny country.  Lately, Israel has been attacking places with pin-pointing accuracy to bomb and destroy these munition centers. The latest hit was on the Syrian port of Latakia.  It's a seaport located on the Mediterranean sea in the city of Latakia. Established on 12 February 1950, it has since served as Syria's main seaport.  

We all remember the week of constant attack that happened most recently.  May 2021: Rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip, targeting civilian facilities in Israeli cities, towns and villages, resulted in 13 deaths and many casualties. Other terror attacks were responsible for two more deaths and additional casualties, bringing the total number of fatal casualties in May to fifteen, with ​ 168 non-fatal casualties.  Apart from the over 4500 rocket launchings from Gaza, there were also incidents of stone-throwing, small-arms fire, pipe bomb, grenade and arson attacks as well as one vehicular attack.​ 

Both Hamas and Hezbollah maintain large stockpiles of ballistic rockets, in addition to mortars, anti-tank missiles, and other munitions. While Hamas does have Iranian-made weaponry, a significant amount of its arsenal has historically been indigenously made, as a result of the ongoing blockade against the Gaza Strip. Hamas has produced several types of rockets, notably the Qassam series. Hezbollah’s stockpile has in the past consisted of former Soviet models, including Grads and Katyushas, but like Hamas now has Iranian made heavy and long distance rockets like the Fajr series. Estimates of Hezbollah rocket stockpiles vary from 150,000-200,000, while Hamas’ is estimated to be around 10,000.  

                                             

The primary Syrian port of Latakia was attacked again early yesterday, allegedly by Israel. The port was previously attacked on Dec. 7. A Syrian military official said Israeli missiles were fired from the sea, west of Latakia, hitting the terminal and igniting fires that caused major damage. Syria’s state-run Al-Ikhbariyah TV ran footage showing flames and smoke rising from the terminal. Maj. Mohannad Jafaar, head of the Latakia fire department, said 12 fire trucks worked for hours to contain the fire. Port manager Amjad Suleiman told Al-Ikhbariyah the damage was much larger than that caused by the Dec. 7 attack and required a major effort to move in-tact containers away from the flames.

                                                   

In a year-end statement issued by the IDF, chief of staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kohavi stated of the IDF success in disrupting weapons shipments to Israel’s enemies in the region. 

He said, “The increase in the scope of operations over the past year has led to a significant disruption of the movement of weapons into the various arenas by our enemies." 

In its year-end assessment, the IDF confirmed carrying out strikes on dozens of targets in Syria in what it called “the campaign between the wars.” Three targets also were struck in Lebanon, it said. It gave no further details. It also reported about 100 operations by the Israeli Navy, including dozens of “special operations.”

Mossad agents who have died in defense of Israel

Between Mossad and technical capabilities of the IDF, today's wars are being fought in a new way.  Israel, though a drop in the bucket compared to the size of neighbors that chose to be her enemies, has the Heb שכל sékhel, Yiddish שׂכל séykhl (intelligence) to defend itself.  

My teacher in Israel was a Kohavi.  I bet they're related.  My gosh, he could speak/understand 16 different languages.  I'll never forget that!  Aviv means Spring.   


Resource:

IsraelAM

https://www.jpost.com/tags/rocket-attack-on-israel

https://mfa.gov.il/mfa/foreignpolicy/terrorism/palestinian/pages/wave-of-terror-october-2015.aspx




Tuesday, December 28, 2021

The Infamous Two-Some Catherines: Empresses of Russia and Both Married to Peters

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                 

         b: April 1684  d: May 1727 in St. Petersburg, Russia at 43 years

The first empress of Russia called Catherine ruled from 1725 to 1727.  Between these 2 years, she managed  to expel all the Jewish residents in Little Russia.  This order was countermanded after her death. Anti-Semitism was already something that was running rampant in Russia.                                    

           Peter the Great  b: May 1672 d: 8 February 1725 at 53 years

Inasmuch as Russia had been declared an empire in 1721, the first Russian Empress was Catherine I, the widow of Peter the Great. Fearing that his son Alexey, who viewed his father's reforming interests and endeavours with little warmth, might come to power, Peter took preventative action and issued a law stating that the ruling monarch could himself appoint his successor. Peter originally planned to give the throne to his wife, Catherine, but after quarrelling with her, he ripped up the will, and thus when he died at the beginning of 1725, no official heir had been named. The most influential nobles, led by the all-powerful Prince Menshikov, took advantage of the situation to place Catherine on the throne, bypassing Peter's grandson, also called Peter. Thus, at the head of Russia stood an ambitious women who had never received a systematic education and was hardly able to sign her name on orders and official documents. How did she end up on the Russian throne?

Information about the early years of Catherine's life is extremely garbled, in part due to her own lack of knowledge about her family history, and in part due to attempts to create a fictitious biography for her that would be worthy of the wife of the Emperor of All Russia. It is generally accepted that she was originally named Marta Skavronskaya, that her parents died of the plague around 1689, and that at the age of three, Marta was taken in and raised by a Lutheran pastor.

At seventeen, she married a Swedish dragoon serving in the city of Marienburg in Livonia, but shortly thereafter Russian troops led by Field Marshal Boris Sheremetev besieged the town during the Northern War between Sweden and Russia, and Marta was taken captive. At first she lived in Sheremetev's home, and thereafter in the home of Alexander Menshikov, the Tsar's closest confidant. It was here that Peter the Great met her for the first time.  The Russian Tsar was already married, but unhappily so, and gradually he fell in love with the young and attractive Marta. Marta accepted the Russian Orthodox faith, and received the name Catherine upon baptism. Starting in 1709, she accompanied Peter on his many trips and excursions and in 1712 they married. Peter had shortly before divorced his first wife, Eudoxia Lopukhina, who was sent off to a convent. In 1717 Catherine was declared Sovereign, and in 1721, Empress. 

Peter began suffering from urological problems and severe headaches. Contemporaries noted that only Catherine could find the soothing words that eased the Tsar's pains. Falling asleep with his head on her lap, the powerful Tsar might sleep for a few hours and then awake refreshed and with renewed vigor.

Catherine and Peter had eleven children together, the majority of whom died in early childhood, and only Anna, who married the Duke of Holstein, and Elizabeth, who was crowned Empress in 1741, survived to adulthood. 

After the death of Peter, Catherine ascended to the Russian throne, but due to her lack of education, she paid little attention to state affairs, although she advocated the continuation of Peter's policies. Nonetheless, actual politics often differs widely from plans. If Russia's foreign policy attempted to follow the guidelines set by Peter the Great by turning to the west and by increasing its influence in Europe (the battle for the unification of Schleswig and Holstein and the placement of a Russian puppet on the Courland throne), then in domestic policy, many of Peter's reforms were stalled or corrupted. The Supreme Privy Council, established by Prince Menshikov and consisting of the most powerful nobles, took over the daily management of the country. Soon Catherine's health declined, and in 1727 she died, having earlier declared Peter's grandson, the future Peter II, as her heir.

Catherine I is buried in the Peter and Paul Cathedral next to her husband.

                                             

  Catherine the Great b: May 2, 1729 d: November 17, 1796 at 69 years

The next empress of Russia, and this should shake up all people, was another Catherine who ruled from 1762 to 1796, and during her extended period of 34 agonizing years, managed to also have a Jewish policy that was marked by a combination of liberalism and coercion. Catherine II, was also known as Catherine the Great.  This was  the longest reign of any female Russian leader. Known more for her affairs of the heart than for affairs of state, she nevertheless greatly expanded her country's empire while at the expense of all the Jews under her domain.                                

  Peter III   b: February 10, 1728  d: July 6, 1762  34 years

Catherine II came to power following the overthrow of her husband and second cousin, Peter III. Peter IIIwas Emperor of Russia for six months in 1762. He was born in Kiel as Charles Peter Ulrich of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorp (German: Karl Peter Ulrich von Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorp), the only child of Charles Frederick, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp (the son of Hedvig Sophia of Sweden, sister of Charles XII), and Anna Petrovna (the elder surviving daughter of Peter the Great).

The German-born Peter could hardly speak Russian and pursued a strongly pro-Prussian policy, which made him an unpopular leader. He was deposed by troops loyal to his wife, Catherine, the former Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst who, despite her own German origins, was a Russian nationalist. She succeeded him as Empress Catherine II. Peter died in captivity soon after his overthrow, perhaps with Catherine's approval as part of the coup conspiracy. However, another theory is that his death was unplanned, resulting from a drunken brawl with one of his guards.

Despite his generally poor reputation, Peter made some progressive reforms during his short reign. He proclaimed religious freedom and encouraged education, sought to modernize the Russian army, abolished the secret police, which had been infamous for its extreme violence, and made it illegal for landowners to kill their serfs without going to court. 

                                              

Catherine reversed some of his reforms and carried through others, notably the annexation of church property.  In her accession to power and her rule of the empire, Catherine often relied on her noble favourites, most notably Count Grigory Orlov and Grigory Potemkin.  Under her reign, Russia grew larger, its culture was revitalized, and it was recognized as one of the great powers of Europe.

On the one hand, Jews were allowed to register in the merchant and urban classes in 1780, but permission was restricted to White Russia in 1786.  White Russia was what we call Belorussia.  It was a Republic. Later, it was called Belarus, country of eastern Europe. Until it became independent in 1991, Belarus, formerly known as Belorussia or White Russia, was the smallest of the three Slavic republics included in the Soviet Union (the larger two being Russia and Ukraine).

 Jews went there originally from Poland and its hardships against Jews.  Jews were living in GRODNO in the 12th century, at BREST-LITOVSK in the 14th century and at PINSK from 1506.  In eastern White Russia, Jews appeared in the 16th century, but owing to opposition from the local burghers, the communities were long unrecognized.  

Massacres occurred at POLOTSK in 1563.  at HOMEL in 1649, at  MOHILEV, etc, in 1655.  The Jewish population suffered severely at the end of the 17th century from the Polish-Cossack and Swedish wars.  

The partition of Poland in the latter 18th century when Catherine the Great was ruling Russia  brought the Jews of White Russia under Russian rule and led to the abolition of their organized communal framework. This marked the beginning of the Pale of Settlement.

                                                 

The white section is the Pale of Settlement

The Pale of Settlement consisted of 25 provinces of Czarist Russia:  Poland, Lithuania, White Russia (Belarus), Ukraine, Crimea and Bessarabia of which 2/3 of Bessarabia is today's Moldova. This was where Jews were permitted permanent residence.  Permission to live outside its confines was granted ONLY to certain groups, like members of the liberal professions with a high school diploma, big businessmen, skilled artisans, and ex-Cantonistswho  were the underage sons of conscripts, or soldiers who had been drafted to be soldiers in the Russian Empire. From 1721 on they were educated in special "canton schools" for future military service.  In other words, only the successful and educated higher social classes might be allowed to live outside the Pale, and they most likely could not be Jewish.  This could become quite a sliding scale, for that matter.  

 At the end of the nineteenth century, close to 95 percent of the 5.3 million Jews in the Russian Empire lived in the Pale of Settlement. In early 1917, at the end of WWI, the Pale of Settlement was abolished, permitting Jews to live where they wished in the former Russian Empire. This region continued to be a center of Jewish communal life until World War II.

Catherine the Great was the longest-serving female ruler in Russian history. But before this Prussian-born princess could reign, she had to overcome a loveless marriage to Peter III,  an unstable heir that resulted in a power struggle that turned deadly.  The future Peter III was born Karl Peter Ulrich in 1728, in Kiel, Germany. His mother was the daughter of Russia’s Peter the Great, and his father the nephew of Sweden’s Charles XII. Peter seemed destined to inherit the throne of Sweden, not Russia, and he was brought up as a Lutheran. His childless maternal aunt, Russia’s Empress Elizabeth, chose him as her successor. He moved to Russia’s then-capital, St. Petersburg, where he took the name Peter (Pyotr) and was forced to give up his Lutheran faith and join the Russian Orthodox Church.

He was a middling student and weak-willed (though not as stupid as he was later depicted), whose intense dislike for traditional learning was equally balanced by his passion for all things military. He dreamed of becoming a great military leader and later emulated Frederick the Great of Prussia.  While many modern historians have presented a more favorable view of Peter, it’s Catherine’s depiction of him that prevails. Her letters and memoirs are filled with tales of his boorish, drunken and frequently cruel behavior (she would later allege that he had forced her to watch him hang and “execute” a mouse he found in their apartments).

During Catherine's last years, which were marked by reaction from 1789 to 1796, 7 long years, she prevented the extension of Jewish settlement and in 1795, prohibited Jewish residence in rural areas. 

Antisemitism in the Russian Empire included numerous pogroms and the designation of the Pale of Settlement from which Jews were forbidden to migrate into the interior of Russia, unless they converted to the Russian Orthodox state religion.

Russia remained unaffected by the liberalizing tendencies of this era with respect to the status of Jews. Before the 18th century Russia maintained an exclusionary policy towards Jews, in accordance with the anti-Jewish precepts of the Russian Orthodox Church. When asked about admitting Jews into the Empire, Peter the Great stated "I prefer to see in our midst nations professing Mohammedanism and paganism rather than Jews. They are rogues and cheats. It is my endeavor to eradicate evil, not to multiply it." In my opinion, this all comes from the indoctrination of Christianity in reaction to how Jews were presented in the New Testament. They were seen in a horrible way as of killing the people's G-d, for Jesus was said to be the son of G-d, making him also a god, as the Greeks and Romans had several of in their belief system.  

Resource:

http://www.saint-petersburg.com/royal-family/catherine-i/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitism_in_the_Russian_Empire

https://www.biography.com/news/catherine-the-great-peter-iii-marriage

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_the_Great

 

Monday, December 27, 2021

The Famous Town of Humorous Jewish Stories: Chelm, Russia

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                 

Chelm was a Polish town.  It's Jewish settlement dated back from the 15th century but was destroyed during the Cossack massacres of 1648, and was subsequently refounded.  Chełm received town rights in 1233, passed to Poland in 1377, and fell to Austria (1795) and then to Russia (1815).   

The city prospered in the 15th and 16th centuries. It was then that The Golem of Chełm by Rabbi Elijah Ba'al Shem of Chelm became famous, but the city declined in the 17th century due to the wars which ravaged Poland.                              

                  Old town of Chelm, Poland. Chelm, Lubelskie, Poland.

The community numbered 7,615  before World War II.  Some Jews escaped to Russia in 1939, and the remainder was killed by the Nazis.  

Chełm was once a vibrant multicultural and religious centre populated by Roman CatholicsOrthodox ChristiansLutherans and JewsGermans began settling in southern Ukraine and the Crimean Peninsula in the late 18th century, but the bulk of immigration and settlement occurred during the Napoleonic period, from 1800 onward, with a concentration in the years 1803 to 1805. At the time, southern Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire

Designated New Russia, and often colloquially South Russia (or Südrussland by its German-speaking inhabitants), these lands had been annexed by the Russian Empire during the reign of Catherine the Great after successful wars against the Ottoman Empire (1768–1774) and the Crimean Khanate (1783). The area of settlement was not as compact as that of the Volga territory; rather it was home to a chain of colonies. Catherine the Great just happened to put all Jews into the Pale of Settlement and out of Russia as well. So out went the Jews and in came the Germans into Russian land.


The native Jewish inhabitants of Chelm figure in many anecdotes of Jewish folk-humor.  Chełm became well-known thanks to Jewish storytellers and writers such as Isaac Bashevis Singer, a Nobel Prize-winning novelist in the Yiddish language, who wrote The Fools of Chełm and Their History (published in English translation in 1973), and the great Yiddish poet Ovsey Driz [heruukyi] who wrote stories in verse. Notable adaptations of the Chełm Jewish folklore include the comedy Chelmer Khakhomim ("The Wise Men of Chelm") by Aaron ZeitlinThe Heroes of Chelm (1942) by Shlomo Simon, published in English translation as The Wise Men of Helm (Simon, 1945) and More Wise Men of Helm (Simon, 1965), as well as the book Chelmer Khakhomim by Y. Y. Trunk. Allen Mandelbaum's "Chelmaxioms : The Maxims, Axioms, Maxioms of Chelm" (David R. Godine, 1978) treats the wise men of the Jewish Chełm as scholars who are knowledgeable but lacking sense.                           

 The wise men of Chelm and the Foolish Carp, by Isaac Bashevis Singer. When Chelm community leader, Gronam Ox, is given a live carp in honour of his great wisdom, he is delighted. He knows, of course, that eating the brain of a carp increases wisdom and that the size of the tail is indicative of the size of the brain. .. 

The Chełm stories emulate the interpretive process of Midrash and the Talmudic style of argumentation, and continue the dialogue between rabbinic texts and their manifestation in the daily arena. The seemingly tangential questioning that is typical of the Chełm Jewish Council can be interpreted as a comedic hint at the vastness of Talmudic literature. The combination of paralleled argumentation and linguistic commonality allows the Jewish textual tradition, namely Talmudic, to shine through Chełm folklore.

The first German settlers arrived in 1787, first from West Prussia, then later from Western and Southwestern Germany and Alsace, France; as well as from the Warsaw area. Catholics, Lutherans, and Mennonites were all known as capable farmers (see Molotschna for Mennonite settlements in the Melitopol area); the Empress Catherine, herself an ethnic German, sent them a personal invitation to immigrate to the Russian Empire, as she felt they would make useful subjects and enrich her realm. She granted them certain privileges such as the free exercise of their religion and language within their largely closed communities, also exempt from military service and taxation.

The population was homogenized after World War II, but would have lost the large Jewish population

  In the 18th century, the situation in eastern Poland stabilized and the town started to slowly recover from the damages suffered during the Swedish Deluge and the Khmelnytsky uprising.  The Khmelnytsky Uprising, also known as the Cossack-Polish War, the Chmielnicki Uprising, the Khmelnytsky massacre or the Khmelnytsky insurrection, was a Cossack rebellion that took place between 1648 .

 It attracted a number of new settlers from all parts of Poland, including people of Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish faiths. In 1794, the Chełm Voivodeship was established. 

Chełm was one of the first towns to join the Kościuszko's Uprising later that year. The Kościuszko Uprising, also known as the Polish Uprising of 1794 and the Second Polish War, was an uprising against the Russian Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia led by Tadeusz Kościuszko in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Prussian partition in 1794. In the Battle of Chełm of 8 June 1794, the forces of Gen. Józef Zajączek were defeated by the Russians under Valerian Zubov and Boris Lacy, the town was yet again sacked by the invading armies. The following year, as a result of the Third Partition of Poland, the town was annexed by Austria.

The reform laws affecting the Jews did not pass, because Poland was wiped off the map of the independent countries of Europe and divided among her 3 powerful neighbors. Khelm belonged to Austria from 1795-1807, and from 1807-1812 to the Great Duchy of Warsaw. From 1812-1915, it was ruled by Russia, and a portion by the Congress of Poland.

During the division of Poland, the old trade roads were disturbed and abandoned. These old routes had a huge influence on the development of Jewish commerce in Khelm. The new economic situation and the new roads and routes were not as favorable for Khelm, which was located in a relegated corner of southeast Congress-Poland. The political situation in Khelm became very tense. The Russian government began a strong political Russification program, especially after the failure of the Polish Uprising of 1863. In the Khelm region lived many peasants who belonged to the “Uniate Church of Little Russia”, and were Greek Catholics.

The Russians put a great deal of pressure on them to leave their Church and join the Greek-Orthodox Church. In 1875, the Greek Catholic Church was outlawed, which initiated a bitter 30-year struggle on the part of the Greek Catholics [Ruthenians] against the Russian government. There were bloody demonstrations, strikes, arrests, bitter press campaigns, etc. In order to strengthen the Russification program, the Russian government circles began, at the end of 1880, to consider a plan to create a separate Khelmer region and unite this region with Russia. Just short of the start of WW I, the Russian Duma [Parliament] on January l, 1913, made a decision to create a new region from parts of the Lublin and Shedlets region.  Isn't this happening right now with Ukraine?  

The Duma's decision aroused a storm of protests in the Polish population world-wide. Understandably, the political tension did not help the economic stability and development of Khelm. 

To the old anti-Semitic population was added the reactionary Russian officials and clergy. Their attitude toward the Jews had a spokesman who was a highly placed Russian priest. During his visit to Khelm in 1889, his travel book was published in an influential Russian newspaper. The priest, Gorodetsky, writes in the newspaper that the Jews of Khelm made a very negative impression upon him. He refers to the Jews as “parasites in the guise of human beings”, and writes further that in “the major part of town, the small Jewish houses with tiny shops, where the dirty Jewesses and Jews are pushing from every door.” 

The Jewish households began to grow and by 1920, had increased three-fold; the Jewish population in the past 40 years increased only two-fold. However, trade and commerce were once again in Jewish hands. According to Dr. Shyper's data, in 1921, 88.3% of commerce and trade in Khelm was in Jewish hands, and in 1926, 82% was in Jewish hands.

YearTotal Population
of Khelm
Jewish
Population
% of Jews
182721,7931,9021%
18563,6622,49368.0%
189311,8876,35653.5%
191017,5557,81444.5%
192123,22112,06451.1%
193129,07413,53746.5%

                                                                                     


Reference:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Che%C5%82m 

The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia

https://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/chelm/che013.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_Germans


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