Showing posts with label Nicholas I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicholas I. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Russian Dynasties who were Anti-Semitic; Alexander, Romanov

Nadene Goldfoot                                           
                                                                           
               Peter the Great,  reigned in Russia from May 7,1682  to February 8, 1725. Peter’s father, Romanov czar Alexis Mikhailovich, married twice. Both his wives bore him children, giving rise to a bitter and bloody succession struggle after his death.
Peter’s mother, Natalya Naryshkina, was Alexis’ second wife. Highly intelligent, Natalya was rare among Russian women for her European education. She also had a Karaite ancestor – one Naryshko of the Crimean Peninsula – about whom she was quite open. Karaites are a Jewish sect who reject the Oral Law and started in the 8th century in and around Persia.  Those Jews had not accepted the discipline of the Babylonian gaonate.  

Interestingly enough, all Romanov rulers after Peter remembered their descent from this gentleman, exercising tolerance toward the Karaite minority in both Crimea and Lithuania. Peter himself ignored his roots; the Karaite connection doesn’t seem to have affected his attitude toward Jews.  Those who disliked him called him the antiChrist, making him to dislike Jews.  

Peter had 2 wives and altogether, 14 children.  "He took Martha Skavronskaya, a Polish-Lithuanian peasant, as a mistress some time between 1702 and 1704. Martha converted to the Russian Orthodox Church and took the name Catherine. Though no record exists, Catherine and Peter are described as having married secretly between 23 Oct and 1 December 1707 in St. Petersburg. Peter valued Catherine and married her again (this time officially) at Saint Isaac's Cathedral in Saint Petersburg on 1712-02-19.  She is known as Catherine I.  In 1724 Peter had his second wife, Catherine, crowned as Empress, although he remained Russia's actual ruler. All of Peter's male children had died.
                                                                           
Catherine I b: April 15, 1684 in Estonia, actuallyPolishMarta Helena Skowrońska, later known as Marta Samuilovna Skavronskaya, a Roman Catholic peasant
d: May 17, 1727 in Russia
 Catherine I was a Russian Empress.  She ruled from 1725 to 1727, and in May 1727, expelled all Jews living in Little Russia (Belarus and Ukraine).  This order was countermande after her death.  She was the 2nd wife of Peter the Great b: 1712 who; died in 1725.  When he died, she picked up the reigns.  . 

"Catherine was the first woman to rule Imperial Russia, opening the legal path for a century almost entirely dominated by women, including her daughter Elizabeth and granddaughter-in-law Catherine the Great, all of whom continued Peter the Great's policies in modernizing Russia. At the time of Peter's death the Russian Army, composed of 130,000 men and supplemented by another 100,000 Cossacks, was easily the largest in Europe. However, the expense of the military was proving ruinous to the Russian economy, consuming some 65% of the government's annual revenue. Since the nation was at peace, Catherine was determined to reduce military expenditure. For most of her reign, Catherine I was controlled by her advisers. However, on this single issue, the reduction of military expenses, Catherine was able to have her way."

                                                                           
Peter III"Peter III was Emperor of Russia for six months in 1762. He was born in Kiel, Germany as Charles Peter Ulrich of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorp, the only child of Charles Frederick, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, and Anna Petrovna.Nature had made him mean, the smallpox had made him hideous, and his degraded habits made him loathsome. And Peter had all the sentiments of the worst kind of small German prince of the time. He had the conviction that his princeship entitled him to disregard decency and the feelings of others. He planned brutal practical jokes, in which blows had always a share. His most manly taste did not rise above the kind of military interest which has been defined as "corporal's mania," the passion for uniforms, pipeclay, buttons, the "tricks of parade and the froth of discipline." He detested the Russians, and surrounded himself with Holsteiners.
It was 
arranged for Peter to marry his 2nd cousin, Sophia Augusta Frederica (later Catherine the Great), daughter of Christian August, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst and Princess Joanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp. The young princess formally converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Ekaterina Alexeievna (i.e., Catherine). They married on 21 August 1745. The marriage was not a happy one but produced one son, the future Emperor Paul, and one daughter, Anna Petrovna (20 December 1757 – 19 March 1759). Catherine later claimed that Paul was not fathered by Peter: that, in fact, they had never consummated the marriage.  During the sixteen years of their residence in Oranienbaum, Catherine took numerous lovers, while her husband did the same in the beginning."  Seems she took her frustrations out on us Jews. 
Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst Stettin, PomeraniaPrussia
(now SzczecinPoland) AKA
Catherine II, known to her people as Catherine the Great
Antisemite most well known to today's Jews
who created the Pale of Settlement, which forced Jews
out of Russia and into nearby land she owned.
She had married Peter III

She came to power following a coup d'état that she organised—resulting in her husband, Peter III, being overthrown.  

She ruled from 1762 to 1796, and her Jewish policy was marked by a
combination of liberalism and coercion.  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.  This marked the beginning of the Pale of Settlement.  During her last years, which were marked by reaction in 1789 to 1796, she prevented the extension of Jewish settlement and in 1795, prohibited Jewish residence in Rural areas.  



Russia often treated Judaism as a separate entity, where Jews were maintained with a separate legal and bureaucratic system. Although the government knew that Judaism existed, Catherine and her advisers had no real definition of what a "Jew" is, since the term meant many things during her reign. Judaism was a small, if not nonexistent, religion in Russia until 1772. When Catherine agreed to the First Partition of Poland, the large new Jewish element was treated as a separate people, defined by their religion. In keeping with their treatment in Poland, Catherine allowed the Jews to separate themselves from Orthodox society, with certain restrictions. She levied additional taxes on the followers of Judaism; if a family converted to the Orthodox faith, that additional tax was lifted. Jewish members of society were required to pay double the tax of their Orthodox neighbours. Converted Jews could gain permission to enter the merchant class and farm as free peasants under Russian rule.
In an attempt to assimilate the Jews into Russia's economy, Catherine included them under the rights and laws of the Charter of the Towns of 1782. Orthodox Russians disliked the inclusion of Judaism, mainly for economic reasons. Catherine tried to keep the Jews away from certain economic spheres, even under the guise of equality; in 1790, she banned Jewish citizens from Moscow's middle class.
In 1785, Catherine declared Jews to be officially foreigners, with foreigners' rights. This re-established the separate identity that Judaism maintained in Russia throughout the Jewish Haskalah. Catherine's decree also denied Jews the rights of an Orthodox or naturalised citizen of Russia. Taxes doubled again for those of Jewish descent in 1794, and Catherine officially declared that Jews bore no relation to Russians.  
                                                                         
Nicholas Pavlovich Romanov
Emperor Nicholas I of the Romanav Dynasty,
b: July 6, 1796; d: March 2, 1855
The man was 6'9" tall.  
Jews lived under Russian Czars throughout the 19th century and had to endure many a pogrom before escaping to such places as the USA and Palestine.  The Nicholas Czars were all anti-Semitic.

Nicholas I reigned as Emperor in Russia from 1825 to 1855.  He was also king in Poland next door, also the home of many Jews.  He was also a Grand Duke of Finland.  He was the grandson of Catherine the Great.  He married Alexandra Feodorovna AKA Charlotte of Prussia and they had 7 children.  

                   Life of Jews under Nicholas I of Russia

In 1851 the Jewish population numbered at 2.4 million with 212,000 of them living in Russian controlled Poland territory. This made them one of the largest inorodtsy minorities in the Russian Empire.
He aimed at assimilating the Jews by police methods.  
On 26 August 1827 the edict of military conscription ("Ustav rekrutskoi povinnosti") was introduced, which required Jewish boys to serve in the Russian military for 25 years from the age of 18. Before that many of them were forcibly conscripted into Cantonist schools since the age of 12, while being a Cantonist did not count into the time of military service. They were sent far away from their families to serve in the military so they would have difficulties to practice Judaism and thus be Russified. The poor, village Jews and Jews without families or unmarried Jews were especially targeted for the military service. Between 1827 and 1854 it is estimated that there were 70,000 Jews conscripted. Some of the Jews who served in the Russian military eventually converted to Christianity.
By 1844, the Jewish community organization was abolished and secular government schools were introduced.  The Jewish costume was forbidden in 1850.  Intellectual life was strictly supervised.  Converts to Christianity were granted several years exemption from taxation.  
Under Nicholas I, the Jewish agricultural colonisation of Ukraine continued with the transfer of Siberian Jews to Ukraine. In Ukraine, Jews were given land, but had to pay for it, leaving very little to support their families. On the other hand, these Jews were exempt from the forced military conscription.
Under Nicholas I there were attempts to reform the education of the Jews in attempt of Russification. The study of the Talmud was disapproved as it was seen as a text that encouraged Jewish segregation from Russian society. Nicholas I further toughened censorship of the Jewish books in Yiddish and Hebrew by allowing these to be printed only in Zhitomir and Vilna, Lithuania. 

Tsar Nicholas I aimed to destroy Jewish life, and his reign is remembered as one of the most 
painful episodes for European Jewry. In 1825, Tsar Nicholas ordered the conscription of all
 Jewish males into the Russian imperial military beginning at age 12. In Jewish diasporal
 communities hailing from the Russian Empire, the 19th century is often recalled as a time 
where Jews were forced to the front lines of the army and used as "cannon fodder". Jews 
were forbidden from becoming officers.  Many of the boys forced into the military were 
captured by "snatchers" (khapers). Jewish agricultural communities in more Southern 
areas were often exempt as the Russian government liked to encourage agriculturalism among 
Jews, while other communities that were exempted were often expelled from their towns
 and villages.                                                  
                                                             
Alexander I of Russia  reigned from 1801 to 1825.
born 23 December 1777; d: December 1, 1825.
He was the son of Paul I and 
Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg,Germany.  On 9 October 1793, Alexander married Louise of Baden, known as Elizabeth Alexeievna after her conversion to the Orthodox Church. He later told his friend Frederick William III that the marriage, a political match devised by his grandmother, Catherine the Great, regrettably proved to be a misfortune for him and his spouse. 
His 1st Jewish policy was a liberal one, and during his reign,
the 1st Jewish agricultural colonies were established in S. Russia.
His ultimate goal, however, was not the amelioration of the position of the
Jews, but the undermining of their religious individuality.

He changed his approach later, and imposed restrictions on the Jews
and ordered their expulsion from many regions in Russia.  
With his mental health deteriorating, Alexander grew increasingly suspicious of those around him, more withdrawn, more religious, and more passive. Some historians conclude his profile "coincides precisely with the schizophrenic prototype: a withdrawn, seclusive, rather shy, introvertive, unaggressive, and somewhat apathetic individual"
                                                            

Son Alexander II of Russia  reigned from 1855 to 1881.
Born April 29, 1818; assassinated: March 13, 1881.
At the beginning of his reign, he eased up some of the anti-Jewish decrees of his father, Nicholas I, and this was encouraging to the Jews in hope for emancipation.  But, towards the end of his reign, an anti-Semitic tendency
was running through the palace as well which won out. 
Long-standing repressive policies and attitudes towards the Jews were intensified after the assassination of Tsar Alexander II on 13 March 1881. This event was wrongly blamed on the Jews and sparked widespread Anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire, which lasted for three years, from 27 April 1881 to 1884.
                                                                                                                          

Alexander III reigned from 1881 to 1894.
At 6'3", his reign is remembered for his harsh anti-Jewish measures including
the MAY LAWS, expulsions from villages and from Moscow, and widespread pogroms and anti-Semitism in universities.  This caused mass Jewish emigrations to the West and a fillip to the Zionist movement in Russia to return to Palestine (Israel). The 1st aliyah (return) was in 1880.  
 Alexander III; 10 March 1845 – 1 November 1894) was Emperor of RussiaKing of Poland and Grand Duke of Finland from 13 March 1881 until his death on 1 November 1894.He was highly reactionary and reversed some of the liberal reforms of his father, Alexander II. Under the influence of Konstantin Pobedonostsev (1827–1907) he opposed any reform that limited his autocratic rule.  Tsar Alexander III (1881-1894) was hostile to Jews; his reign witnessed a sharp deterioration in the Jews' economic, social, and political condition.                

The Warsaw pogrom of 1881 worsened Polish-Jewish relations, and was criticized by some members of the Polish elite. Historian Michael Ochs notes that period from 1863 to 1881 was witnessing the increase of anti-Semitism in the Russian-controlled Poland.

They banned Jews from inhabiting rural areas and shtetls (even within the Pale of Settlement) and restricted the occupations in which they could engage. The Russian imperial police strictly applied the anti-Semitic discriminatory laws, while the Russian media engaged in unrestrained anti-Semitic propaganda. In 1891, all Jews were systematically expelled from Moscow. These repressions embittered many Jews against Russian society, convincing many that Russia could no longer be their home.
The Tsar's minister Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev stated the aim of the government with regard to the Jews was that "One third will die out, one third will leave the country and one third will be completely dissolved in the surrounding population".  The pogroms and the repressive legislation resulted in the mass emigration of Jews to western Europe and America. Between 1881 and the outbreak of the First World War, an estimated 2.5 million Jews left Russia - one of the largest group migrations in recorded history.
After the Pesach pogrom of 1903, pogroms became the official policy of the Russian Empire, and the anti-Semitic terror reached its peak in October 1905.
Nikolai Alexandrovich Romanov
Emperor Nicholas II b: May 18, 1868; d: July 17, 1918
His wife was also Alexandra Feodorovna AKA Alix of Hesse (German).
They were married in 1894.  
Nicholas II, was the last emperor of Russia and reigned from November 1, 
1894 to March 15, 1917.  He was forced to abdicate and then the whole family 
was murdered, a plot that made movies and books as well as now on Netflix.
A girl was found with amnesia, saying she was the last child of the family, 
Anastasia, which turned out to be false.  
Nicholas continued the harsh policies of his father, Alexander III
 toward the Jews.
Severe pogroms occurred in 1903 to 1907, and the notorious Beilis trial took 
place in 1913.  When his premier, Stolypin, presented a plan affording some relief 
to the Jews, Nichals replied:  "As long as I am czar, the Jews of Russia shall
 not receive equal rights."   With his family, he was imprisoned by the Bolsheviks at that time, exiled to Siberia, and executed the following year in July 1918.  

No wonder we had issues like the Bellis Affair happen.  Menahem Mendel Beilis was a Russian Jew accused of ritual murder in Kiev in the Russian Empire in a notorious 1913 trial, known as the "Beilis trial" or "Beilis affair". The process sparked international criticism of the antisemitic policies of the Russian Empire. The Beilis trial took place in Kiev from September 25 through October 28, 1913. The Beilis case was compared with the Leo Frank case in which an American Jew was convicted of raping and murdering 13-year-old Mary Phagan. After his acquittal, Beilis became an enormous hero and celebrity.

In World War I, many Jews felt they could improve their position in society if they contributed to defending Russia. Over 400,000 were mobilized and 80,000 served on the front lines. Despite this, when the Russian army faced defeat, anti-Semitic commanders blamed Jewish populations. Jews were accused of treason and spying for the Germans, with some Jews being kidnapped and tried for espionage. After their trials, mass expulsions of Jews living near the front lines were organized, with Jews being expelled from Courland and northern Lithuania in 1915. One month later, the printing of Hebrew characters was forbidden.

Resource:  
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia

Saturday, July 20, 2019

RUSSIAN JEWS And Their Trying Experiences

Nadene Goldfoot
                                               
The Great Grand Duke of Kiev
St. Vladimir 1st
1st Czar of Russia 
Originally a follower of Slavic paganism, Vladimir converted to Christianity in 988 and Christianized the Kievan Rus'.He is thus also known as Saint Vladimir.

In the beginning of Russia's history in the year of 988, Duke Vladimir converted to Christianity.  Jews participated in a disputation (debate)  on this occasion. 
                                                                           
We've had disputations throughout history.  We've even debated with G-d himself in Genesis.  
                                                     
By 8th to 10th centuries, Khazaria was a powerful state.
It was started by a Turkish or Finnish tribe that settled in the lower Volga region.  Russian chronicles called them White Ugrians as Hungarians were called the Black Ugrians.  Khazaria was so large that it extended into Kiev and its royal house intermarried with the Byzantium.  In the 8th century it had a powerful judaizing movement when King Bulan and 4,000 of his nobles accepted Judaism, helped by prince Obaiah.
  
"The story of a disputation on the question, Which is the best religion? is, however, very old. One is said to have taken place about 740, before Bulan, the king of the Khazars, who, uncertain whether to exchange his heathen religion, which he had come to abhor, for Mohammedanism or Christianity, summoned representatives of these two creeds, as well as of Judaism, for a disputation. None could convince him of the superiority of his faith, and Bulan resolved to espouse the Jewish, since both Christian and Mohammedan referred to it as the basis of their own, and each recognized it as superior to the others . Upon this story the religious disputations in Judah ha-Levi's "Cuzari" are based. The story of a disputation occurs in Russian legends regarding Vladimir's conversion, but with a different result."
                                                   

The once extensive power of the Khazarians was broken on the Volga by the Russian archduke Yaroslav in 1083.  

"Christianity spread to Russia through the Byzantine Empire. A churchman in Constantinople sent two monks to convert the Slavs to Christianity and the two monks (Cyril and Methodius) spoke the Slavonic language and used it to conduct mass rather than the traditional Greek. Use of the native language led to many conversions to Christianity. ... Within 100 years Christianity was established and claimed an important convert, Grand Duke Vladimir the 1st of Kiev. Some say his conversion was spurred by political and economic gains from the Byzantine Empire, but he did make Christianity the state religion of Kievan Russia. Christianity spread gradually and became popular in the cities long before it did in the countryside."  This was the start of Christianity in Russia.  
                                                          

This relationship has a long history: the rulers of the Turkic Khazars, powerful in southern Russia,  converted to Judaism in the 8th century.  They had chosen Judaism after having a debate or contest after listening to representatives of Judaism, Christianity and Islam because they were sitting in the middle of the Silk Road crossroads and had to deal with people of all 3 faiths. 

 According to the Russian chronicles, Jewish missionaries sought to convert the pagan Grand Prince Vladimir of Kiev as early as 987.  Ultimately, however, Vladimir chose to accept baptism and become a Christian, adopting the Eastern Orthodox rite that his ambassadors had found to be so beautiful when they visited Hagia Sophia in Constantinople.

By the 12th Century, a Jewish gate is mentioned in Kiev.  This would restrict Jews from other gates, evidently.  The Jewish quarter (restriction of Jews as to where they could live) in Kiev was looted in 1113, so such anti-Semitism was a part of the culture of Ukraine even then.  

However, in this period, Russian Jews were attending western yeshivot and were able to asked questions of German rabbis.  

In the late 15th Century, some Lithuanian traders found a Judaizing sect in Novgorod and Moscow which ticked off the Christians.  Christians could spread Christianity but Jews were not allowed to spread Judaism, and that was the end of Jewish learning to Christians.  The attitude of Christians toward Jews became more violent.  

In 1563, Jews in Polotsk and Vitebsk, Russia, 300 Jews were drowned  upon refusing to accept baptism.  This would have meant they were refusing to let go of Judaism and become Catholics.  

Russia didn't want Jews to enter their country.  They had clauses that prohibited Jews from even visiting Russia that were inserted in treaties in 1550 and 1678.  Any Jews that managed to stay were expulsed from Russia in 1727, 1738, 1742.                                              

As it was, in May 1727, the 2nd wife of Peter I, Catherine I from Poland,  the first empress born as Marta Helena Skowrofiska,  later known as Marta Samuilovna, b: April 5, 1684, who ruled from 1725 to 1727, expelled all Jews living in LITTLE RUSSIA.  This was ended after her death  on May 6, 1727.
Had her family ties in Poland caused her to be so against Jews?  
                                                           
Catherine the Great ruled from 1762 to 1796 and her Jewish policy was marked by a combination of liberalim and coercion. Only White Russians were allowe to register in the merhant and urban classes-with permission.  This act marked the beginning of the PALE OF SETTLEMENT.  During her last years, she prevented the extension of Jewish settlement and in 1795, prohibited Jewish residence in rural areas.
 Born Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst, this Catherine II  was Empress of Russia from 1762 until 1796, the country's longest-ruling female leader. She came to power following a coup d'état that she organised—resulting in her husband, Peter III, being overthrown. Under her reign, Russia was revitalized; it grew larger and stronger and was recognized as one of the great powers of Europe.  Of course she's a hateful ruler in the eyes of Jewish historians today.  

By 1753, 35,000 Jews were driven out of Russia. Then Catherine II came along in 1762 who permitted all aliens to live in Russia except the Jews.  

Poland was partitioned in 1772, 1793, and 1795.  That's when the great Jewish masses of White Russia, (Ukraine), Lithuania and Courland became Russian subjects.  For over a century these Jews, including my maternal grandmother's family of Jermulowski, , were under the reactionary rule of the Czars.  


In 1786, Jews were restricted to towns, which was laying the foundation of the PALE OF SETTLEMENT.  By 1795, only the Karaites ( Jewish sect refusing the Oral Law from Moses) had equality of rights with the Christians.  Finally in 1802, There was created a Council for Jewish Affairs.  Two years later, it defined the Pale, restricted Jews in the villages and in 1807-1808 limited the activities of the KAHAL (Jewish leadership) in the areas of religion and charity, and prohibited the traditional Jewish costume.  

On the other hand, it took measures to promote agriculture, which for Jews, was a new endeavor for they hadn't been allowed to own land and had been urban people with trades.  The trades were limited as well, and mostly the only one available to Jews was money-lending, a trade that was unseemly to Christians.  


People usually are benevolent towards Jews at first and then turn on them because they have refused to convert.  Luther was like that.    Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812 and was kind at first.  Later, he turned reactionary and about 20,000 Jews were expelled from the provinces of Vitebsk and Mohilev in 1824, and those remaining were forbidden to live near the frontier.  

                                                   
Nicholas I, Emperor of Russia, grandson of Catherine the Great II.
b: 1796 d: 1855
His reign was from December 1, 1825
to March 2, 1855. 

  About 600 oppressive enactments regarding Jews were published during the reign of Nicholas I who regarded Jews as an injurious element.  Military service was brutally imposed on young male Jews from age 12 on up by 1827.  Jewish boys were taken by force to serve in their army for 25 years.  They were put on the front lines.  " These boys were known as cantonists; derived from the term 'canton' referring to the word 'military camps' to which they were sent. Conscripts under the age of 18 were assigned to live in preparatory institutions until they were old enough to formally join the army. The 25 years of service required that these recruits be counted from age 18, even if they had already spent many years in military institutions before reaching that age."
Czar Nicholas strengthened the cantonist system and used it to single out Jewish children for persecution, their baptism being a high priority to him. No other group in Russia was expected to serve at such a young age, nor were other groups of recruits tormented in the same way. Nicholas wrote in a confidential memorandum, "The chief benefit to be derived from the drafting of the Jews is the certainty that it will move them most effectively to change their religion." Historian Simon Dubnov wrote, "The barrack was to serve as a school, or rather as a factory, for producing a new generation of de-Judaized Jews, who were completely Russified, and if possible Christianized."  I've heard of stories where mothers injured their son's fingers or feet to keep them from being taken.  My paternal grandfather was born in 1871.  Perhaps he had just missed this horrid ordeal somehow, living in Telsiai, Lithuania.  

 Jews then could not live near the frontiers of the PALE OF SETTLEMENT in 1835, effective until 1915.  Jewish books were censored in 1836.  Their Kahal was abolished by 1844.  This was the organized Jewish community having autonomous rights and it was their responsibility for taxation.  

                                                     
Golda Meir (1898-1978) born in Russia, was caught in a pogrom when a child.  She lived in the USA after that experience, then settled in Palestine in 1921.
In 1969 she became Israel's Prime Minister and served during Israel's
Yom Kippur War.  She retired in 1974. 
The PALE OF SETTLEMENT was the world's great center of talmudic study and Odessa was the center of Hebrew literary revival.  It's also where Zionists and contemporary Jewish history began.  In 1914, at the outbreak of WWI, 5,600,000 Jews lived in the Russian Empire, including almost 2 million in Poland.  Those Jews near war zones were deported en masse, and their community was made the scapegoat for the Russian defeats, even though 300,000 Jews were in the Russian army. 
                                                     
A Pogrom in the Ukraine
Pogrom in Russian means "DESTRUCTION."
It's an organized massacre for the annihilation of any body or class or people,
especially with governmental collusion;  more specially one directed against Jews.  The term was first used in 1905 at the time of the anti-Jewish outbreaks by the Black Hundreds in Russia.  It is often applied to earlier Russian outbreaks from 1881 onward.  Some pogroms killed thousands. 
 
65,000 Jews became engaged in agriculture in Russia in 1864 when the judicial law contained no anti-Jewish discrimination.  Jews became prominent in such areas as economics, culture and left-wing politics.  That was the spark to start anti-Semitism which reinforced the former religious prejudices.

While 1st generation Russian born Jewry were abandoning  their traditional Jewish way of life, the Soviet government would not recognize the Jews as a nationality, so discouraged Hebrew and persecuted Zionism.   Not many Jews were involved in agriculture.  The government worked to discourage Jewish practices in the 1930s.  The annexation early in WWI of western White Russia, western Volhynia, eastern Glaicia, Northern Bkovina, Bessarabia, Lithuania and Latvia led to the mass-deportation of Jews, especially the intelligentsia, from these places.  The Nazis invaded Russia in 1941 and aimed at exterminating the Jewish population.  That meant that of the 500,000 Jews in white Russia, only half escaped to the interior and up to 200,000 were slaughtered.   

                                                     When Alexander II in 1881 was assassinated, anti-Semitism grew much worse.  Jews were the chief victims.  In the early 1880s many pogroms made people think of Jews as a foreign element to be kept apart from the village populations, so out came the MAY LAWS against Jews.  
                                                     
New York Russian Jewish immigration said to be the drivers of American culture
In 1891 Jews were expelled from Moscow and a NUMERUS CLAUSUS was introduced in high schools which caused Jews to turn to Zionism and Socialism.  This is when Jews really started immigrating to the USA. 
                                                           
Two little waifs who were born in 1906 an 1908
in the USA with parents from Lithuania and Poland who came over just before.  Our  Zada married Babba in Idaho in November 1905.
My father is on the right with his brother Charlie.
Dad became a kosher butcher and that led to owning Silver Falls
Meat Packing Co and owning a string of cattle trucks.  Under freedom
sprinkled with some Jewish anti-Semitism, Jews did pretty well in the USA.  

 That immigration flow was ended in 1924 with new rules in the USA.  Russia's census  of 1959 showed 2,268,000.  After Israel's 1967 War, many Russian Jews demanded the right to emigrate to Israel, and some did emigrate by 1970.   Then, 250,000 Jews were able to leave Russia with 150,000 of them going to Israel, and later, to the USA. In the 1980s the doors of emigration were almost virtually closed but the Jewish ferment continued inside the county. 
                                                         
We're learning Hebrew in an Ulpan in Israel,
Mostly all are Russian students.  For starters, I was in a class of 40 of us.
Russians were much faster learners, so I was placed in a gimel class and
had more individual attention sprinkled with some English.  Even
my husband, who taught boys Hebrew for bar-mitzva, was struggling. 
It's not easy when you are older.  
 
I immigrated to Israel from the USA  in September 1980.  I had many Russians in my Hebrew class.  They were used to learning new language and my husband and I were not.  We went against the Russians who had a shvee-ta, a strike over the cost of our dinners in the program we were in.  It was our 1st disagreement with our fellow Russian Jews.  Our Hebrew teacher, Sarah, was a pen pal of Sharansky, who was in the Russian prison.  He was later able to get out and became involved in Israel's government.  He was there for trying to learn Hebrew.  His wife, somewhere safe in Israel, was a major power in getting him out, as I remember.  While I lived in Israel from 1980 to the end of 1985, I saw more Russians under President Gorbachev again being allowed widespread emigration.  Where anti-Semitism up to then was being suppressed, now this freed up such activity.

Israel's doors are open to Jews of the world under suppression; that's what it's for.  Israel took in almost 200,000 Soviet immigrants in 1990 alone after I had left, with the stream continuing into 1991.  


Diplomatic relations with Israel was re-established in 1991, shortly before the liquidation of the USSR.  


Resource:
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5226-disputations
https://quizlet.com/8651225/kingdoms-and-christianity-questions-flash-cards/
The Jews of Khazaria 2nd edition by Kevin Alan Brook
https://asu.pure.elsevier.com/en/publications/judaism-and-jewish-influences-in-russian-spiritual-christianity-t
https://www.aish.com/jl/h/h/48929772.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_I_of_Russia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_I_of_Russia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_the_Great
My Life, by Golda Meir
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2014/07/russia-ukraine-and-pale-of-settlement.html
https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2019/03/russian-jews-their-background-and.html
https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2018/01/when-600000-jews-were-exiled-by-russia.html
https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2019/04/europes-pale-of-settlement-1914-and-jews.html
https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2018/02/russia-and-jews.html