Kiev pogroms (1919)

Kiev pogroms

Pogrom victims in Alexander Hospital, Kiev, 1919. Credit: Elias Tcherikower
Location Kiev, Ukraine
Date 1919
Target Primarily Jews
Attack type
Decapitation, Burning, Stabbing, Shooting
Deaths unspecified number
Non-fatal injuries
unspecified number
Perpetrators Cossacks and the White Armies

The Kiev pogroms of 1919 refers to a series of anti-Jewish pogroms in various places around Kiev carried out by White Volunteer Army troops. The series of events concern the following districts:

Immediate reactions

The leaders of the White Army issued orders condemning the pogroms, but these were largely unheeded due to widespread anti-Semitism.[3] Lenin had spoken out against pogroms in March, and in June, the Bolsheviks assigned some funds for victims of pogroms. However, the events received little coverage in the Bolshevik press.[3]

Escalation of hostility

The Kiev pogroms of 1919 proved the first of many such events.[4] There were a total of 1,326 pogroms across Ukraine around that time, in which between 30,000 and 70,000 Jews were massacred. The pogroms were marked by utmost cruelty and face-to-face brutality. Thousands of women were raped. Hundreds of shtetlekh were pillaged, and Jewish neighborhoods were left in ruins. According to some estimates, overall, in the pogroms of 1918-1921, half a million Jews were left homeless.[5]

Of these 53.7% were committed by Petlura's Ukrainian nationalists, the remainder by troops from White Volunteer Army (17%), the Bolsheviks' Red Army (2.3%), or local bands. These estimates include deaths due to massacre-induced disease or starvation. More recent estimates based on newly available Russian records judge the percentage killed by the White Volunteer Army to be much higher, perhaps as high as 50 percent." [4][6]

Background and Causes

The Kiev Pogroms of 1919 were splurges of looting, raping, and murder chiefly directed against the shops, factories, homes, and persons of the Jews.[7] The Ukraine had the largest concentration of Jews in Russia at the time and was also the scene of the bitterest and most prolonged fighting between Jews and non-Jews. This is important because according to research there is a positive correlation on a broad scale between the number of Jews, in a given place, and an increased likelihood of pogroms, and they become more likely when long-term subordination and superordination of social groups is in dispute.[8]

The Kiev Pogroms of 1919 were not the first of their kind in Ukraine, and other instances of violence occurred and were carried out against Jews in and around Kiev in the 1880s Kiev Pogrom (1881) and the first decade of the 20th century Kiev Pogrom (1905). Ultimately the tension from these events never really subsided, it laid just beneath the surface and could be seen as a cause of further violence. However the Jewish massacres in the Ukraine in the year 1919, which set the whole land ablaze, can not be compared with these previous pogroms due to its essence and scope. The Kiev Pogroms of 1919 were the bloodiest and the most atypical of the pogroms in Ukraine, taking place after the fall of the imperial regime and under conditions of bitter strife, where violence of every kind was basically unrestrained. Fueled by anti-semitism and propaganda against the Jews, the massacre of the Jews in Kiev, in 1919, was essentially a method for Political Warfare.[9]

The tsarist regime attempted to “divert the attention of the socially and politically discontented masses in another direction, the direction of least resistance.” [10] Essentially it was a way of redirecting popular discontent away from the government and onto a visible minority group. They did this by inciting the lower classes against the Jews who were largely defenseless, and who, they also proposed, were responsible for the misery of the people as a whole. The Jews were depicted as the exploiters of the people, as the leeches of society, who drained the blood of the worker and robbed him of the bounty of his economic activity.[10]

Another cause of the Kiev Pogroms of 1919, was economic difficulties and changes in the urban environment. Economic difficulties and political strife tended to increase the probability of pogroms and this was certainly the case with Ukraine which was in a state of conflict and transition during the Ukrainian War of Independence and afterwards when it had separated from Russia. The stress of changes in the urban environment also provided fertile ground for violence against Jews, stresses such as immigration, not only by Jews from other parts of the empire but by outsiders in general made the pogroms possible.[11]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Michael L. Brown. "More Tears". Our Hands Are Stained with Blood. Destiny Image. p. 105 via Google Books, preview.
  2. Harry James Cargas, Reflections of a Post-Auschwitz Christian. On meeting Kurt Waldheim. Pg. 136
  3. 1 2 Benjamin Frankel, A Restless Mind: Essays in Honor of Amos Perlmutter. Published by Routledge, pg. 272
  4. 1 2 Zvi Y. Gitelman, A Century of Ambivalence: The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union, 1881 to the Present. Pg. 65-70. Indiana University Press, 2001. ISBN 0253338115.
  5. Sharman Kadish, Bolsheviks and British Jews: The Anglo-Jewish Community, Britain, and the Russian Revolution. Published by Routledge, pg. 87
  6. Manus I. Midlarsky, The Killing Trap: genocide in the twentieth century. Published by Cambridge University Press. Page 45
  7. William C. Fuller, The Foe Within: Fantasies of Treason and the End of Imperial Russia, 2006
  8. Heinz-Dietrich Löwe, “Pogroms in Russia: Explanations, Comparisons, Suggestions”, Jewish Social Studies , New Series, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Autumn, 2004) , pp. 17
  9. Elias Hiefetz, The Slaughter of the Jews In the Ukraine In 1919, 1921, preface
  10. 1 2 Elias Hiefetz, The Slaughter of the Jews In the Ukraine In 1919, 1921, chapter 1.
  11. Heinz-Dietrich Löwe, “Pogroms in Russia: Explanations, Comparisons, Suggestions”, Jewish Social Studies , New Series, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Autumn, 2004) , pp. 18

Further references

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