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When eastern Europe was home to the Jews

Colin Shindler hails a study of Jewish life that covers two millennia

June 30, 2023 14:10
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JJJ6Y7 Krasilov, Ukraine (Russian / Polish shtetl or Jewish village ).c. 1916-17. Jewish men sitting outside shop talking
2 min read

The 20th century will be the century of the Jews and revolutions.” So wrote the Hungarian painter Béla Zombory-Moldován, on hearing about the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, in Sarajevo in the summer of 1914. No wonder that Stefan Zweig later described the period before as a “golden age of security”.

This book by the American writer Jacob Mikanowski is indeed, as the title suggests, “an intimate history of a divided land”, which traverses two millennia — from the wars of the Roman Emperor, Marcus Aurelius, in 170 to the founding of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1387 to Hitler’s killing fields during the Second World War. It is also the story of Mikanowski’s own antecedents, Jewish and non-Jewish.

The early Jewish migrants were welcomed as a means of counterbalancing invaders from the East. It was a land to be filled by Armenian traders, Dutch farmers, Italian musicians — and Jews who referred to it as “Canaan”.

Even so, the Jews were later caught in the murderous crossfire between a plethora of hostile ethnic groups and violent Christians of different denominations. Jews perished in unimaginable numbers at the hands of Cossack brigands who posed as patriotic Ukrainians during the Khmelnytsky massacres of 1648.