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The Jewish Chronicle

The avenger whose action overcame prosecution

May 19, 2016 11:57
Jewish anarchist Sholom Schwartzbard

By

Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

5 min read

In May 1926, a Jewish watchmaker approached a middle-aged man sporting a cane and attending his favourite restaurant in the Rue Racine in Paris. The watchmaker asked the man his name and, after hearing the response, pumped five bullets into him, adding two more as he lay dying on the pavement. The dead man was Symon Petliura, the head of the Ukrainian state in its struggle for independence between 1919 and 1921. His assassin was Sholom Schwartzbard who had lost more than 20 relatives in the massacres in Ukraine following the October revolution.

In the armed conflict between Ukrainian nationalists, the Bolshevik Red Army, the Monarchist White Russians and a host of free-lance irregulars, it is estimated that a possible 150,000 Jews were killed - the greatest mass-murder of Jews before the Shoah. Many Jews at the time held Petliura responsible for a large number of these pogroms and certainly did not mourn the manner of his passing. An editorial in the Yiddish daily, Der Morgen Zhurnal, in New York - where many East European Jews lived - commented:

"We are not grieved by this incident. Nor are we afraid of the possible consequences. Would that every pogrom leader feel unsafe."

Schwartzbard's pregnant mother had been killed in an earlier pogrom. His uncle Israel was killed as he left synagogue in Baloskow during Passover 1919. His mother's brother and all his family had been killed in Balta, where the women were raped beforehand.