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[Page 377]
Translator's Note: Ainikait (also spelled Einigkeit) was the publication of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in the Soviet Union. The JAFC has an entry in Wikipedia.
Leo Kvitko. He is 23 Years Old. In Gomel oblast, German propaganda leaflets declared that the leader of a terrorist group, the Jew Samuil Rochlin, has been hanged, with God's help, on the main square. Authorities invited the public to look at his body. In reality, Rokhlin was derailing two enemy trains carrying troops and ammunition. His first actions ended night-time railroad traffic between Gomel and Zhlobin. After that Rokhlin began organizing daytime raids. Rokhlin would appear suddenly, and, in front of the stunned guards, run to the railroad track, place a mine in front of the moving locomotive, run back, and drop flat on the ground. A terrible explosion would shake the air, while Rokhlin was running to the woods and escaping among the trees before the Germans could start shooting at and chasing him. This is what the staff of Kotovski Partisan Unit writes about him: Lieutenant Samuil Rokhlin is an excellent soldier. In a battle for the village Peresviannoe, he, already wounded, demonstrated courage, fearlessness, and initiative. The Unit commanders nominated him for the Order of the Battle Red Banner.
Rokhlin's group derailed 22 trains with troops and ammunition, destroyed 8 trucks and 8 tanks, and liquidated up to 1,000 German soldiers and officers. Out of 22 trains, Rokhlin personally mined 13. In July 1943, the unit commanders nominated him for the Order of Lenin. Samuil looks younger than his age. Not tall, slim, with a rosy peaceful face, he looks more like a cooperative society accountant. But his reserved words, Not much to talk about, and his heavy strong sunburned hands show immense stamina and great fearlessness. Rokhlin was born in a little village, Anufrievo in Mogilev oblast, on the kolkhoz Red Star where his parents worked on the collective farm's Jewish team . At the beginning of the war, he fought on the border, and after his regiment was crushed, Samuil with his four Russian comrades, escaped into the woods and formed a partisan group. His two sisters and nephew also fight the enemy in the partisan group; his older brother is in the Red Army and is always on the frontline.
Honor to the people who raised such brave sons! With this spirit they will win over all their atrocious enemies.
October 26, 1943
Translator's Note: Lev (Leyb) Kvitko (circa 1890-1952), . A prolific Yiddish writer best known for his children's poems. He lived in Russia, Ukraine and Germany, and then returned to the Soviet Union where he became a prominent Soviet writer. During the war he was a member of the Presidium of the Jewish Antifascist Committee (JAC) and one of the editors of the newspaper Ainikait. As a member of JAC, he traveled to the territories liberated from Germans and collected stories from Jewish survivors. In 1944 Leyb Kvitko went to just-liberated Crimea and reviewed the possibility of settlement of Jews returning from evacuation.
With the beginning of Stalin's anti-Semitic campaign in 1948, the Jewish Antifascist Committee and the newspaper Ainikait ceased operating. In January 1949, authorities arrested Lev/Leib Kvitko and other members of the Antifascist Jewish Committee, and accused of spying and anti-soviet propaganda, Zionism, and nationalism. After a fabricated hearing in court, Lev was shot to death on August 12, 1952. In 1955, the Soviet commission secretly cleared Lev Kvitko and the other executed members of the JAC. This fact became public much later. (from
An English translation of one of his poems is online. Lev Kvitko has a Wikipedia entry.
Solomon Gorelick Hero of the Soviet Union. He was a cheerful guy from Bobruisk, a singer and tank driver, beloved by his family. Gorelick was originally a mechanic during the Finnish war. He appeared in various places, got into a burned out tank, and returned it to service within a few days. Later Solomon became a tank driver.Once, his tank caught fire in battle, and he barely made it out. WW II found Gorelick in Lvov. For a long time his family had no news from him; they were evacuated from Bobruisk to Omsk and all communication cut off. Solomon and his tank were fighting near Moscow. His tank caught fire. He drove his blazing vehicle into enemy lines, destroying
Aaron Gorelick had two sons. The older, Josef, gave his life for Leningrad, and the younger, Solomon, died for Moscow.
No date is recorded.
Translator's Note: In the Winter War with Finland, the Russians used a British tank replica, which was vulnerable, flammable, deficient in winter and required constant maintenance. Although Russia won this war, the Soviets lost 2300 of 3000 tanks. The Finns had 30 tanks, and inflicted casualties mainly by throwing Molotov cocktails. [When I was a senior in high school, we had a Finnish exchange student, who had heard from older members of his family, that when they faced the probability of Soviet invasion, asked, Where will we bury them all?-IN]
Gorelick died near Belgorod on October 22, 1941. In his last battle, he smashed 3 mine canons, 8 regular canons, a few dozen trucks and horse carriages. He is buried in a mass soldiers' grave near Belgorod, on which a monument was raised in the 1980s.
[See Wikipedia articles on the war in Finland. The Simon Wiesenthal Center web site has an entry for him under Solomon Gorelik].
M. Lapidus. Jews who build fighter aircraft. In a discussion with Alexander Wasserman, Chairman of the aircraft industry Trade Union of the USSR, I learned that we have a number of Jews - workers, engineers, plant directors, who put their efforts into producing more aircraft, engines, and equipment for the front. One is Israel Levin, who started working at an aircraft factory when he was young, in 1927. He began as a student, became a mechanic, and showed managerial talent. Assigned to be a team leader, he then obtained a master position. Then he was drafted into the Red Army, and placed in an aviation regiment. The former mechanic advanced , becoming deputy director of the plant. Later he became director of another plant, and finally led plant number 292, the most distinguished in the aircraft industry. Soldiers from the Guard Unit came from the front to award this plant a gold embroidered red banner for winning the socialist competition among aircraft plants. Authorities awarded Israel Levin The Order of Lenin.
The head of another aircraft plant is young but gifted director Mark Gorelick. In August, this plant was noted among the best in the collective. Jews and non-Jews alike work in a friendly, harmonious manner.
August 27, 1942.
B. Mark. Jews in Soviet industry in 1941-1943. A large number of Jews work in the Soviet defense industry, especially in aircraft building plants. In one plant whose director is Mordechai Gorelick, 25% of the workers are Jews. The same is true at the factory producing trench mortars (lead engineer: N.Shapiro). More than three thousand Jewish workers, mechanics, and engineers from Lvov, Moscow, Krakow, and Leningrad are working at the largest ammunition factory in Kazakhstan. Thousands of Jews are employed in the machine gun and tank production industries. Everyone knows the names of Stakhanovites
From 1941 to 1943, workers formed hundreds of co-op production organizations in different parts of the Soviet Union. The local administration of the city of Krasnoarmeisk on the Volga helped Jews evacuated from Kiev and Riga organize a textile production co-op numbering 1500 people. In this organization people speak Yiddish, Latvian, Russian, and Ukrainian. A similar co-op was created in Kokand with one of its leaders Bunimovich from Uzbekistan). This co-op grew from 800 to 2000 people. Among them are a few hundred Ukrainians and Uzbeks. A number of co-op organizations were formed by Jewish evacuees in Tadjikistan. In Aschabad there is a big textile co-op , with one of its leaders Simon Tavrovski; this co-op is considered the best in Turkmenistan. Several textile co-ops were created in Fergana (Uzbekistan). Many Jewish textile workers from Kiev are working in the Aschabad co-op which had only 300 Tadjikian and Russian workers before the war. Under the leadership of its chairman Chaim Potaschnikov, this co-op continuously produces over its quota. There are many co-op organizations of tailors in Saratov, Barnaul, Zlatoust, Baschkiria, Chuvashia, Mordovian Autonomous Region, and in Ural. In Alma-Ata, a large group of Jews from Kiev, mechanics and carpenters, makes military carriages for the front. Another co-op produces field kitchens. In one city on the Volga, watchmakers evacuated from Zhitomir, Berdichev, and Vinnitsa, make clocks for war airplanes. Others make cameras for reconnaissance airplanes.
June 19, 1943
I. Katsnelson. Ambassadors of a red-bannered Baltic. A small fleet of war ships entered the Moscow River to celebrate Navy Day in the capital. One ship commander is third rank captain Efraim Goldstein; Menashe Sverdlin is a commander of armored vessels. Goldstein came from a poor Jewish family. His father and grandfather worked all their lives in the small town of Loew, on the junction of the Soj and Dnepr Rivers. Generations of Goldsteins ran a passenger ferry across the rivers. Efraim helped his father, loved the river, and dreamed about the Navy. But in the Tsars' time, Jewish children were not accepted in the Navy schools. Only after the October Revolution could the boy fulfill his dream. First, he worked in the Gomel plant Metallist and becoming a good mechanic. A few years later he signed up for the Red Army and was transferred into the Navy, to a torpedo boat. Efraim graduated from the Navy school and became an officer of the Baltic fleet. In battles he showed himself a skilled and decisive commander, an expert in torpedo attacks. He fought alongside Heroes of the Soviet Union Abram Sverdlov, Uschev, and Starostin. They torpedoed and sank enemy ships in Finland and Riga's bays, participated in the liberation of Tallinn, were engaged on the Lubava Koenigsberg line, and crushed the enemy in the Lubava pocket. In Mogilev, fascists killed Goldstein's brother, engineer Zalman; his other brother Shevel returned from the war disabled.. Goldstein himself was wounded twice in battle but never left his ship. From childhood, Efraim loved Jewish music and always carried a record player and records with him. He shared the joy of victory with his wife Dvoira and son Senderel, who came with his father to the Moscow celebration. The boy enthusiastically described 16 days on the torpedo boat while traveling through the rivers Neva, Sver, Scheksna, and the Moscow-Volga Canal on the way to Moscow.
On the deck of another battleship I met another commander, Menashe Sverdlin. A son of a tailor from Vitebsk, Menashe was a mechanic at a large Leningrad plant. He wanted a naval profession and entered the Navy school. He saw combat from the first days of the war, and participated in successful raids. His ships convoyed transports from blockaded Leningrad to Kronshtadt. His armored vessels enabled the Soviet Navy to approach enemy communications. (This material was delivered to Toronto, London, Tel-Aviv, Havana, and Sofia).
July 25, 1948
Data from 1897 taken from the 5 Byelorussian provinces (guberniya): Grodno, Vilna, Vitebsk, Minsk and Mogilev. In the years of the First World War (1914-1918) and the military intervention (1918-1920), casualties among the Byelorussian civilian population made up, apart from natural deaths (117,600 people), 1,376,200 people. In total the number lost at the front 106,600 people; including those above the normal death rate 445,200 people; emigrated 122,000 people; deported to other districts in the former Russian Empire 246,000 people. Reduction in population from a declining birth rate was 456,000 people. After the signing of the Peace Treaty in Riga (March 1921) the territory of Byelorussia included 6 districts (uezd) formerly in Minsk province (guberniya) covering 52,300 square kilometers with a population of 1,300,000 people. Present-day Vitebsk, Gomel, and Mogilev regions (oblast) were transferred to the Russian Federation. In 1924, the BSSR consisted of 18 districts (uezd) of the former Vitebsk, Gomel, and Smolensk provinces (guberniya), which had predominantly Byelorussian population. Data for 1926 tabulated according to Ukrupneniya (Increase in Belarus' territory) from the Russian Federation, at the time excluded Rechitsa and Gomel districts (rayon).
[Page 384]
Tranlated by Judith Springer
An order: "Jews, dig a hole here!"
[Page 386]
To eradicate the sting of anti-Semitism, with which the fascist serpent poisoned the people's masses
Surrendering to mass psychosis, Jews sometimes lapsed into self-negation, seeing a national trait in every improper act of their co-religionist. Others withdrew into a narrow circle of alienation and bitterness. Can we consider the tragic fate of Jewish masses to be a separate and untimely issue when the fate of all nations is being decided on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War? It is urgent that an authoritative, invigorating, and explanatory statement on Jews be heard in our country through a powerful mouthpiece of public opinion -- the Soviet press. The anguished hearts of Jews are waiting for this statement, which will be a healing balm to them. True, a certain part of Russian society does not need such a statement. Another, very small, part is awaiting actions and will not be moved by words. But among the overwhelming majority of the Russian population, this statement will find fertile soil and will promote fraternal coexistence with all the small nationalities of our Union. We firmly believe that the victorious peace, which is not far off, will bring Jews consolation and happiness. We do not doubt that the Soviet Government will take practical steps for a political and labor system for Jews dispersed by the winds of war throughout the Soviet Union. However, psychological training of the masses and moral support are needed right now. The "inviolable Union of free republics" extolled in the state hymn will admit the Jewish nation into the family of equal nations, despite all the intrigues of Hitler's myrmidons.
[Page 387]
Dr. Shmuel Krakovsky,
Dr. Josef Rav, editor in chief
Dr. Smilovitsky,s work provides new perspectives on many aspects of Nazi policies and their methods toward the final solution of the Jewish question in Belarus. We see how Jews move from suffering to armed resistance, showing examples of genuine courage. With great confidence, the book investigates the topic of anti-Semitism among the local population and partisans, a topic banned even now in post-Soviet historiography. It recounts who saved and who betrayed, the fate of Jewish children including children of mixed marriages, the relationship of Jewish and non-Jewish spouses. As a person who lived through the war I can tell that this book came out truthful and enlightening.
Dr. Itskhak Arad, Head of the Board of Directors,
Dr. Shalom Cholavsky,
JewishGen, Inc. makes no representations regarding the accuracy of
the translation. The reader may wish to refer to the original material
for verification.
Holocaust in Belorussia
Yizkor Book Project
JewishGen Home Page
Copyright © 1999-2024 by JewishGen, Inc.
Notes
1. World War II news reports in the Soviet Union always used destroyed instead of killed when referring to enemy casualties. Return
2. Stakhanov was a coal miner who produced 10 times his quota. From then on, people who greatly exceeded their work quotas were called Stakhanovites. Return
Table of the dynamics of the change
in the Jewish population of Belorussia
from the 18th to the 20th centuriesTranscribed by Irene Newhouse and Dr. Leonid Smilovitsky
Year of Census
Total Population
Jews
Per cent of Jews
1766-1811
5,037,000
62,800
not given
1838-1847
4,956,600
225,725
--
1897
6,380,000
915,200
14.3
1914
7,515,100
1,250,000
not given
1921
1,634,200
not given
--
1926
4,983,900
407,000
8.16
1 Jan 1939
5,568,994
329,395
23.95
22 Jun 1941
10,528,000
980,000
9.3
1942
7,828,600
not given
not given
1943
6,937,900
--
--
1944
6,293,600
--
--
1945
6,264,800
--
--
1946
6,540,000
--
--
1950
7,709,000
--
--
1959
8,054,648
150,054
1.2
1979
9,532,516
135,450
1.42
1989
10,452,000
111,789
1.06
1994
10,346,000
100,000
0.96
1999
10,100,000
70,000
0.69
Table compiled by the author from these sources:
Nine Aspen Stakes
by Yanka Kupala
There are nine, nine aspen stakes
They desecrate my Belarus.
There are hundreds, thousands of them --
My angry and painful tale will be only about those nine.
The murderer is raging ferociously, he does not slumber.
From a deserted highway, the robber
Intoxicated with human blood, he is rushing
To pave all lands with innocent corpses,
The furious Fuehrer is a vampire and a bandit.
Spread his pillaging all over Belarus.
He keeps my people shackled in jail,
Turning my beloved land into a bonfire.
Till the night, Jaegerstrasse in Berlin is full of
Belorussian maidens, songs of the land,
Pockmarked prostitutes with Aryan blood,
In patterned blouses embroidered in silk,
Torn off our maidens by a band of beasts.
A cruel executioner cut out your breasts.
Father blinded in a time of evil,
Mother shot in the hut by fascists...
Germans took out my Belorussians,
There were nine of them, SS men with full bellies,
Germans took out my Jews,
Grey-moustached people of Belorussian land,
Innocent people, close to me, my kin.
Hitler's lackeys, nine dogs.
There is no salvation from German bandits,
Only the dawn rises, like a beacon, over the ravine.
Jews are digging, not knowing for whom.
And, with their own hands, they dug a hole,
A grave-prison for themselves by order.
Belorussians and Jews stood next to the hole.
The cannibals' order: "Into the hole, Jews!
And you, Belorussians, cover it faster!"
Only hot dry winds are whistling all around
And animals are haunting the swampy brushwood road.
They froze... all stayed still like poles...
"Grab the shovels, you backward morons!
Do you want to follow the Jews into the hole, you pigs?"
Fascists killed my Belorussians,
But soon the time of reckoning came,
Fascists killed my Jews,
Grey-moustached people of Belorussian land,
Innocent people, close to me, my kin...
A partisan detachment avenged all.
And it drove nine aspen stakes deep
Into the grave of the fascist beasts.
The prediction of doom to the enemy is not unfounded,
Grave ravens are in the sky for a reason.
Oh, Belorussian land! Oh, my beautiful land!
Your sons will bring you freedom!1942
To the USSR Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee
by M.G. Kel'man
Translated by Judith Springer
July 30, 1944
German fascism was preparing to attack the Soviet Union not only by means of military equipment, but also with the poison of wild chauvinism, which it injected primarily into the empty souls of its tin soldiers -- these blind executors of the will of big and small fuehrer. Fascist conquerors tried to permeate with it the entire soil in the countries they occupied. The invaders brought innumerable victims and sufferings to all the peoples of our Union. However, the Jewish people, in addition to these sufferings, feel a deep sense of moral injury, which weighs heavily on their souls. This sense of injury stems from the onslaught of anti-Semitic persecution, evil, and mass annihilation unleashed by the occupiers and their toadies -- an onslaught unprecedented even in the history of the long-suffering Jewish nation. Owing to historical peculiarities, the Jewish masses are the first to be affected by all major national upheavals, which cost them much blood and many tears. Hitlerites, first and foremost, attacked Jews, which brought them considerable material benefits. Their bloodstained hands immediately got hold of the property of those exterminated. On the other hand, by means of massacres of Jews, they tried to arouse the base instincts of national strife among the native population and thus to weaken its capacity for resistance.
M.G. Kelman, physician
Kuibyshev, 259 Samarskaya Street
GARF [State Archive of the Russian Federation], fond [collection] 8114, opis [inventory] 1, delo [file] 137, list 380-382
.
About L.Smilovitsky's book,
Holocaust in Belarus.Translated by Lena Gorina-Black
Yad Vashem Archive Director
Journal Ialkut Moreshet,
Journal of the history of the Holocaust, Tel Aviv
Itshkak Alperovich, Department Chief
Memorial Beit Volin, Gevataim
Memorial Institute Yad Vashem,
Jerusalem
An organizer of the Nesvizh ghetto rebellion,
A commander of a Jewish partisan group,
One of the founders of the kibbutz Ein-ha-Shofet
fulfilling our
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destroyed Jewish communities.
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