Friday, June 30, 2023

 

Early Wars Causing Lithuanian Jews to Flee to Ukraine

Nadene Goldfoot                                          


In 1432 -1438 there was war in Lithuania.  It was Lithuania and Poland against Russia.  

From 1487-1494 a 2nd war was fought; the Lithuanian Muscovite War of Lithuania, the Golden Horde against Moscow.  

From 1492-1537, the war raged on as the Muscovite-Lithuanian wars of Lithuania and Moscow.  (1492 when Columbus sailed the ocean blue)  and Jews had to  leave Spain, start moving all over trying to find a home...

By 1495, Jews were living in  Vilna, Grodno and Kovno totaling 10,000.  

1508 was the Glinski Rebellion against Lithuania by Glinski supporters

1524 was the big Ottoman-Tartar invasion of Lithuania and Poland

1561to 1570 was the Northern 7 Years War of Lithuania/Poland against Sweden

They received a charter in 1529 guaranteeing freedom of movement and employment.  Soon they were the leading workers in foreign trade and taxing and farming.  However, from 1495-1502, the first 7 years of being in Lithuania, they were excluded FROM Lithuania.  In 1566-1572, the Jewish badge was introduced for Jews to wear to distinguish themselves from citizens.  Jews were disqualified in the court system for giving evidence.  

1576 to 1582 was the Livonian War of everyone (Lithuania/Poland/Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Transylvania);  being against Tsardom of Russia

1600-1629 was again the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and  Swedish War and 1605-1618 included war against Russia  and 1606 -1608 the Zebrzydowski Rebellion of nobles against the king.  

Organization took place.  Jews were represented in the COUNCIL OF THE FOUR (then 5) LANDS, but that wasn't helping, so the Jews formed a separate COUNCIL OF LITHUANIA in 1623 when a separate tax-system was  established.  

                                    Catherine II in the 1780's

By 1762, Catherine II permitted all aliens to live in Russia, except Jews.  Partitions of Poland, resulting from wars, took place in 1772, 1793, and 1795, when the large group of White Russian Jews, Ukraine, Lithuania and Courland  became Russian subjects.  For more than a century, they were all under the reactionary rule of the Czars.

Lithuania became part of Russia in 1795 which lasted until WWI of 1918.  It had become a major part of the Jewish culture so was most important.  It was the home of  distinguished yeshivote (Jewish schools)  and leading rabbis such as the Gaon of Vilna.  It became the seat of MUSAR movement, and a center of Haskalah.

During World War I, 100,000 Jews were expelled or actually emigrated to the Russian interior, leaving their shtetles.  In independent Lithuania, Jews received national autonomy from 1918- 1924.  A Jewish National Council was established under a Ministry for Jewish Affairs.  They had the right to levy taxation under government auspices.  

Polish forces stops Austrian advance at Raszyn, only to retreat to the other side of the river soon afterwards.

The Austro-Polish War or Polish-Austrian War was a part of the War of the Fifth Coalition in 14 April 1809 (a coalition of the Austrian Empire and the United Kingdom against Napoleon's French Empire and Bavaria). It ended October 14, 1809.  It lasted 6 months.  

                                Gaon of Vilna, Rabbi Eleazar

Vilna, the largest city as well as capital, was lost to Poland in 1919, the result of WWI.  This weakened the Jews of Vilna.  After 1924, autonomy was restricted solely to religious matters, while the economic position of the Jews deteriorated in the oncoming years. 


No Jews survived the expulsion of Jews of 1290 when Jews were also expulsed from England.  A few former Marranos settled in Dublin after 1660 and more arrived as military purveyors after the 1689 revolution. Original Jews were displaced by Ashkenazim, but by 18th century, population declined and by 1816 there were only 3 Jewish families in Dublin and a few in other Irish towns.  They were joined by others in 1822 and the population was 400 by 1880.  Emigration from Eastern Europe took place at the end of the 19th century and many went to Dublin, Cork, Waterford, Limerick, Belfast.  the chief rabbinate was founded in 1918 being Yitzhak Halevi Herzog with the Jewish population in 1990 at 1,600, mainly in Dublin,

Many Jews of Lithuania moved on to Dublin, Ireland and from there, to South Africa which Jews started settling in the early 19th century.  Capetown had a synagogue by 1841.  The settlers were traders and peddlers who traveled among the Boer farmers.  Later they went to the towns.  Gold was discovered there in the end of the 19th century, which eastern European Jews which drew many.  Johannesburg became the main Jewish settlement, and they enjoyed the political equality in Cape Colony and Natal, but obtained it in the Transvaal only after the 2nd Boer War.  Immigration to South Africa was popular following WWI and  came mostly from Lithuania.  

I know that Simon Goldfoot moved from Lithuania to South Africa in the 20's.  His son, Stanley Goldfoot b: May 2, 1914,  was born there in Houghton, Johannesburg, South Africa.  Immediately after graduation high school, he made Aliyah to Palestine, and he lived in Jerusalem, becoming the Chief of Intelligence for the Stern Group which the British called the Stern Gang.  


Polish–Lithuanian Conflict) was an undeclared war between newly independent Lithuania and Poland following World War I, which happened mainly, but not only, in the Vilnius and Suwałki regions. The war is viewed differently by the respective sides. According to Lithuanian historians, it was part of the Lithuanian Wars of Independence and lasted from May 1919 to 29 November 1920. Polish historians deem the Polish–Lithuanian war as occurring only in September–October 1920. Since the spring of 1920, the conflict became part of the wider Polish–Soviet War and was largely shaped by its progress. It was subject to international mediation at the Conference of Ambassadors and the League of Nations.

Though most emigration from Lithuania went to Israel, it is now going to other English-speaking countries.  The rabbis of the principal congregations in Johannesburg (Jewish population was 63,620. Cape Town of which Cape Peninsula  had 28,000.  Chief rabbis and 65 synagogues are affiliated to the Orthodox Federation of Synagogues. A Reform Movement started in 1933 and has 14 affiliated congregations.  Also, there are 69 nursery schools, 10 primary schools and 8 high schools.  They have an extensive Jewish press and a lot of cultural  activities.  By 1990 there were 120,000 Jews living in South Africa.   

In 1923, there were 300 Jewish elementary schools, the majority teaching in Hebrew, a minority in Yiddish (Hebrew-German Combo).   

Jews of Central Europe in the 14th and 15th centuries immigrated to Ukraine and from Poland in the 16th to 17th  centuries.  Severe massacres happened during the Chmielnicki and the Haidamak uprising in the 17th to 18th centuries.  

The Frankist and Hasidic movements originated in the 18th century in Ukraine which was also associated with the early Zionism in the 19th-20th centuries.  Jews of Galicia and White Russia had emigrated there.  

The Soviet Government promoted Jewish settlement in the Ukraine in the 1920's, however.  They used the funds of the American Joint Distribution Committee in the regions of Kalinindorf, Zlatopol, and Stalindorf.  By 1930 there were 90,000 Jewish agriculturists there.  In January 1918 , a regime of national autonomy was estalished in the Ukraine.  Jewish economy and culture suffered under Soviet rule.  About half of Soviet Russia's 3 million Jews lived there before WWII.  Under Nazi rule, the Jewish people who had not fled to Russia were wiped out by the Germans and Ukrainians from 1941 to 1942.  The Jewish population was officially put at 777,126 in 1970 and at 484,129 in 1989.  

There were restrictions on them imposed during the 1930's limited the influx (when Germany and Nazism were affecting all countries towards Jews), although many German Jews were able to settle in South Africa.  After 1939, however, Jewish immigration was small to nothing.  It has increased again in the late 1980's.                                                                                        

In 1939 when Germany marched into Poland, starting WWII, the Jewish population numbered about 175,000.  About 25,000 were deported by the Russians from Lithuania and Latvia in July 1940.  The remaining Jews were massacred by the Germans and Lithuanians by 1943.  24,000 Jews were living there in 1959, but by 1989 about half of these had left for Israel, leaving 12,312.  Today of 2023 there are 52,300.  I presume most have made aliyah to Israel.

Jews of Central Europe in the 14th and 15th centuries immigrated to Ukraine and from Poland in the 16th to 17th  centuries.  Severe massacres happened during the Chmielnicki and the Haidamak uprising in the 17th to 18th centuries.  

The Frankist and Hasidic movements originated in the 18th century in Ukraine which was also associated with the early Zionism in the 19th-20th centuries.  Jews of Galicia and White Russia had emigrated there.                         

Ukraine was the center of anti-Semitism.  It was the scene of pogroms in 1905 and 1918 to 1920.  Fiddler on the Roof was situated in Ukraine. As the play begins, Tevye, a Jewish milkman, tells of the customs in the little Russian town of Anatevka. It is 1905, and life here is as precarious as a fiddler on the roof, yet, through their traditions, the villagers endure. Anatevka (Ukrainian: Анатевка) is a Ukrainian refugee village that provides food, housing, education, and medical support for refugees resulting from the 2014 Russian invasion and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The village was established in 2015 and currently houses hundreds of families.

The Soviet Government promoted Jewish settlement in the Ukraine in the 1920's, however.  They used the funds of the American Joint Distribution Committee in the regions of Kalinindorf, Zlatopol, and Stalindorf.  By 1930 there were 90,000 Jewish agriculturists there.  In January 1918 , a regime of national autonomy was estalished in the Ukraine.  Jewish economy and culture suffered under Soviet rule.  About half of Soviet Russia's 3 million Jews lived there before WWII.  Under Nazi rule, the Jewish people who had not fled to Russia were wiped out by the Germans and Ukrainians from 1941 to 1942.                                    

The Jewish population was officially put at 777,126 in 1970 and at 484,129 in 1989.  Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy (also transliterated as Zelensky or Zelenskiy; born 25 January 1978) is a Ukrainian politician and former comedian and actor who is the sixth and current president of Ukraine since 2019. 




Reference;

https://katz.sas.upenn.edu/resources/blog/ironies-history-ukraine-crisis-through-lens-jewish-history

https://wisevoter.com/country-rankings/jewish-population-by-country/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austro-Polish_War

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish%E2%80%93Lithuanian_War

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The Towns of Telsiai, Lazdijiai, Papile, Augustowa and Vilnius and Seltz and Counties, Territories of Lithuania and Importance in Our Genealogy

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                

Telsiai is where Nathan Abraham Goldfus/Goldfoot was from (salmon section) . Telzh in 1797 had a Jewish population of 1,650 which was 66% of the town's population.  Telzh had a Jewish population from 1855 to 1857 of 3,209 which was 61% of the town's population.  By 1897 the population had dropped to 3,088 which was 51% of the population.  Telsiai (Telz) 55*59'/22*15'

Suvalk or Suwalki  Gubernia of Russia or Poland had its seat in the city of Suwałki. It covered a territory of about 12,300 km².In 1867, the territories of the Augustów Governorate and the Płock Governorates were re-organised to form the Płock Governorate, the Suwałki Governorate (consisting mostly of the Augustów Governorate territories) and a recreated Łomża Governorate. 
  Map showing Telsiai in north, Lazdijai in south, Vilnius in east

Suwalki is where Nathan Goldfoot's wife, Zlata Jermulowski was from (yellow section).  She actually lived in Lazdijai, Suwalki, Lithuania/Poland as it had then been taken over by Poland.  Lazdijai was on the border. From 1855 to 1857, Lazdey's Jewish population was 1,546, which was 60% of the town.  By 1897 it had dropped a little to 1,439 which was 57% of the population.   Lazdijai has been a part of Poland though originally it was part of Lithuania. Lazdijai (Lazdey)54*14/23*31'  According to contemporary Russian Empire statistics, from 1889 the Suwałki Governorate was predominantly Lithuanian since they comprised 57.8% of the population. Lithuanians formed a majority only in the northern part of the governorate in the counties of Kalvarija, Marijampolė, Naujamiestis, Vilkaviškis as well as the eastern part of the Sejny county.

Augustowa is where a new DNA match, R. Freedman's grandfather-Hayman Freedman was from.  Hayman came to the US in 1881.  At the time, Augustowa was in Suwalki which is now part of Poland.Augustów ([au̯ˈɡustuf] ( listen); Lithuanian: Augustavas, formerly known in English as Augustovo or Augustowo) is a town in north-eastern Poland. It lies on the Netta River and the Augustów Canal.  Coordinates: 53°50′37″N /22°58′46″E.  Poles were in a majority in the southern part of the governorate in the counties of Suwałki, Augustów and in the western part of the Sejny county.

Augustów actually is a resort town in northeastern Poland on the Netta River. It's known for its therapeutic spas. Flanked by lakes, the town also borders the Augustów Primeval Forest. At the junction of the river and the Augustów Canal, the Augustów Canal Museum traces the waterway’s 19th-century origins as a trade route. Forests and wetlands cover Biebrza National Park to the south and Wigry National Park north of town.

A town called Alytus or Alite was also in Suwalk Gubernia and in 1897 had a Jewish population of only 481 which was 33% of the town's population.  Augustowa was not listed. Alytus (Alite)54*24'/24*03' 

"In 1815, after the defeat of Napoleon, all of Lithuania was annexed to Russia, as a result of which Lazdey was included in the Augustowa Province (Gubernia), and in 1866 it became a part of the Suwalk Gubernia as a county administrative center."  

During the years of its existence, Lazdey suffered from many fires.

                  Papile bridge over Venta River in Lithuania

Papile, Siauliai, Kaunas was home of the Gochin family of whom one matches our Goldfoot line.  Siauliai County  In October 1795, Catherine II of Russia granted Šiauliai the city rights and the privilege to become the capital town of the region. Administrative division of Russian Empire remained unchanged up to the end of World War I. When the war came to its end, in 1918 Lithuania was restored as an independent state.  So Papile was the closest place to Telsiai, and that's how the Gochins and Goldfus got together. One of our female Goldfus married a Gochin. What we have in common is the interest and work of genealogy, so were able to match our findings, pretty good work for two 4th Jewish cousins.  

 Notice that there is the Telsiai and Siauliai endings.  In Lithuanian, each noun has 7 endings for the singular and 7 for the plural. So the word "vyrai," "men," has the ending -ai that tells the reader that it is plural and the subject of a sentence, so it is in the nominative case. If the word was "vyru", it would mean "of or belonging to the men" -- the genitive case. Both endings build on the same root "vyr-".  Some cities and towns are always plural, like Siualiai. In the Lithuanian phone book you will see "Siauliu r." This means in the region (rajonas) of Siauliai. The root of Siauliai is "Siaul-"Other towns or cities may have the nominative ending "-as," such as "Kaunas" or the ending "-is," such as Virbalis, or "-ys" as in Pasvalys. The roots of these names are "Kaun-", "Radvilisk-", and "Virbal-"

The same rules govern the names of persons in Lithuanian.
Vilnius, Lithuania, site of the famous rabbi, the Gaon of Vilna, Eliahu Zalman, son of a rabbi Zalman who died in 1758 from Seltz-which was near Grodno, Lithuania was known helping to make Lithuania the home of intellectual and factual Jewishness, much more religious attuned than a country like Ukraine. He has left well over 100,000 descendants.  

                           Map Treaty Brest-Litovsk Stock Photo - Alamy

From the Jewish Encyclopedia, published by Brockhaus-Efron (volume 14, page 121).

During the Polish rule, Seltz belonged to the Brisk [Brest] District of Lita. According to the resolution of “Vaad Medinat Lita” [Council of the State of Lithuania] from 1623, Seltz belonged to the district of Brisk. In his book, “A Voyage of Mission from Moscow to Poland (1678),” the diplomat Bernard Tanner describes Seltz as “a city built of wood and full of Jews.”

In 1766, there were 260 Jews in the city. At the time of the 1877 census, there were 680 people. In the 1897 census there were 2648 residents in Seltz, of which 866 were Jews.


The variety of nations in Vilnius was further increased by Grand Duke Vytautas the Great, who introduced Litvak Jews, Tatars and Crimean Karaites. After a few hundred years, the number of locals in Vilnius was smaller than the number of newcomers. However, according to an analysis of the tax registers of 1572, Lithuania proper had 850,000 residents of which 680,000 were Lithuanians.  Vilnius  previously known in English as Vilna,  is the capital and the largest city of Lithuania,

As it turns out, R.  Freedman and my brother, David, and I have a DNA match.  R. and David both also belong to the Y haplogroup (male line) of Q which gives them another common DNA  fact.  It doesn't always happen that men from the same male line also are related by having common DNA segments as well. My brother's line of Q-M242 has been tested again in the big Y test as being listed as QBZ67, new title pinpointing where he is on the tree of life.   R. Freedman also tested as Q-M242, same as David, so he may also be the same or just slightly different to show he's a Freedman and not a Goldfoot.  This Jewish line of Qs makes up about 5% of the Jewish population which is 0.02% of the total world population.  We are related to a lot of Freedmans of several different Y haplogroups.   

When the Q group was first organized  at Family Tree DNA, we discovered a group of us of Ashkenazi Jewish (Eastern European Jews) were Y-DNA Haplogroup Q which at the time was considered to have originated in Siberia. We wanted to know how this could be and we started this group to find out what we all had in common. We were originally one of the few groups focused on Jewish men and so we invited any Jewish person to join our group if they were interested in our common ancestral origins.

This group is specific to the branches of Q that are found in any and all Jewish Diaspora populations from Ashkenazi Jews in Europe to Yemeni Jews in Africa. While many people with these lineages may not be practicing the Jewish faith today, we come together to explore our common history and heritage.(Family Tree DNA)

Just for comparison with the above towns, the coordinates-Latitude and Longitude for Portland, Oregon are:45.5152° N, 122.6784° W


Resource: 

Preserving our Litvak Heritage by Josesf Rosin;  Joel Alpert, Editor, published by JewishGen,Inc. 

https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/littlelithuania/ending-of-towns-in-ava-iai-t6819.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suwa%C5%82ki_Governorate

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August%C3%B3w 

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