The
name Kishinev, however, was thrust into the consciousness of the
world on Easter Day, 1903 when 49 Jews were massacred by frenzied
mobs. Hundreds more were seriously injured; thousands were left
homeless and property damage was measured in millions of gold rubles.
Public outrage was expressed in protests which echoed throughout
every civilized capital of the world.
In
1905 Kishinev was again the scene of unspeakable horror and violent
death when a second pogrom claimed the lives of another 19 Jews.
The Jewish community was shaken to its foundations, and a flood
of emigration began, which continued through the interim war years.
All
the while, government endorsed anti-Semitic propaganda stirred the
never extinguished embers of anti-Jewish hatred. The devastation
of the Jewish community of Kishinev was completed by the bestial
Nazis and their enthusiastic Moldavian cohorts who together, annihilated
53,000 of the 65,000 Jewish inhabitants of the city.
Communism
brought ever more difficult restrictions to the remaining Jews:
In 1961 - bar mitzvas were forbidden; 1964, all Synagogues were
closed, except one - the one which is used today; Jews were harassed
and imprisoned on trumped up charges.
Life
for the Jews of Kishinev was bleak indeed. |
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| Kishinev - Capital of the republic of Moldova (Bessarabia), part
of the former Soviet Union, became a flourishing Jewish center
in the 18th century, when the growing economy presented new commercial
and industrial opportunities. By the turn of the century
Jews owned a score of factories employing thousands of Jewish
workers; there were 16 Jewish schools with 2,100 students, and
70 synagogues. |
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