A monument in Paneriai, Lithuania in memory of the Jews killed there.

This article presents the timeline of selected events concerning the history of the Jews in Lithuania and Belarus from the fourteenth century when the region was ruled by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

Early history

While the first mentions of Jews in writing dates back to 1388, it is accepted that Jewish settlement in the region dates back to a century, or possibly centuries, earlier (some claim there were already Jews living in modern-day Belarus by the eighth century). It has been theorized that Jews immigrated to the grand duchy in different waves, the first from the east (Babylonia, the Byzantine Empire, the Caucasus, and Palestine) and later from Germany in the west. Others say the region's first Jews were from the Kingdom of Poland, as we know of Polish Jews living in the grand duchy (in what is present-day Belarus) as early as the twelfth century. There are several possible motives that the Jews had to emigrate. In 1323, Grand Duke Gediminas of Lithuania wrote a letter sent to many cities throughout the Holy Roman Empire saying that despite his country's paganism, Lithuania was tolerant to Christianity, and that he in fact wanted to convert. He then went on to invite "knights, squires, merchants, doctors, smiths, wheelwrights, cobblers, skinners, millers," and others to come live in Lithuania where they could practice their crafts without compromising their religion. This letter likely led to a wave German Jewish immigration to Lithuania. However, it has been theorized that German Jews had already settled in Lithuania centuries earlier, escaping the Crusades in the eleventh-century which massacred communities of Jews.[1]

Russian Jewish historian Abraham Harkavy speculated that the Lithuania's first Jews had emigrated in the tenth century from Khazaria.[2] This idea is based on the story of the Khazar Correspondence which states that the king of Khazaria and thousands of his subject converted to Judaism, transforming the nation into a Jewish kingdom which lasted for centuries, only to be destroyed in the tenth century at the hands of the Byzantine and Kievan Rus' forces in the tenth century.[3] This theory is also in line with the myth that Ashkenazi Jews descend from Khazars.

Timeline

Early history leading to Jewish settlement

Jews in Lithuania and Belarus

  • 1323 – Grand Duke of Lithuania Gediminas writes a letter in which he invites German craftsmen to live in Lithuania without compromising their religion.[1]
  • 1388–1389 – The Charter of 1388 is enacted by Vytautus, at this point a duke. The charter, the earliest mention of Jews in Lithuania, granted privileges to Jews residing in Trakai, and later Brest, Grodno, Lutsk, and Vladimir. Vilnius however remains off-limits to Jewish settlers.[4]
  • 1453 – Casimir IV of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ratifies the General Charter of Jewish Liberties, the charter written in 1264 granting the Jews of Poland liberties.
Old Jewish Cemetery of Vilnius
  • 1487 – An Old Jewish Cemetery of Vilnius is said to open this year, likely for the few Jewish merchants and/or tax collectors who had permission to reside there.[5]
  • 1492 – Casimir IV dies and is succeeded by his two sons, John I Albert in Poland and Alexander Jagiellon in Lithuania.
  • 1495 – Alexander Jagiellon expels the Jews from Lithuania.[3][4] Many settle in Poland and Crimea.
  • 1503 – Expulsion edict is lifted. Returning Jews can reclaim their property as well as collect debts owed to them from before the expulsion.[4]
  • 1520 – The establishment of the Council of the Four Lands (Vaad Arba' Aratzot), the a Jewish council governing and representing the Jews of Poland and Lithuania.[6]
  • 1527 – Nobles convince Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus to ban Jews from living in Vilnius.
  • c. 1535 – Rabbi Shlomo Luria (the Maharshal) becomes yeshiva dean in Brest, and is therefore sometimes accredited with bringing Torah (and Torah study) to Lithuania.
  • 1551 – Sigismund II Augustus permits the Jews who work for him as well as two Jewish merchants to reside in Vilnius, despite the law he enacted in 1527.
  • 1556 – Antisemitic nobles work to pass a law forbidding Jews from wearing expensive clothing while forcing the men to wear yellow hats and the women to wear yellow kerchiefs to "distinguish Jews from Christians."
  • 1569 – The Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania officially unite to form the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.[7]
  • 1572 – A synagogue opens in Vilnius.
  • 1592 – A pogrom breaks out Vilnius. Jewish businesses and homes, in addition to the synagogue, are destroyed.[5] The synagogue is rebuilt in 1606.
  • 1593
  • Grand Duke Sigismund III Vasa grants Jews permission to live in Vilnius, with the community becoming completely legal.
  • Over the ensuing years, Vilnius grows to become a center of Torah study and Torah scholars, dubbed the "Jerusalem of Lithuania."[8]
  • 1772–1793 – The Partitions of Poland end the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth. Most of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (Lithuania, Belarus, and part of Ukraine) are incorporated into Russia.
  • 1777 – Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk emigrates to the land of Israel with a group of three hundred hasidim. He is succeeded as Rebbe of Lithuania by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi.[10]
  • 1791–1835 – The Pale of Settlement is created, and over the ensuing years expanded to include much of the former Grand Duchy. It is an area within the Russian Empire where most Jews are forced to live.[11]
  • 1798 – Misnagdim press charges against the Hasidim, claiming they were involved in counter-government activity. Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi and twenty-two Karliner Hasidim are arrested and imprisoned for a short time.
Jews in Pinsk engaged in Torah study
  • 1802 – The Volozhin Yeshiva is established in Valozhyn by Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin. The first of the Lithuanian yeshivas, it was called the "Mother of Yeshivas."[10]
  • 1808 – A group of students of the Vilna Gaon (Perushim), led by Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Shklov, emigrates from Lithuania to Palestine.[12]
  • 1809 – Two more groups of Perushim emigrate to Palestine.
  • 1817 – The Mir Yeshiva is established in Mir by Rabbi Shmuel Tiktinsky.[13]
  • 1841 – The non-religious Jewish Enlightenment movement, called the Haskalah, spreads in Lithuania with the opening of a secular Jewish school by Mordecai Aaron Günzburg and Shlomo Salkind.
  • c. 1848 – Rabbi Yisrael Salanter founds the Musar movement, a Jewish ethical movement encouraging an emphasis on musar study and introspection.
  • 1882 – Rabbi Nosson Tzvi Finkel (the Alter of Slabodka), a student of Rabbi Yisrael Salanter, establishes a musar-oriented Yeshiva Knesses Yisrael in Slabodka (Vilijampolė).[14]
  • 1896 – Another student of Rabbi Salanter, Rabbi Yosef Yozel Horowitz (the Alter of Navordok) establishes his own musar yeshiva, the Novardok Yeshiva, in Navahrudak. It was the first of a network of musar yeshivas known as "Beis Yosef."
  • 1897 – Controversy breaks out in the Slabodka Yeshiva over the emphasis on mussar. Many students leave and form Yeshivas Knesses Beis Yitzchak (later be known as the "Kaminetz Yeshiva").[15]
  • 1900 – The total number of Jews throughout the Russian Empire, including Lithuania and Belarus, is 3,907,102, or 3% of the Russian population.
  • 1903 – The Choral Synagogue is opened in Vilnius. The synagogue was largely influenced and led by the Haskalah.
  • 1914 – World War I breaks out. Russia declares war on Germany and they clash in Poland.
  • 1915 – Russia surrenders in Poland and German forces advance into Lithuania and Belarus, capturing Vilnius, Grodno, Lida, Brest, and other cities. Many Jews flee east into present-day Ukraine.
  • 1918–1923 – The Bolsheviks rebel against the empire, eventually overthrowing it and establishing the Russian SFSR and killing the czar.
  • 1918
  • After Germany's defeat in World War I, Poland, now called Second Polish Republic, declares independence. Their territory includes much of Belarus.
  • Lithuania as well declares independence.
  • 1919
  • Nazi Germany invades Poland starting World War II. The entire country is surrendered within weeks. Thousands of refugees including entire yeshivas escape to Vilnius. The Lithuanian prime minister orders the yeshivas to disperse to other towns throughout Lithuania.
  • The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact is signed between Germany and the Soviet Union. Germany agrees to give the Soviet Union eastern Poland (including much of present-day Belarus) on the condition of peace.
  • The Lithuanian city of Klaipėda (Memel) is absorbed in Nazi Germany and its Jewish residents, numbering approximately 7,000, are expelled, with most moving to Lithuania proper.[17]
  • 1941
Forced relocation of Jews to the Grodno Ghetto.
  • 1942
  • The Nazis come up with the Final Solution, the decision to exterminate all Jews under their control. They were to carry this out by transporting Jews on trains (often using cattle cars) to camps dedicated to killing Jews: either extermination camps where Jews are gassed to death immediately; or concentration camps, where the Nazis implemented the idea of "extermination through labor," forcing the Jews to work to death. The largest of these camps was Auschwitz in Poland, the site of at least 1.1 million death.
  • The ghettos of Belarus are liquidated. Many of the Jews are murdered in Bronna Góra.
  • 1943 – Heinrich Himmler orders the liquidation of ghettos. The Kovno Ghetto is transformed into the Kauen concentration camp with some of its residents being deported to other concentration or death camps. The Vilna Ghetto is liquidated with the remaining Jews sent to concentration or death camps, or to be killed in the Ponary Forest.
  • 1944 – The Soviet Union's Red Army occupies the Baltics and liberates all the surviving Jews in Lithuania. Soon after, the Red Army captures Belarus, which declares independence.
  • 1945 – The Soviet Union regains complete control of Belarus.
  • 1945–1991 – The implementation of Soviet laws restricts religious practice. Jewish religious observance is quashed under the anti-religious legislation throughout the Soviet Union (including both Lithuania and Belarus).[20]
  • 1968 – Thousands of Jews are arrested on accusations of Zionist activity.
  • 1970–1988 – A large wave of Jews immigrate from Soviet Belarus to Israel during the 1970s Soviet aliyah. Many immigrate to the United States.
  • 1990 – Lithuania declares independence from the Soviet Union.
  • 1991 – Belarus declares independence from the Soviet Union. Many more Jews immigrate to the United States and Israel (see 1990s post-Soviet aliyah).
  • 2003–2005 – 4,854 people make aliyah (immigrate to Israel).[21]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Part 2: Lithuanian Jewry from the Middle Ages until the end of the First World War". jewishgen.org. JewishGen. Retrieved 19 July 2021. The first Jewish settlers, merchants from South-Eastern Europe, arrived, it is surmised, as early as the 12th century. After them, refugees came from Western Europe, escaping the slaughters and the oppression initiated by the Crusaders as they marched through Europe and from the Black Death plague. And of course, Jews were to be found amongst the merchants and artisans who were invited to Lithuania by the Grand Duke Gediminas in the first half of the 14th century. In his conquest of Wolyn and Galicia, the Duke found there a Jewish population. Some of them moved north and settled in areas close to Lithuania such as Brisk (Brisk in Lithuania) and Grodno (Horodna) in the Samogitia region.
  2. Greenbaum, Masha (1995). The Jews of Lithuania: A History of a Remarkable Community 1316–1945 (8th ed.). Israel: Gefen Books. pp. 2–5. ISBN 965-229-132-3.
  3. 1 2 Spiro, Ken (2011). Crash Course in Jewish History. Southfield, MI: Targum Press. ISBN 978-1-56871-532-2.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Part 2: Lithuanian Jewry from the Middle Ages until the end of the First World War". jewishgen.org. JewishGen. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  5. 1 2 Eilat Gordin Levitan. "Kehilalinks: VILNA". kehilalinks.jewishgen.org. JewishGen. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  6. "Councils". yivoencyclopedia.org. YIVO. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  7. "Union of Lublin – Poland-Lithuania [1569]". britannica.com. Britannica. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  8. 1 2 Kossover, Dr. Mordecai. "Vilnius – Jerusalem of Lithuania". jewishgen.org. JewishGen. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  9. "The Ger Tzedek of Wilno – (5509) – Jewish History". Chabad.org. Chabad. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  10. 1 2 Zakon, Rabbi Nachman (June 2003). The Jewish Experience: 2,000 Years: A Collection of Significant Events (Second ed.). Shaar Press. ISBN 1-57819-496-2.
  11. "The Pale of Settlement". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  12. "Menahem Mendel of Shklov". encyclopedia.com. Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  13. "Mir yeshiva (Jerusalem) – Jerusalem, Israel". yellow.place. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  14. Rosenblum, Yonasan (February 1993). "Chapter 2 – The Meaning of Slabodka". Reb Yaakov – The Life and Times of HaGaon Rabbi Yaakov Kamenetsky (First ed.). Mesorah Publications, Ltd. ISBN 0-89906-413-2.
  15. Cohen, Dov (2017). "In the Shadow of Gedolim". To Rise Above – A Journey to Greatness Against All Odds. Jerusalem, Israel: Feldheim Publishers. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-68025-270-5.
  16. "Yisrael Meir HaKohen (Chofetz Chaim)". geni.com. Geni.com. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  17. "Klaipėda". yivoencyclopedia.org/. YIVO. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  18. Rodman Ross, James (1994). Escape to Shanghai: A Jewish Community in China. Free Press. ISBN 978-0-02-927375-3.
  19. "Memorial Stone Kaunas Pogrom – Kaunas". tracesofwar.com. STIWOT. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  20. Pam, Rabbi Avraham (February 1991). "The Soviet Aliya: Responding to the Challenge". The Jewish Observer. XXIV (1): 7. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  21. "Belarus: Virtual Jewish History Tour". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. 1991-04-25. Retrieved 2013-04-16.
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