Ukraine. Index
von / by Michael Palomino
Juden in der Ukraine / Jews in
Ukraine
1. Jews
in Ukraine (01) 16th century - 1917 (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)
Jews arriving under Polish
government - envy and Antisemitism against the "nonbelievers" - Jewish
professions in the Pale of Settlement - pogroms since 1881 and
emigration movement
2. Jews
in Ukraine (02) 1917-1971 (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Antisemitism and pogroms -
destruction of Jewish institutions since 1918, hunger crisis and exodus
- World War II with mass flight to central "Soviet Union" or
annihilation of the staying Jews 1941-1943 - Jews from inner "SU"
coming back - harsh Antisemitism since Khrushchev - numbers of Jews
(table)
Chmielnicki
Juden in ukrainischen Regionen /
Jews in Ukrainian regions
- Jews
in Bukovina (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Trade since 13th century - Cossack invasion in 1656 - Austrian rule
with restrictions - split of the community between left and right -
Romanian rule - Soviet rule - Holocaust in northern Bukovina - Soviet
rule (northern Bukovina) and emigration movement (southern Bukovina
under Romanian rule)
- Jews
in Ukraine: Crimea (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Jews in Crimea since Hellenistic times - Khazars - Jewish settlements -
Tatars - Genoese and Ottoman Crimea - Czarist rule and Pale of
Settlement - Soviets and Jewish settlements - Holocaust with Tatar
collaboration - Crimea Republic project of 1944 as an espionage trial
of the "USA" - Soviet rule and Jews in Crimea after 1945
- Jews
in Ukraine: Volhynia (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Jews in the north west Ukraine under Lithuanian, Polish, Swedish, and
Russian rule - suffering during army actions and pogroms -
sovietization 1939-1941 - Holocaust and definite destruction of Jewry
by "Soviet Union"
Juden in ukrainischen Städten /
Jews in Ukrainian towns
- Jews
in Chernovtsy (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Occupations - Ashkenazi, Sephardi, and Polish Jews - Austrian rule with
discriminations - split between Orthodox and Enlightenment - Romanian
law since 1918 with persecutions - Sovietization 1940 - Holocaust
1941-1944 - destructions within the second Sovietization since 1945
- Jews in
Ukraine: Kiev (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Back and forth with Jews in Kiev - pogroms 1881 - police actions
1881-1917 - pogroms 1905 - blood libel trial 1911-1913 - communist
revolution and turmoil 1917-1921 - Babi Yar 1941-1944 - communist
measures against racist Zionists 1948-1971 - Jewish writers and
cultural activities
- Jews
in Ukraine: Odessa (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Jewish center - Zionist center - pogroms - Jewish literary center -
Holocaust with Big Flight from Barbarossa, deportations, ghettos and
mass shootings - again Jewish center since 1944
- Jews
in Ukraine: Little towns A-K (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Bolekhov (Bolechóv) - Borislav (Boryslaw) - Dnepropetrovsk
(Yekaterinoslav) - Dubno - Feodosiya (Kaffa, Caffa) - Glinyany
(Gliniany, Gline) - Gorodenka (Horodenka) - Gorodok (Gródek
Jagiellonski)
- Jews
in Ukraine: Little towns L-Z (Encyclopaedia Judaica
1971)

Mogilev-Podolski - Novoselitsa (Noua Sulita, Sulita) - Uzhgorod
(Uzhorod, Ungvár) - Vinnitsa - Vizhnitsa (Vijnita, Vizhnits) - Vladimir
Volynski (Lodomira, Wlodzimierz, Lodmer, Ladmir, Ludmir) - Zastavna -
Zbarazh (Zbaraz) - Zhdanov (Mariupol) - Zhmerinka - Zholkva (Zólkiew,
Nesterov) - Zolochev (Zloczow)
|