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[By: Ariel Scheib]
Moldova (formerly Moldovia) became an independent democratic republic in May 1990. In 1979, Moldova had a Jewish population of 80,100, a decade later that had declined to 65,800; as of 2012, its Jewish population had dwindled to less than 4,000 with the majority of Jews residing in the capital Kishinev (Chisenau).
- Early History
- Jews in the 20th Century
- Modern Jewish Community
- Moldovan Cities
- Anti-Semitism
- Tourist Sites/Contacts
Early History
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In the 15th century, Sephardic Jewish merchants began using Bessarabia (a region that today includes
Moldova) as a trade route between the Black Sea and Poland.
Bessarabia is the region between the Dniestr and Prut rivers. Jews settled
in the region, prompting a growth of communities in northern and central
Bessarabia. Jewish communities were found in southern Bessarabia in
the 16th century.
By the 18th century, several permanent Jewish communities
had been established in urban developments. In the 18th and 19th century,
Jews were very involved with local trading as well as liquor distilling.
The rabbis of the communities
prior to 1812 were Hayyim b. Solomon of Czernowitz, rabbi of Kishinev,
and David Solomon Eibenschutz, rabbi of Soroki. By the end the 18th
century, Hassidim had begun
establishing small congregations.
By the time, of Russian rule in 1812, there was a permanent Jewish presence in Moldova, with
an estimated 20,000 Jews living in the area. There were 16 Jewish schools
with 2,100 students and 70 synagogues.
The region became a center for both Yiddish and Hebrew literature.
In 1836, the Jewish population had grown to 94,045 and, by 1897, there
were 228,620 (11.8% of the population) Jews living in Bessarabia.
Between 1836 and 1853, a vast number of Jews entered
agriculture and 17 Jewish agricultural settlements were formed. However,
after several years of agrarian crises in Russia, the economic situation
of Jews in Bessarabia began to deteriorate. By 1897, the majority of
Jews were once again involved in commerce and industry. During this
period, Hassidim flourished among Jews of this region.
For the first half of the 19th century, Jews of Bessarabia
were not affected by the severe Russian anti-Jewish decrees. By 1835,
when Bessarabia began to lose its autonomy, Russian anti-Jewish laws
began to be equally applied to Bessarabian Jewry. In 1869, 1879, 1886,
and 1891 decrees of expulsion were issued to Jews of various cities.
After the many hardships of the 19th century, Hovevei
Zion societies were established in Bessarabia in the 1880s, led
by Abraham Grunberg and Meir
Dizengoff. Many Jews became strong Zionist activists and, at the First
Zionist Congress in 1897, were represented by Jacob Bernstein-Kogan
from Kishinev.
By the end of the 19th century, the Jews made up approximately half of Kishinev's population of 125,000. The population continued to grow as tensions with
Moldova’s populace mounted, culminating in massacres of Jews in
1903 and 1905 in Kishinev. Most Moldovan Jews lived in poverty, working as cobblers, watchmakers, peddlers, and outside the cities, farmers. Under the Russian Empire, tsarist authorities
either encouraged or allowed the local population to attack the Jewish
population during Easter Day, April 6-7, 1903, spurred by a blood
libel that had been printed in a national newspaper. P. Krushevan,
director of the Bessarabian newspaper Bessarabets, incited the
incident through numerous anti-Semitic articles, which preceded the pogrom. Led by Vyacheslav Plehve, and supported
by the Russian Ministry of the Interior, 49 Jews were killed, 500 were
wounded and hundreds of Jewish homes and businesses were severely damaged
in the attacks. Both Romanians and Russians joined in the riots, and
the 5,000 soldiers stationed in the city did nothing to prevent or stop
the pogrom. About 2,000 Jewish families were left homeless.
News of the event reverberated throughout Europe,
and thousands of Moldovan Jews emigrated. The United States reacted
with public condemnations and trade restrictions against Russia. Massacres
during the 1905 Russian Revolution, only two years later, resulted in
the death of hundreds more Jews in towns across Moldova.
Jews in the 20th Century
In Kishinev, a second massive pogrom occurred on October
19-20, 1905, in which 19 Jews were killed and 56 wounded in a second
attack on the Jewish community. This time, several Jews organized into
defense units to protect the community. The famous poem, Be-Ir ha-Haregah (In the City of Slaughter), by Chaim
Nachman Bialik was prompted by this second attack on the Jewish
community of Kishinev. Overall, the pogroms of 1903 and 1905 had a profound
affect on the Jewish community of Moldova, as thousands immigrated to
the United States and the Americas.
In 1917, Bessarabia was became a territory controlled
by Soviet power. The Russian Revolution brought some civic equality
for the Jews of Bessarabia.
Romania took control of Bessarabia between 1918 and 1940, and Jewish life continued
to thrive in the region. Jews automatically received Romanian citizenship
in 1918 and were permitted to open Jewish elementary and secondary schools
with instruction in Yiddish and Hebrew. By 1922, there were approximately
140 Jewish schools in Bessarabia. During this time, there also existed
13 Jewish hospitals and old-age homes. By 1920, the Jewish population
in Moldova numbered about 267,000. Although, the numbers of Jewish citizens
continued to climb, many communities experienced hostility and anti-Jewish
harassment. The weakening of the Bessarabian economy also hit the Jewish
population extremely hard; however, they received assistance provided
by the American Joint Distribution Committee.
The 1930s marked the peak of Jewish life in Moldova.
In 1935, 40 Jewish communities united as the Union of Jewish Communities
of Bessarabia. In 1940, Bessarabia was reclaimed by the Soviets, who promptly sent thousands of Jews suspected of disloyalty to gulags (work camps) or to Siberia.
After the German-led invasion of the Soviet Union
in 1941, Germany reconquered Bessarabia on July 23, 1941. During this fighting, thousands
of Jews died in mass shootings, deportations, ghettos and concentration camps on
Bessarabian and Ukrainian territory. A large number of the Bessarabian
Jewry was deported to Transnistria or massacred by the Einsatzkommandos.
The Jewish community of Kishinev was nearly annihilated, with the Nazis
murdering 53,000 out of the 65,000 inhabitants of the city. While many
Moldavians are believed to have collaborated with their German and Romanian
occupiers (Romania joined the Axis powers in late-1940), Israel has recognized 53 Moldavians as “Righteous
Among the Nations” for risking their lives to save Jews during
the Holocaust. Since the creation of
the State of Israel in 1948,
more than 42,000 Moldovan Jews have immigrated to Israel.
In August 1944,
the Russians reoccupied the region. This land became the Moldavian Soviet
Socialist Republic with the capital in Kishinev. Following the Holocaust,
much of the Jewish community of Moldova met with increasing hardships,
were forbidden to practice many Jewish traditions, under Communism.
In 1961, the Jews were forbidden by the government from celebrating Bar/Bat mitzvahs and, in
1964, all synagogues were
closed except for one in Kishinev.
In 1992, Moldova was struck with a civil war which
left the country divided. In settling the conflict, Moldova was partitioned
into the Republic of Moldova and the Republic of Transnistria. Because
of this conflict, much of the Jewish community was evacuated from the
area by the Moscow and Israeli Federation of Jewish Organizations and
Communities (Va’ad). Following the fall of Communism, Jewish life
in Moldova began to flourish again with the emerging democratic society.
Modern Community
As of December 2012, the Jewish population of Moldova had dwindled to less than 4,000, with the majority residing in the capital city of Kishinev. Communities also
exist in Beltsy, Tiraspol, Bender, Soroky, Rybnitsa, Orgei and up to 45 other small villages across Moldova. One-quarter to one-half of the
community is elderly, and nearly 80 percent of Moldovan Jews report
significant economic hardship. Elderly Jews receive pensions of only ten dollars per month, while Jewish teachers make fifty dollars a month.
The Jewish population of Moldova has decreased substantially
since independence due to the high percentage of elderly Jews and high
levels of immigration, predominately to Israel. Thousands of Transnistria’s
estimated 12,000 Jews left after the outbreak of hostilities in 1991,
most making aliyah; thousands more left Moldova proper at that time.
Communal institutions continue to be centered in Chisinau.
The Association of Jewish Organizations and Communities
of Moldova (AJOCM) is the primary umbrella for the Jewish community;
it runs programs such as the Moldova-Israel Friendship Association,
the Moldova-Israel Foreign Trade Association, the Jewish Museum, and
the monthly Nash Golos (“Our Voice”) Jewish newspaper.
The Union of Jewish Organizations of Chisinau (SEVROK),
an umbrella group in Chisinau, was created from the Moldovan Cultural
Center. The Religious Jewish Community of Moldova also operates in the
capital. Chisinau’s Jewish Community Center, an outgrowth of SEVROK,
is housed in the Manger Children’s Jewish Library. The Center
and the Library are both supported by The American Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee (JDC). There are five other JCCs in Moldova – in Beltsy,
Bendery, Rybnitza, and Soroki, and a combined JCC/Hesed in Tiraspol.
A Hillel chapter is based in Chisinau.
The Organization of Ghetto Survivors, 250 members strong, is headed by Shaps Roif, a Moldovan Holocaust survivor. The organization works to obtain pensions and compensation for Moldovan survivors equal to those received by Holocaust survivors in other countries.
The following organizations have also been established
in Moldova since 1992:
• Kishinev Jewish Library
• Organization of Jewish Veterans of World War II
• Organization of Former Refugees
• Women’s organization HAVA
• Society of Jewish Culture
• Association of Former Prisoners of Concentration Camps and
Ghettos
• Federation of Jewish Religious Communities
• Educational University of Jewish Culture
• TV program Af der Yiddisher gas (“On the Jewish Street”)
• Radio program Yiddish lebn (“Jewish Life”)
Currently, reports say that only one rabbi serves in Moldova: Chabad emissary Rabbi Zalman Abelsky, whoc is both Chief Rabbi of Moldova and President of the Federation of Jewish
Communities of Moldova. He has been in Chisinau since the early 1990s.
Rabbi Moshe Budilovsky, who passed away in 2001, had been a second practicing rabbi, associated with Agudat Israel since his arrival
in 1997.
Chabad
Lubavitch maintains synagogues in Chisinau and Tiraspol and is active
throughout Moldova. The movement runs one of the two Jewish day schools
in Moldova – the 250-student Jewish School #15, a rabbinical school
operated through the synagogue, and two pre-schools. In addition, Chabad
runs several welfare and supplementary education programs and publishes
a monthly newspaper, Istoky (“Roots”).
Agudath Israel
operates the yeshiva high school, Torat Emet, where up to 200 boys and
girls are separated into two programs. The Yeshiva is located in the
same building as the once famous synagogue and yeshiva of the pre-World
War II era that was headed by Rabbi Leib Yehuda Tsirelson. Rabbi Tsirelson
was killed on the first day of Germany’s invasion by a bomb. The
Torat Emet stands across from a large sports stadium in which Jews were
murdered during the Holocaust.
Jewish School #22, established in 1991, educates up
to 300 students. This school was established by the Israeli government’s
Lishkat Hakesher (Nativ) as part of its Maavar (Tsofia) program. World
ORT established technology and media centers within the school in 2001.
These Jewish schools are all funded in part by the Moldovan government
and the Israeli Cultural Center. At least eight Jewish Sunday schools
operate throughout Moldova – three in the capital, and one each
in Bender, Soroky, Beltsy, Rybnitsa and Tiraspol.
The Israeli Embassy’s Israeli Cultural Center
operates in Chisinau, and the Israeli Government and Moldovan Education
Ministry jointly run a school to prepare children for aliyah. Jewish
Agency For Israel also has a presence and runs Nesharim summer camps
and winter seminars on Jewish history and tradition. Israel’s
Open University, sponsored by JDC, is based in the capital, while Chisinau
State University and the Academy of Sciences each have a Judaica department.
More generally, Jewish programs are included in Moldovan university
curricula, though a critical shortage of teachers and funding threatens
these programs.
International organizations have provided significant
aid to Moldovan Jewry. In addition to funding renovation of the Community
Center, Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) has distributed medicine,
clothing and educational materials to the community, and funds the Hesed
Chana welfare center in Tiraspol and Hesed Yehuda in memory of Rabbi
Leib Yehuda Tsirelson in Chisinau. The JDC helps nearly 2,500 elderly
Jews in Chisinau alone. JDC works closely with The United Jewish Federation
(UJF) of Pittsburgh and local leaders through the Spectrum Seminar,
a strategic planning program for local and national community development.
UJF Pittsburgh has worked with JDC on a number of welfare programs.
In 2003, JDC launched a major program to feed low-income children under
age 16. Work has begun on a JDC-sponsored Jewish Campus in Chisinau.
This new community center will also house the JCC, a synagogue, Hesed,
and a new Holocaust museum. JDC runs the Ofek Jewish book festival through
Moldova’s JCCs.
Moldovan Cities
Tiraspol
Tiraspol is a city located in the Southeast of Moldova.
Since the 17th century, this city has always had a thriving Jewish presence.
By 1897, the Jewish community equaled 27 percent of the total population
of Tiraspol (8,668). During the Holocaust,
nearly the entire Jewish community perished in Nazi concentration
camps. After World War II,
the Jewish community began to grow once again and, by the 1960s, there
were nearly 1,500 Jews living in Tiraspol.
Soroki
Soroki is a city in northern Moldova. Jewish settlement
in Soroki is first recorded in 1657. An organized community, however,
dates back to the 18th century. During this period, Soroki had 157 Jewish
families and was led by Rabbi David Solomon Eibenschutz. By 1897, there
were 8,763 Jews, making up over half of the population of Soroki. During
the 19th century, most Jews in Soroki, engaged in agriculture, grew
primarily tobacco and grapes. The economic crisis of the 1880s caused
many Jews to immigrate to other nations in search of economic prosperity.
Prior to World War II, the Jewish community of Soroki
was thriving; it included a several Jewish schools, a hospital, and
old-age home. The entire community was nearly annihilated with the entry
of German forces into the region. The Jewish community is beginning
to rebuild itself.
Rascani
Rascani is a town in northern Moldova. During the
19th century, Rascani became a major industrial center in Bessarabia
due to the flourishing Jewish community. In 1897, the Jewish population
was 69 percent of the total population at 2,247 Jews. In the early 20th
century, the Tarbut organization maintained much of the communal affairs.
In 1941, most of the Jewish community was destroyed with the entry of
the German and Romanian army.
Teleneshty
Teleneshty is a town in central Moldova. The town
was founded by the estate’s owner when Jews were invited to work
in the area in the late 18th century. In 1794, a hevra kaddish was consecrated and maintained until World
War II. By 1897, there were 3,876 Jews living in Teleneshty, composing
89 percent of the total population. The Jewish community was devastated
in World War II, as nearly all the Jews were annihilated by the Nazis.
Anti-Semitism
Moldova has a history of virulent anti-Semitism,
including widespread local collaboration in the Holocaust.
Although, the Jewish community of Moldova is beginning to flourish,
many Moldovan Jews still experience anti-Semitism in their country;
everything from vandalism to Holocaust
denial. While today no policy of anti-Semitism exists at the state
level, incidents do occur on a community level. In 1999, a Holocaust
memorial in the capital was desecrated, and other incidents of street
beatings and bigotry against Jews have occurred. During Passover in 2002, two teenagers destroyed almost 50 tombstones in a Jewish cemetery
in Chisinau. The police arrested these teens but claimed that their
crime was not anti-Semitic. The police later arrested several skinheads
suspected of bombing a Tiraspol synagogue in April and June of 2002.
Local groups such as the Youth Helsinki Citizens’
Assembly have made efforts to protest such anti-Semitic incidents. In
June 2003, a municipal radio station decided to suspend a controversial
call-in show in which callers had expressed anti-Semitic views. On May
9, 2005, six gravestones were vandalized in a Jewish cemetery in Chisinau.
Over the past few years, the synagogue in Tiraspol as well as dozens
of gravestones in the Jewish cemetery in Tiraspol have been vandalized
and attacked by anti-Semitic Russian nationalists.
Government relations with the Jewish community are
reported to be normal. After construction in a Chisinau suburb revealed
a mass grave from the Holocaust, the community alerted the government,
which halted the construction and erected a memorial. A larger Holocaust
memorial is prominently located near the national government offices
in Chisinau. In April 2003, President Voronin unveiled a monument commemorating
the Chisinau pogrom on its 100th anniversary. Voronin has condemned
anti-Semitism in speeches to Jewish audiences.
Prospects for the restitution of communal property
remain uncertain. Moldova has no general statute on restitution, and
the Jewish community has achieved restitution of only two of the many
communal properties seized during the Soviet period. In conjunction
with the U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage
Abroad, the Moldovan and U.S. governments have signed a Declaration
of Cooperation to establish frameworks for the protection and preservation
of cultural sites. In February 2002, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council
signed an agreement with the Moldovan government, giving the Council
free access to World War II-era government intelligence archives.
Tourist Sites & Contacts
The Jewish Cultural Center
4 Diorditsa Street
Phone: 011-373-22-224-814
Gleizer Sheel (The Glaziers Synagogue)
8 Chabad Lubavitch Street
Phone: 373-22-541-052
Fax: 373-22-226-131
The Ghetto Memorial
Jerusalem 3000 Street
Memorials take place every year here onYom Hashoah.
Yeshiva of Kishinev
Shutafa 5 277001
Kishinev
Phone: 264-238, 264-331
Kishinev Synagogue
Yakimovsky per. 8 277000
Phone: 221-215
Teleneshty Synagogue
4 28th June Street
Sources: World Jewish Congress; Zaidner, Michael. Jewish Travel Guide 2000, Intl Specialized Book Service (2000); NCSJ; JCC of Kishinev; "The Jews of Moldova" from Jewish Roots in Ukraine and Moldova; "The Jews of Moldova, 1988"; “Jewish Cemetery Vandalized in Moldova”; Former Soviet Union Monitor; AmyIsrael; Map: CIA; “Kishinev,” Encylopaedia Judaica; “Jewish History of Moldova”; Esther Hecht, "The Jewish Traveler: Kishinev," Hadassah Magazine, November 2004; Memories of the Holocaust Kishinev (Chisinau) 1941-1944; Kishinev Monument Photo courtesy of Samuel Aroni
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