How insulted religious feelings turned into pogroms : Lithuania in 1900

Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Anglų kalba / English
Title:
How insulted religious feelings turned into pogroms: Lithuania in 1900
In the Journal:
East European Jewish affairs. 2013, Vol. 43, no. 2, p. 119-142
Keywords:
LT
Panevėžys; Šiauliai. Šiaulių kraštas (Šiauliai region); Lietuva (Lithuania); Rusija (Россия; Russia; Russia; Rossija; Rusijos Federacija; Rossijskaja Federacija); Diskriminacija. Konfliktai / Discrimination. Conflict; Mitai. Legendos. Padavimai / Myths. Legends. Stories; Socialinė struktūra / Social structure.
Summary / Abstract:

LTReikšminiai žodžiai: Antisemitizmas; Atisemitizmas; Gandai; Kraujo legenda; Kraujo šmeižtas; Pogromai; Religinis identitetas; Rusijos imperija (Russian Empire); Valstiečiai; Žydai; Anti-semitism; Antisemitism; Blood Libel; Jews; Lithuania; Peasants; Pogroms; Religious identity; Rumours; Russian Empire.

ENThis article is devoted to a single wave of anti-Jewish violence in Lithuania which spread through northern Lithuania during the first half of the summer of 1900. It claims that specific incidents that took place during the first half of 1900 at Konstantinovo (news of an allegedly kidnapped girl, the so-called Jewish “procession” and a domestic dispute between Jews and the priest’s workmen) were among the most important reasons for the pogroms. At the same time, it is clear that there were some more general (structural) changes in this society which facilitated the occurrence of violence (changes in the economy, growing Lithuanian nationalism, antisemitic tendencies, and pogroms in the south of the Romanov empire in the early 1880s, because they established the idea that violence against Jews was somehow legitimate). Peasants in the Panevėžys and Šiauliai districts took up violence against Jews because, as they understood it, an offence had been committed which no one else (especially the authorities) would put right and so Jews would go unpunished.Uncontrolled rumours ruled the mobs. Since Catholic peasant religious sentiments had been affected the most, it was common religious identity that drew people into a temporary community of action. When Jews were beaten in public spaces, the doors and windows of their houses smashed, the Jews were not only being punished for their alleged offences, but being shown the clearly delineated boundaries within the local social hierarchy. In public life, Jews were supposed to submit to the monopoly of power enjoyed by the Catholic community. Thus, this wave of anti-Jewish violence essentially differs from the deadly pogroms that took place in the early twentieth century in other gubernias of the Jewish Pale of Settlement. [From the publication]

DOI:
10.1080/13501674.2013.813128
ISSN:
1350-1674; 1743-971X
Related Publications:
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https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/76260
Updated:
2020-07-28 20:26:14
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