Horodetz

Horodetz

 

55,27 €
IVA incluido
Consulta disponibilidad
Editorial:
JewishGen
Año de edición:
2025
Materia
Historia social y cultural
ISBN:
9781962054270

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

Gorodets (present day Horodzets, Belarus) was a small but commercially busy town in southwest Belarus situated along a major railway line about halfway between Brisk and Pinsk. It was home to 254 Jews in 1766, a number that grew to 648 (among 1761 non-Jews) in 1897. The town had been absorbed into the Russian empire in the late 18th century until it became part of Poland after World War I when it was reestablished as a republic. The Soviets annexed it in 1939 giving way between 1941 and 1944 to the Nazi occupation. Belarus became and independent Republic in 1991 after the breakup of the Soviet Union.Gorodets was an important center due to its canal and railway connections, and it was strategically located near rivers and forests, making it significant both economically and militarily, particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The railway helped spur commerce but the canal played a bigger role because it could be used to ship products through Kobrin, Brisk, Warsaw and Danzig. Large and small lumber and wood merchants from all over Russia would stop over for a few days and patronize Jewish stores and businesses.But this prosperity would come to an end. With the outbreak of the first World War, the canal lost its usefulness. The Jewish population of Gorodets, like many shtetls in Belarus, declined in the early 20th century due to emigration, economic hardship, and the devastation of the war. Two streams of emigration pulled Jews from Gorodets: one towards Eretz Israel and the second to South American countries like Argentina, Brazil and Cuba. The book recounts turbulent chapters in the town’s history. The historical overview of the town’s history includes a description of the evils and persecutions under the Tsar. 'Under the Polish Regime' tells of the hardships imposed on the community by saddling it with heavy taxes and ousting Jews from their occupations in favor of Polish farmers.As with so many other towns, the community came to an end after the Germans invaded. 'Jewish Gorodets is no more,' says a passage in the book. 'Even a gravestone is not left standing in its place. Empty is the town, desolate, destroyed. In one’s heart is a wound, a desecrated empty space.'

Artículos relacionados

  • Arizal
    Raphael Afilalo
    The Ari overflowed with Torah. He was expert in Scripture, Mishnah, Talmud, Midrash, Maaseh Bereishit and Maaseh Merkavah. About all the different levels of prophecy, their details and from which level the prophets had their revelations.  He understood the whistling of the trees, the grass and stones, the language of the birds and other animals, the conversations of angels, the...
  • Rose-tinted Memory
    Michael S Fryer
    “Those who deny Auschwitz would be ready to remake it”.  ~ Primo Levi, Holocaust survivor and author Seventy years after the mass murder of the Jews of Europe, Holocaust denial and Holocaust revisionism are creeping into our overall perception of what actually happened.Christendom has not ‘denied’ Holocaust, but it has attempted to create a memory of Holocaust which suggests th...
    Disponible

    8,84 €

  • Pan Kapitan of Jordanow
    William Leibner
    Yeshayahu Drucker devoted a good part of his life to rescuing Jewish children from non-Jewish homes. Many parents had given their children to Polish neighbors for safekeeping during the war. Unfortunately most of the parents did not survive the Shoah. At the end of the war, there was no one to claim the children and they remained with the “adopted” Polish families. Following hi...
  • Holy Dissent
    Glenn Dynner
    BThe religious communities of early modern Eastern Europe—particularly those with a mystical bent—are typically studied in isolation. Yet the heavy Slavic imprint on Jewish popular mysticism and pervasive Judaizing tendencies among Christian dissenters call into question the presumed binary quality of Jewish-Christian interactions. In Holy Dissent: Jewish and Christian Mystics ...
  • AL-FARD
    Ali Mahdi Muhammad
    The Al-Fard, or the The Dawn, has captured the early rays of Our history. This history is essential if we are to be brought face to face with the One true and living God of the universe. The purpose of this writing is to bring the reader step by step, one degree at a time to the reality of God in person. The teachings of Our Father elevates the believer to the level of Godhood ...
  • Wild Things. Nature and the Social Imagination
    HISTORIES OF HUMAN CONSTRUCTIONS OF NATUREWild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination assembles eleven substantive and original essays on the cultural and social dimensions of environmental history. They address a global cornucopia of social and ecological systems, from Africa to Europe, North America and the Caribbean, and their temporal range extends from the 1830s into th...