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Conglomeration
of countries extending from Eastern Europe to
Eastern
Asia. Prior to
World War II, about 3 million Jews lived in the Soviet
Union. About one-million of them were murdered in the
Holocaust. Following Hitler’s rise to power,
Germany and the Soviet Union behaved as mortal enemies.
One month prior to the outbreak of World War II, however,
the two countries surprised the world by signing a
"non-aggression pact" (Nazi-Soviet
Pact), in which they agreed to abstain from attacking
each other. This pact allowed the Germans free reign to
invade
Poland without
Soviet intervention. In exchange, the Soviets were given the
eastern parts of Poland and the Baltic countries of
Latvia,
Lithuania, and
Estonia.
Over the next year the Soviets also annexed
Bessarabia and
Bukovina, which had been under
Romanian rule since World War I. Altogether, these new
territories had a Jewish population of about 2 million.
Additionally, about 250,000—300,000 Jewish refugees from
German-occupied western Poland had fled to the Soviet Union
after the war broke out. Jewish populations in these
territories did not live under the best conditions but at
this point, they were spared the systematic extermination
suffered by Jews under the Germans. The
relatively good status of Jews in the Soviet Union did not
last long. In mid-1941 the Germans decided to betray their
pact with the Soviets and secretly planned to attack the
Soviet Union in Operation "Barbarossa." In preparation for
their invasion, the Nazis ordered the extermination of all
Jews living in those areas annexed by the Soviet Union in
1939-1940. The Germans attacked on June 22, 1941. After the
invasion, more than 5 million Jews came under Nazi rule,
constituting over half of Europe's Jewish population.
Einsatzgruppen followed the advancing army and with
assistance from local collaborators and various police and
regular army (Wehrmacht) units, they quickly massacred most
of the Jews of the Baltic States,
Belorussia, and the
Ukraine by shooting into open pits. The remaining Jews
were put into ghettos, and most were murdered within 12--18
months. The German
army quickly overran the Soviet Union, which was unprepared
for the onslaught. The Soviet people began to flee eastward,
away from the advancing army. Those Jews who fled, had a
much better chance of avoiding extermination. However, most
Jews could not escape, as choices were limited. The Nazis
considered the killing of the Jews within the pre-1939
Soviet Union to be a military priority. As the Nazis
occupied a new area, they would begin the extermination of
its Jewish population and finish the job within 2 to 3
months, at most. The
destruction of the Jewish communities in the Soviet Union
was carried out in different ways. Generally, the German
occupiers appointed a Judenrat with 3 or 4 members who were important members
of the Jewish community. A few days later, the Jews were
ordered to register with this council, and within a few more
days or weeks, they were ordered to appear at a certain spot
in town, from which they would be leaving, supposedly, for a
labor camp or for Palestine. When they arrived, Germans and
local Jew-haters would beat them and shoot anyone who
protested or walked slowly. The Jews were then led to nearby
pits where they were to be killed. Just before the spot,
they were split into groups and made to undress. Then the
Jews were forced into the pits and fired at from all
directions by Nazis with machine guns. After one group was
exterminated, another would follow. In some cases the Nazis
immediately rounded up and shot the Jews, without the
aforementioned procedure. In other cases, Jews were put into
lightly guarded ghettos and forced to wear the Jewish badge,
while the young, skilled workers would be put to hard labor
outside the ghetto. These ghettos generally lasted no more
than a few weeks or months---the Jews were soon taken out
and shot. Sometimes, an area's Jewish population was forced
into a temporary concentration camp and forced to wear the
Jewish badge. They would then be massacred by the thousands
at nearby sites (see also
Badge, Jewish). After the
Jewish populations of the Soviet Union were exterminated,
the Germans continued to hunt for the few who had escaped
and hidden. Those that were found were immediately shot.
Very few non-Jews were willing to risk their lives to help
Jews as they knew that they too would be punished by death.
Many non-Jews collaborated with the Nazis and took part in
the mass murders. Organized
Jewish resistance activity in the Soviet Union was limited
mostly to the territory annexed from Poland in 1939. Since
the Russian Revolution, the existence of all Jewish
organizations was forbidden in the Soviet Union, so they did
not have a basic structure for cooperation. Furthermore, the
murders took place so quickly that the Jews had no time to
band together against the Nazis. In addition, hundreds of
thousands of Jewish men were away serving in the Russian
army (many Jews who had been drafted distinguished
themselves in the army; more than 160,000 won military
awards), and thus were simply not around to coordinate
resistance against the Germans. The only major possibility
for resistance was to escape and join the Russian
Partisans.
About 10,000 Jews fought in that way. Some families also
escaped to the forests and established family camps.
At the end
of 1942, the Soviets' luck turned with their victory over
the Germans at Stalingrad. Over the next 2 years, they took
back lands, which had been occupied by the German army. For
political reasons,
Stalin established the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee,
which became the first representative body of the Soviet
Jews since the revolution. However, Jews returning to their
homes in the Soviet Union were met with destruction,
antisemitism,
and news that their neighbors had collaborated with the
Nazis. They quickly realized that the Soviet boast of having
destroyed antisemitism was fiction. This led to a growth of
Jewish identity and interest---a force that eventually led
to the mass immigration of Soviet Jewry to destinations the
world over.
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