The Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Image of Jews, and the Shaping
Transcription
The Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Image of Jews, and the Shaping
The Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Image of Jews, and the Shaping of Ukrainian Historical Memory Author(s): Zenon E. Kohut Source: Jewish History, Vol. 17, No. 2, Gezeirot Ta"h: Jews, Cossacks, Poles and Peasants in 1648 Ukraine (2003), pp. 141-163 Published by: Springer Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20101495 . Accessed: 01/06/2014 01:55 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Springer is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Jewish History. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 17: Jewish History ? wl 2003 2003. 141-163, Academic Kluwer Printed Publishers. in the Netherlands. the image The Khmelnytsky Uprising, historical memory shaping of Ukrainian and of Jews, the ZENON E. KOHUT University of Alberta, This Abstract. early modern a rapacious, E-mail: Canada; traces article Ukrainian how historical Zenon. a stock narrative. [email protected] in the developed the Jew was image, of the Ukrainian independent exploiter the one true Orthodox openly mocking image of the to According even at times, and, deliberate, over them who lorded and people controlling in the seventeenth faith. Elements of this image were present of a renewal in the in the wake late eighteenth, of only relevance of the Polish continuing the emergence of a Jewish question. Ukrainian folk modern the culture, tradition. the written entered image of the twentieth beginning a stereotype, article the Finally, into modern its embodiment century, question, Since examines century, the Uniate but it solidified the problem, the partitions of Poland, and, following the same stock also present in image was this to and its genre briefly relationship article gives Ukrainian leading in Ukrainian Jew this a few indications historical Ukrainian historical memory. intellectuals memory on how this early Although, by the had rejected such would prove difficult to modify. is considered Khmelnytsky Uprising in a number of national historical moment, The a great watershed, The narratives.1 a defining Poles came as a historical to regard the uprising that led the Cos misunderstanding sacks to rebel against the "civilizing mission" and eventually of Poland in easternmost of resulted territories the loss of the "Greater Poland." The Russians as a major to interpret in the the uprising episode in of lands and the of "Russian" transformation "gathering" came continuing mas into a European the Khmelnytsky power. Jews mourned Muscovy sacre as an unprecedented a of anti-Jewish outburst precursor violence, of the horrible if not of the Holocaust. of late imperial Russia, pogroms as a war of liberation celebrated the uprising Ukrainians from Finally, a popular movement in the cre national foreign oppression, resulting a state moment in the in general, ation of the Cossack and, defining of the Ukrainian nation.2 shaping The Ukrainian of an event that in the Jewish tradition glorification is perceived tive of the as of early modern horror times is indica greatest the historical memories chasm between of the two the deep have led to stereotypes Such perceptions peoples. not if anti-Semites damental, "biological," ready of Ukrainians to slaughter This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions as fun Jews at a 142 E. KOHUT ZENON moment's notice, and in the social, religious, within these Working empathy ing that for the in the wake of Jews hand, anti-Jewish and willing tools exploiters of the Ukrainian oppression people. Ukrainian historians have shown little and national traditions, the that tragedy massacres Jewish of unbearable other as economic frequently befell were oppression. the Jewish community, if not understandable, Jewish commentators, have presented little paying the massacres attention as to the imply justified, on the a uniquely so complex phenomenon, or ignored the and national and have mitigated context, cial, religious, violence non-Jewish Poles and Ukrainian Uniates. perpetrated against How and when were such stereotypes created? It is the contention a stock that by the late eighteenth paper century image of in Ukrainian consciousness. the Jew became historical fully developed was a to this the Jew and, deliberate, image, rapacious, According even independent at all times, of the Ukrainian exploiter people who of this over and openly mocking the one true Orthodox controlling traces in the early faith. This of this image article the construction on why modern narrative and offers a hypothesis it reached Ukrainian lorded them its culmination 150 years the Since after the Khmelnytsky Uprising. was in it is also stock image also present Ukrainian folk culture, to examine this genre and to consider its relationship necessary briefly to the written tradition. the article how this early suggests Finally, same modern image entered into modern Ukrainian historical memory. The of Jews and the Khmelnytsky developing image in modern history Uprising early writing Until the monopoly the Orthodox great uprising, on historical The most writing. a virtual clergy maintained influential post-Khmelnytsky was also penned the Synopsis, text, by a cleric. This work, as the first history described of the Eastern Slavs, has been frequently to Innokentii the archimandrite of the attributed Caves Gizel, Kyiv history in Kyiv and first appeared between 1670 Monastery, effort to enlist the protection and help of the Muscovite attempted common to connect Kyiv common with in several Muscovy faith, ethnic unity, and of the dynasty. patrimony dynasty, as a rightful presented cleric work of a Ukrainian became and tsar, 1674. In an the author ways: through territory, which the was this Paradoxically, a springboard for Russian imperial de facto as the first official textbook and was adopted historiography and reprinted nineteen times by 1836. But of Russian history, as was serve unfit to elite's version the Cossack arguably Synopsis This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions the of 143 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING in great detail Kyivan Rus' and the Riurykid until it the Cossacks well after 1654. completely ignored dynasty, on of the first the the later editions Cossacks appear pages (In fact, in the discussion of the Synopsis of the Turkish of 1677 invasions the it discussed past: but 1678, that edition of with is, in connection the book appeared.)3 of the Eastern history Bohdan Khmelnytsky the mid-seventeenth Another which Sofonovych Monastery relied Sofonovych times, Stryjkowski. He does in the written A place after popular the Cossack the first indigenous wars and in of Jews (only a few copies of on Ancient Chronicles of the hegumen (1672-1673), in Kyiv. In his description on Polish writers, heavily discuss the Cossacks and the massacre St. Michael's of early modern especially Maciej the Khmelnytsky Up of the Jews though or any anti-Jewish exploitation" two stories that would historical Ukrainian 1670s Based Chronicle mentioning rising quite extensively, on "Jewish without any comments statements and introduces religious subsequent of the town took century. history was survived) by Feodosii Golden-Domed that this most Slavs completely ignores the massacres and, consequently, clerical have events Thus, The first in be retold concerns the capture writing. of Polonne, the Cossack where colonel Maksym Kryvonis to escape killed those Polish nobles who did not manage from the town a large number is about and "slaughtered of Jews." The the second of Tulchyn Ivan Hanzha by the troops of Colonel (Handzha), truce with the Polish defenders of the town on condition siege made the latter a ransom pay and Hanzha "ordered and that all the all their took into the plot all which could of of East the clergy. European or the Riurykid under Poland, Ukrainian and Russian slaughtered, another the Poles Poles while dynasty. the great and Cossack tsars. While that did so, taking colonel, Ostap Ivansky, as well. These events are are They constitute to wane in the last quarter of satisfy the interests of the Ukrainian the Cossack officers and the Cos began not elite of the time political The historical sack administration. those The story in the narrative. secular from be Jews. or explanation. any moralizing of the killing of the Poles and do not historiography, the seventeenth century, scheme all without mentioned a separate Clerical Jews Then for himself."4 property the town again and killed simply inserted over hand who tastes of the Cossack elite differed not in some general interested the medieval state, mighty history, Kyivan was interest Their Ukraine Cossack primary They liberator were hetm?n Bohdan rights and liberties not denying affinity under with Khmelnytsky, both Polish Muscovy/Russia This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions and kings in 144 E. KOHUT ZENON even dynasty, high culture and on Ukraine's distinctiveness the Cossack chronicles ethnos, in the political and social order not and at least autonomous historical The development. separate) (if a to chronicles find for Ukraine and its attempted rightful place people religion, insisted the Polish-Lithuanian, among worlds.5 Muscovite-Russian and Tatar-Ottoman of anti-Jewish and the description violence do not figure promi to them in the the narratives of Cossack references chroniclers; nently are few to to when the attention the compared paid Tatars, especially or to the small or to tracing Cossack rights under different monarchs, Jews est detail of every military engagement of the Jews, their economic discussion rebels not does inserted always The treatment The problem. under period to underscore here discussion, the perfidy even and by the is but slaughter on their own until they are late in the introduced most between 1672 of the events chronicles likely by Roman and 1702. Though he describes, primarily is the the events so-called Rakushka-Roma the author he only far as the years of Bohdan Khmelnytsky's in the chronicle were written related As heard activity down of the Cossacks' The story tal commanders mistreatment by a brief actu about are con a quarter his account cerned, after they had occurred. The author of a century begins a compilation of the war with of Polish misdeeds and oppression caused the Cossack later in the narrative, he turns rebellion; Jews. the Moreover, subject (narrative line), mentioned only in passing. to the Polish subordinated of the Cossack written Chronicle, then their of the Poles. the first novsky (1622-1703) witnessed many ally others. and the Poles. and role, there, seemingly of the Jews is completely Jews do not appear as actors Chronologically, Eyewitness a separate constitute with that to the by their Polish regimen remark on the town Jews, is accompanied from the Cossacks the liquor monopoly prevented at turns to Then the drink home. author the any oppression keeping on the local castle chiefs and vice it mainly of the peasants, blaming whose over control gerents (starosty The great Polish pression of the as well as on Jewish leaseholders. namisnyky), the op about he presumes, knew nothing landlords, on not estates did live their in since peasants, they and "blinded by gifts from the castle or, even if they did, they were Ukraine, In the meantime, leaseholders." he continues, the chiefs and the Jewish rent payments in kind and Jews grew richer and richer by increasing money, and even by confiscating the debtors' land. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 145 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING The litany of Polish Eyewitness's since it provides the context quoting, in which the first The and and accusations anti-Jewish Jewish is worth misdeeds the hierarchy of complaints emerge. cause of the Khmelnytsky War is solely the Polish of the Orthodox and oppression of the Cossacks. Then persecution the latter's freedoms were taken away and they were forced to do corv?e into and turned labor, to which they were unaccustomed, and origin them the at the castles servants household to groom and yards, stoke horses, perform the Cossack on of the castle fires other in the unbearable chiefs, who also used sweep stove, groom dogs, tasks. Those who still sent to them had Polish nobles register as care not about Cos colonels; by they did sack freedoms, but restricted instead. The King Cossack privileges an annual and the Commonwealth established of thirty payment remained the Crown Hetm?n but would embezzle zloty for every Cossack, [the Polish colonels] it with that money, the captains, for the latter were not sharing at their own elected by the Cossacks, but appointed the colonels by were ones the subservient favoured. The also colonels discretion; forced to perform all kinds the Cossack seize a horse the Cossacks no concern would again, send household from a Tatar in the steppe, it away; they would send the unfortunate to the city by way of the wild steppes, or greyhound as a gift for some lord, with for the Cossack, who might easily be killed by the Tatars. tasks; should sure to take they were Cossack from Zaporizhia a falcon, eagle carrying Then of unaccustomed should him the Cossacks to the Crown take a Tatar Hetm?n the colonel prisoner, his favourite [Polish] to scorn. In the towns, not allowed to keep any with Cossack courage soldier, thereby putting the Jews mistreated the Cossack, who was or beer, but even mash. at home not just wine, vodka spirits who went fishing beyond Cossacks the [Dnieper] rapids had to give at Kodak; tenth fish to the every they also [royal] commissioner to to had to the aide-de-camp, the captains, and give [some fish] were to the chancellor. the Cossacks Thus impoverished. Besides, there were even the Cossacks; [registered] to perform corv?e labor and pay taxes. was That was what the Cossacks. befell The lot of the peasants were well with different. their and off, cattle, fields, They apiaries. were devised not customary But new practices, in Ukraine, by the to be only still son of a Cossack six thousand had and Jews. The castle-chiefs, vice-regents, reside in Ukraine, but merely held offices of the oppression of the peasants. Even lords themselves did and therefore knew if they knew, they were This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions not little so 146 E. KOHUT ZENON blinded that to bribe from from by gifts they could not that them, the see they The their subjects. about this, castle chiefs and the Jewish own was being would subjects the lord himself had that their property given what were leaseholders being been used taken so complained it freely. Meanwhile not have had taken bitterly the lazy scoundrel, the lazy Jew grew richer, riding a carriage drawn and thinking the ox tax, up new taxes: by several pairs of horses tax and others, the handmill tax, the marriage tax, the measuring one man estates until encountered seizing [debtors'] [the Poles] was source of and that the trouble whose apiary apiary they seized, 6 for all of Poland... latter the Church respected Ruthenian.7 Christian to the question of the oppression of in passing and schools by the Poles, that noting the vilest than the most Jew more upstanding returns the author Subsequently the Orthodox in the Ukrainian lands during processes not in the style of the author describes summarily, mass in the Cossack about enrolment generalizations the Social of the Polish nobility administrators castle throughout and Jews, servants, without to Poland even sparing but lives, surrendered. but and officials and but as chronicle, army, the escape of new appointment the rebels "killed wherever children." All the noblemen, them, they found of the the property was confis estates," specifically on to that the Polish nobles surrendered goes say to the rebels to save their in order their possessions once they the nobles the rebels typically slaughtered all with town their wives mentioned victims, including cated. The author Jews own proper, The Ukraine. the uprising Jews Many later escaped "no Jews remained converted to Poland and "Jewish to Christianity their renounced to save new their religion. number lives, Finally, of Jews in Ukraine," while "the greatest an uncountable in Nemyriv and Tul'chyn number."8 perished seems to disapprove that the author It is worth noting generally the and of the wartime violence and looting. While describing killings he notes that "at that time, there and Jewish estates, of Polish plunder was much from of every estate, mostly for prominent trouble people in the and their Tatar allies the knaves." he adds that Cossacks Later, killed "not only Jews and nobles, Volhynia that land suffered the same fate."9 The tial, were next two Cossack written by the chronicles, subsequent both common but the very and influen popular of the Ukrainian Cos generation people of sack elite. Both Samiilo Velychko (1670-1728) and Hryhorii Hrabianka (1686-1737/38) relied heavily in their description of the Khmelnytsky This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 147 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING on Polish period contemporary in the pecially the Most Bitter tween Bohdan case with and Most relied on hearsay, and es apocryphal, Hrabianka's The Events work, Velychko). since War the Bloody Origin of the Poles (often the Zaporozhian Hetm?n, Khmelnytsky, first chronologically. It is in Hrabianka's came (1710), accusation historians, although they also or documents Ukrainian diaries and of be the Poles... work that the in Ukrainian churches first appears leasing Orthodox some are dealing, the after We history writing sixty years uprising. one sentence in in fact, with in list of Polish misdeeds five-page just the Eyewitness's the list itself clearly Ukraine, recapitulating lengthy enumeration of complaints. The insert on the churches reads: "Also of Jews to churches sold the Lord's [the Poles] with the Jews' baptized permission, were at the mercy pious [Christians] Hrabianka narrative, subsequent tributes and takeover and the Jews, and infants were various customs of religious of Jewish mentions In the leaseholders."10 the Jewish of new invention and the great landowners estates, was upon us" the Jewish tribe, which constantly "inflicting devising new tributes text sent the of the and extortions letter supposedly (in to He retells the of the szlachta story by Khmelnytsky Warsaw).11 a at Nestervar to Hanzha the Jews surrendering adding (Tulchyn), detail: the defended themselves for three Jews significant days.12 When Kryvonis the Jews, took Bar, "of whom of debtors' all there were the Poles alone more than slaughtered, thousand fifteen so were and were in killed Bar."13 has if too often fictional, work in full. the Moreover, preserved surviving revolt is heavily of Khmelnytsky's dependent monumental, Velychko's not been description count of the Polish the 1720s part of his on the ac the supposedly to have been proven documents that Velychko quotes contemporary some probably Parts invented himself. of be fictitious, by Velychko been first book have and the discussion of the Jews lost, Velychko's in his general description of the first book may promised by the author well have to have been been among a detailed the end of the first turned historian of to Pereiaslav book and Samuel Twardowski, the missing discussion: he parts.14 intended the Little while In any case, to Velychko's it is unlikely at outline, re "how Khmelnytsky greeted him; about various according to discuss Russians to Khmelnytsky and how they were sent back; about the in various places and about conduct the Jews; about Shumeiko's on Kodak and its failure."15 The first surviving mention of the ambassadors Poles' march Jews comes the Ukrainian an apocryphal dated May people, from appeal Khmelnytsky by Bohdan 28, 1648: "We shall not describe This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions to here 148 ZENON E. KOHUT all the insults, and devastation inflicted oppression, comprehensively the Poles and their leaseholders and beloved upon us Little Russians by massacre the mentions the Jews.. of ,"16 Nestervar factors, Velychko in expressions to those of Hrabianka almost identical (Tulchyn) (in stead of "defended for three days," he writes themselves that the Jews "defended themselves does not mention the Velychko relentlessly").17 he says that "fourteen thousand killing of the Jews of Bar at all. Rather, nobles who there with their German treasures, settlers, sought refuge their servants, and others" As Valerii has shown, Shevchuk perished.18 were all these details Wojna There domowa is no in a chronicle which taken from the widely read Polish historical in 1681.19 Samuel Twardowski, published by further development of the Jewish theme until ends by Stefan compiled in the chronologically the Historical Lukomsky, late sixteenth poem 1770, Collection, long before the century, as a postscript a the author includes Uprising, although Khmelnytsky diatribe Poles and Jews.20 against Uniates, exem The Historical Collection compilative by Stefan Lukomsky an in historical Ukrainian toward plifies tendency increasing writing more based religiously Jewish violence. churches It further this Historical Poland who develops is [a description and Lithuania Ukraine, Poland, of how the different among peoples, ends. What Collection developments to 1648, of the wars with Union Rome in Lithuania and was of anti increasing justification the topic of the leasing of Orthodox died there, and the lands been discussed (this has already it was it, and how strengthened, for responsible in all commenced persecutions experienced by the who did not accept the Union, was of Constantinople patriarch and follows in Russia, of] various from 1606 damnable and the Jews: by Here accusations how faithful how exiled the Orthodox blameless of the Union. Also told is how the Poles exarch yet of the to Malbork the Uniates by would by above), of the and Cossacks Ruthenians the held suffer because included in the Cossack who the 6,000 of the 50,000 Cossacks fought against how Hetm?n abolished the Sahaidachny, [the Poles] and enserfed hetman's office and cruelly executed many hetmans, either by force or by deceit, and the remaining Cossacks 44,000 register only Turks under imposed the heaviest Poles] so that thodox, there be a need anything peasants. Finally, [the to the Jews, to the great grief of the Or and should the Jews kept the keys to the churches, or a Christian to celebrate rite, baptism, wedding, divine leased else, on the Ukrainian taxes churches [the Jews] charged the Orthodox a special This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions tax, and 149 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING would and as insult and beat the priests, curse, tearing out their hair In other words, the Poles treated the Ruthenians just or no with fear of and the God pleased Day, Judgement also beards. they stories following the will their display crimes in detail.21 and early nineteenth the Jewish centuries, eighteenth a prominent come to occupy in the narratives of place is the Khmelnytsky its causes). This Uprising change (in particular, By factor late had Istoriia exemplified by late eighteenthsack elite nineteenth (The of History the Rus' theme of The century. discussion of economic any Orthodox leasing churches it is developed as "relentless precedes exploitation; and in great detail, with the Jews characterized in this opportunity of Christianity" who take pleasure the Christian the theme of economic faith.22 Overall, in Istoriia clearly subjugated curse the Orthodox who afford Ukrainians.23 vividly enemies to diminish is oppression motive: the Jews to the Rusov to Jews religious which the Poles, synagogues, pleases to oppress the Jews even more economic the opportunities on to The list of complaints the goes incorporate "keys to the church" The a People), nineteenth-century historico-political treatise, of the historical of the Ukrainian the apogee Cos thought a and for the Ukrainian national revival of the springboard was which Rusov or early in their faith argument: churches [with Rome] one to five who did not accept the Union parishioners leased to the Jews, and for each service a fee of of those were a fee and funerals set, and for christenings of one to four zloty. The Jews, relentless enemies of Christianity, to universal wanderers and outcasts, took this vile source eagerly of gain and immediately the church keys and bell ropes to removed to go their taverns. For every Christian need, the cantor was obliged was talers to the Jew, haggle with him, the service, pay for it and beg to his heart's having laughed having in their reviled all Jews Talmud...also are described were not sky Uprising Christians out, as "Polish at the Christian hold order dear, calling the cantor that were not service, it pagan, to return paid for had of and or, the been and spies who, with their the the Cossacks rebellion during forgotten [by of taxes;" for their collection the fully requited of 1630-1631] and were Jews were killed mercilessly broke content would goyish, that no services language, an oath with keys celebrated.24 The that on the importance and, depending for the keys. And the Jew, meanwhile, advisors When the Khmelnyt by the thousands.25 the hetm?n "cleared the Jews from the part This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 150 ZENON to Kyiv to purchase their of Little were Russia able E. KOHUT and Kaniv." up survival and Some "good" Jews, however, to Poland: "The Jews escape well and being useful rather their freedom with silver and as behaving by the people recognized to the community than harmful bought that the army needed, and they were valuables without to go abroad hostility."26 In the sionally to clear allowed subsequent us reminds Ukraine narration detailed that one of of Poles and Jews the occa of the war, the author of the Cossack units was aims wherever to be found, they were The author of Istoriia no concrete are provided.27 examples although text the of fictional manifesto Rusov from reproduces Khmelnytsky's one at that mentions the of "the hands Poles oppression Velychko (the and beloved the Jews").28 and their leaseholders The story of factors, in much more in the previous is given than detail new concern most of the details the particulars chronicles, although tactics. of the siege and military The author the story of the repeats a point of stressing in Bar.29 He also makes fifteen thousand Jews killed connection rather minor military that have some remote with reports the Bar massacre the Jews; in some cases, he seems to be relying on contemporary docu or diaries of the Cossack staff officers: "On June 13, Khmelnytsky ments a received report from the the Siversk quartermaster-general, that he hetm?n] had from Rodak, cleared the Chernihiv land, [informing as well as the Starodub the vicinity, the town of including region, was of Poles and Jews, and that his corps Starodub, advancing rapidly to Istoriia to Novhorod-Siverskyi."30 Rusov, According Khmelnytsky to drive Poles and Jews out of the territories that he was continued and "useful" Poles and Jews "who did not lord over the taking, although were a contri to stay, paying allowed Ruthenian people" supposedly In particular, in Brody in kind. bution this allegedly took place and Zamosc.31 The so far as to claim that the absence of Jewish goes was a to in in the Ottoman be considered factor Empire a treaty with that empire rather than with Muscovy in 1654. author leaseholding concluding He claims, this that some "young officials and Cossacks" moreover, brought to the attention at Pereiaslav.32 of the council consideration The final mention patriots" the original is a telling one: certain "anti are background supposedly concealing treaties with Muscovy of the Cossack that provided of the Jews of Polish texts and in Istoriia Rusov Jewish for a free and the Hetmanate and equal union between not only have Poles and Jews oppressed Ukrainians Thus, but they are also suppressing the truth about the past. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions the empire.33 in the past, 151 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING sources The As we have completely fundamental and of anti-Jewish imagination seen, in the earlier Cossack to the Polish subordinated chronicles, theme. The the Jewish chronicles motif is list two the Poles: the violation of the rights against grievances estate and the violation of the Cossack of the rights of the to a detailed of Church. As the authors proceeded description liberties Orthodox as the agents of the Poles. the Jews enter the picture misdeeds, leaseholders and stewards of the absentee lords, the Jews are of the Cossacks the mechanisms and peasants taking advantage through of economic the liquor monopoly, of various the collection exploitation, Polish As the taxes, estates etc. At in the the so the Ukrainian of the Cossacks, control physical on time, Jews could peasants legally punish the lord. Thus, Jews had been involved (or not only in violating writers the rights understood) not only in economic in the but also exploitation, given At people. of corporate such the of and this representation to stress attempt have same name oppression is still a part the depravity to power same time, In a sense, people. as the chronicles problem, of the Ukrainian of the Polish of the Christian over infidel Jews in the chroniclers' king and the Christian accounts, lords, who Orthodox the violation are and religious rights, economic exploitation oppression to fuse. The final step is the "keys to the church" argument: beginning it shows the utter depravity of the Polish allow the ruling bodies, which the rights of the Cossacks, infidel Jew not only to violate the exploit lease holding and tax farming, and secure physical population through control over the peasant, but even to establish power over the spiritual access to Orthodox their the where church divine grace by controlling to their salvation, could be as the in That argument also resonated minds dispensed. contemporary ultimate of Christianity and the Orthodox Church. profanation And, while the "keys to the church" motif was part of the general argument itself, in form of the sacraments essential as the fundamental Polish it was the Jews who emerged perfidy, even and economic, exploiters legal spiritual. Where does this image come from and why was it developed? Appar about comes from Polish literature. ently, the "keys to the church" argument causes As Polish for the of historians the great uprising, began looking a whole which had precipitated series of tragedies for Poland, they first on their stewards, focused on the magnates and particularly the Jews. In a sense this was an attempt, or subconscious, conscious to admit for the while responsibility uprising, simultaneously minimizing as the primary cause. that blame by identifying Jewish profiteering In Polish writings, the the pre-war of Cossacks and the peas exploitation some This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 152 ants E. KOHUT ZENON porary Polish Cosacco-Polonici in most is described the Jews by contem Among in his Historia belli Grondski Samuel authors, terms. strident (Gr?dzki) and who wrote Kochowski, Wespazjan (early 1670s) in the 1680s, developed the topic of Jewish of the Ukraini exploitation ans most causes seventeen for lists Grondski, instance, prominently.34 powers and control of for the demanded payments of the uprising, with Jewish lease holding, ceremonies Orthodox religious (including baptismal ceremony) similar enumeration as Mykhailo chronicler The Polish Cossack among prominent of wrongdoings, has shown, Hrushevsky Hrabianka.36 of the story "keys to the This story writings. commenced chroniclers judicial them.35 a provides ones, and his list, by the Ukrainian Kochowski Jewish especially was appropriated church" also to come appears was in 1649, first cited their work, by a Polish In his booklet Heaveris from the long before Catholic priest from Lublin, Fr. PawelRuszel. Ruszel Favour, as one of the Polish tolerance of Jewish sins for portrays exploitation In this context, rebellion. which the state was punished by the Cossack and that both Catholics he reports that he has it on good authority are Orthodox forced to pay Jewish As leaseholders before noted sacramental earlier, purposes.37 in Grondski. for religious ceremonies reappears of the seventeenth Polish memoirs the anonymous for in the and Hrushevsky Jan J?zefowicz, chronicle from dating the of a Polish late using churches of payment in is also present the motif It cleric seventeenth studied century by from Lviv, Tomasz or early eighteenth century.38 creasing at least in in Polish literature and the subsequent presence one writers this with should of Ukrainian topic, preoccupation the factual basis address briefly (if any) of the "keys to the church" theme. Given its strong Ukraine-Rus' considered the question of Jew Hrushevsky in his volume of monumental leaseholding History eight of evidence and concluded that no documentary of such a practice had ish church historical been discovered, in the Ukrainian written appeared Jewish historian of Jewish Mykhailo and that tradition the quite accusation late.39 The Ilia Galant leaseholding works and itself had Russian the motif that, although similarly argued in Polish of churches was present and Ukrainian in Ukrainian there was no docu folk tradition, to resolve It is not my aim, of course, mentary proof of its existence.40 in of whether the Jews actually leased Orthodox churches the question me in is interests of the this the Ukraine. What Jewish paper dynamic in Ukrainian historical tradition. appearance question's This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 153 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING It is my of the contention as exploiter Jew the development of the stereotypical the economic, social, and, religious, of Ukrainians that emerges oppressor that - image to some in early proto-national to is tied the of Ukrainian re-emergence historiography closely the Polish question the Uniate and, by the nineteenth question, century, were writing a new "Jewish question." the chroniclers twenty, Although even after and the similar 150 years seventy, Khmelnytsky Uprising, extent, modern issues that had sparked chroniclers were authority) on writing the Left to simmer. While the uprising continued the in the autonomous Hetmanate (under Russian of the Dnieper, Bank another part of their had - fatherland, Ukraine, Right-Bank warfare decried by the chronicles authorities manage renewed to firmly the Poles and well Uniate. saw a series of virtually 1768 when Uniate in Uman. slaughtered were the perennial These borderlands the eighteenth on a much smaller by Ukrainian Orthodox Jewish and, keepers, tates and could in some prerogatives conditions szlachta. Poles, and uprising. sense It is this heightened Istoriia the Ukrainian Commonwealth. intermediaries cases, or purchase of the against Uniates, 1768 haidamaka on of conflict who continued were to be tax collectors, tavern es stewards of landed lease monopolies that were the exclusive the and its Orthodox Church Moreover, Ukrainian concomitant, culture, was early modern was conflict further heightened religious by Russia, in Poland. Most of the Orthodox likely, Lukomsky colours peas recruited rarely Jewish, Jews returned this time as Thus, through was re-enacted the Khmelnytsky century, Uprising scale. Polish Roman Catholic magnates exploited or nominally Uniate and Cossacks, fre peasants through quently region. institution In Right-Bank the eighteenth Ukraine, in continuous 1734, 1750, and uprisings were Polish nobles and Jews clergymen, of the Polish-Lithuanian out Ukrainian worked the the Polish nobility. Yet of tax-farmers and tavern-keepers.41 At the same most and Ukrainians Church was being liquidated, capacity time, the Orthodox were at least nominally particularly over control now the minor from in the century devastated completely by after 1714 did the Polish reestablished colonization, owned by Polish magnates, run by stewards. The latter were Through of large estates ants, instead been and only reassert their Rusov. The Jews in 1770 under under attack. acting wrote as protector his diatribe the of Orthodoxy and Ukraine work was almost certainly impression under written second of the siege that after the the Right Bank became, of Poland partition (1793), when and home the Uniate, Polish of the Russian and Empire brought This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions The part Jew 154 E. KOHUT ZENON the ish questions. Initially, on the Right Bank, situation and even Jewish leaseholds, conversion forced to exist continued Uniate of the Uniates in the until an began 1839. There was magnate Church. Although 1790s, the church influx of Polish into there well predominated for the author of Istoriia the itself into nobles the nineteenth even though Poland Rusov, remained alive within very much Thus, century.43 had been including the hated the existing the estates, accepted the Polish culture and Polish Kyiv, authorities imperial the Polish issue vanquished, linked with of the Russian the Polish Empire. Inexorably issue was there was a massive influx the role of the Jews. Moreover, the borders into Left-Bank of Jews Jewish significant found written, active and their itself visible included Jewish quickly Empire. there previously where Hetmanate, had no been Rusov was in the emerging Pale of Settlement. involvement in commerce and crafts, The lease holding practices all of Ukraine, eight almost where Ukraine, The presence. in the Pale out Istoriia and of Settlement of nine included (which Ukrainian provinces) ethnic the "discovery" of the Jewish question triggered came with economic This complete discovery in the Russian anxieties and, subsequently, religious animosity.44 at a great watershed of Ukrainian Istoriia Rusov was written history. of two of the Hetmanate's the ultimate defeat The author observed Poland and the Crimean but he also wit enemies, Khanate, the abolition of the autonomy of his beloved Cossack state, to a mere three provinces of the Russian reduced Moreover, Empire. on the Right the Polish magnates still ruled, the Jews held a Bank greatest nessed on taverns con and tax collection, and the Uniate Church monopoly to exist. To complete the humiliation, his Left-Bank homeland tinued was now included in the Pale I contend, and anti-Uniate, of developments, anti-Polish, ical devotion It was this to author's of Settlement. rise that gave anti-Jewish views the constellation his and almost virulent fanat same to Orthodoxy. At the of Istoriia time, the author a child of the Enlightenment and distinguishes between even and Tatars. all and "bad" neither Jews, Poles, Thus, "good" - are - nor nor all Jews either all Tatars, considered Poles perpetual and there is hope of achieving with the enemies of Ukraine, harmony Rusov is still of those "good" elements to Ukrainian consideration The early Scholars firming modern have Jewish often nations. historical referred exploitation, The author does not extend similar Uniates. narrative to Ukrainian including the and folk literature songs as a source con as well as leasing of churches, folk This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 155 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING of authentic Ukrainian toward Jews dating antipathy of Khmelnytsky. the coverage However, researching in the early modern cannot I of these topics written tradition, help on that in that the folk all songs are, likelihood, dependent noting or even some later be considered bookish tradition; they can hardly proof constituting back to the time an authentic source. The contemporary about "The Duma dumy, two Ukrainian Jewish The is of latter "The Duma and Leaseholders" limited causes is elaborated theme the Oppression about the Battle in of Ukraine by of Korsun."45 on a it concentrates for my topic, as from Ukraine.46 Jews' escape interest of the grotesque description does say about the the traditional motif Jewish of social the unrest, of the post-war Polish writers, rebellion: "Then the Poles conceived In what duma it follows literally of blaming the of an idea Jews for the /They blamed the Jews: /'0 you Jews, /You children of pagan parents, /Why did you raise such rebellion and alarums, did you build three /Why taverns per mile? did you collect such high tolls'."47 /Why "The Duma the Oppression of Ukraine by Jewish a since it contains relevant, long description as well as of the Cossack revenge supposedly oppression, himself. Khmelnytsky ted about is far more ers" early been that from but 1850s, The and incomplete), to relating national "pure" presumably cover the numerous the was duma same the second history of national sample from borrowings duma, we cannot or whether interpolations Kulish's in the late of Jewish ordered 1840s by and bard had (the first recording Panteleimon admit recorder, Kulish, to the kobzar even as he recorded this peasant in this traditions recorded Leasehold folk poetry.48 Thus, when the Polish and Ukrainian determine whether the oral and written we dis literary they are mostly inter traditions at some acted earlier stage. Ivan Franko this duma in the late studied and found that it reflects the later Cossack tradition century than the circumstances of the 1640s. In particular, he noted nineteenth rather of the Jews lording over the description to the catalogue in Hrabianka of Cossack grievances and Lukomsky than to the reality of the mid-seventeenth century."49 and Mykhailo who Volodymyr Drahomanov, published Antonovych that "the poetically Cossacks is closer this duma included duma Filiaret in the 1870s, first in it was borrowed folklorists Ukrainian on the basis Kolessa the Polish Shatzky elaborated has noted the list of the Ukrainian from Velychko's directly chronicle; this Kulish's proved thought heavy editing of the Cossack In the early literary tradition.50 noted poem shown that the parallels about the battle that this duma between at Zhovti displays the plot Vody.51 a striking of the duma Finally, similarity This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions rivers later of the 1920s, and Jacob to a 156 ZENON E. KOHUT Polish w zlotej klatce, albo zydzi a in wolnosci Raven Golden Polskiej Korony Cage, (The in the Freedom of the Kingdom of Poland), Kmita. Jan by w swobodnej or the Jews Shatzky and tax his hat Polish the work literary has from dating out pointed 1648, Kruk that the description of Jewish lease holding as the episode in which the Christian takes seem to have migrated to the duma from this as well collection, off to a Jew, As to source.52 oral the way the Ukrainian tradition, 1909 that early as Ukrainian by which scholar literary motifs Ivan Ierofeiev penetrated as suggested to the of a Jew migrated the image stereotypical the eighteenth-century stage or the Ukrainian drama theatre from dumy school the religious the theater, performances wandering (via puppet likely that In the final analysis, it appears quite vertep).53 their possession of the the stereotypical image of the Jews, including to from into the Polish and Orthodox churches, passed keys dumy no is there Ukrainian sources, agreement although scholarly literary on this The subject.54 the of impact If we consider icles and next generation early the Ukrainian Istoriia especially of Ukrainian modern historical intellectual held Rusov historians narrative chron the Cossack tradition, over the considerable sway and writers.55 That influence in Mykola five-volume Istoriia is particularly apparent Markevych's This of Little Malorossii Russia, patriotic history, 1842-1843). (History recasts most of of Romanticism, written the influence under literally the those concerning Jewish of Istoriia the stories Rusov, especially on blessed the Cossacks mock bread at Easter, right to levy duties curses upon the Christians, the "good Jews" ing their Jewish victims' to the of Bar, etc.56 after leave allowed ransom, capture paying being was own was in its book very popular Markevych's right; its importance to its use by Ukrainian Romantic thanks moreover, writers, magnified, most Taras Shevchenko. notably that finally the Khmelnytsky and The Uprising image of Jews resonance found particular from early modern history writing emerged in Ukrainian tual the history frequently not They identified the Romantic current image populism, in the mid-nineteenth and which became century. The life of the common intellec the dominant on focused populists same individuals were The people. fiction. and writers of popular historians, or wrote also the common about but people, To the Romantic with their suffering. populists, ethnographers, only studied themselves of Jews and the Khmelnytsky Uprising that they This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions perceived 157 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING was an accurate in early modern of the representation historiography im of the Ukrainian This and exploitation terrible people. suffering what the Ukrainian Romantic age was further reinforced by populists authentic historical considered the ultimate folklore. source, Ukrainian The most and of the Romantic representative to He paid considerable attention important, Kostomarov. famous, was Mykola populists in his folkloristic, of the Ukrainian Jewish exploitation historical people In a study of Ukrainian folk songs, Kostomarov and journalistic works. their reflection of the arrogant of the historical emphasized "tyranny Jews."57 This of the condemnation in his publicistic is also prominent social role of the Jews of the early writings of Ukraine 1860s: in Poland the Judeans settled and Little Russia, they occu servants the the middle and of class, becoming pied place willing to of the the agents stronger mighty nobility; they clung side, and the lords, brought they fared well until the people, rising against under their judgement the helpers of the latter. The Judeans, caring When their own comfort only about extract from the [advantages] tween the nobles of the the factotum their taverns, serfs, book Kostomarov's scholarly the lords; their mills, even sometimes and Bohdan under style Nevertheless, and edition, and he the dropped in later editions and serfs. the that relationship In this way, lords entrusted their the of to tribe, began then existed be their that the Judeans to them became their their property, industry, faith of the latter.58 income, and their in semi Khmelnytsky (1857) was written and Istoriia influence of Velychko Rusov. as a source Istoriia in the second Rusov also took into consideration in particular the testimony of the Jewish eyewitness once it became in Russia available with (beginning other sources, Hanover Nathan the fourth edition of 1884).59 Istoriia Rusov Russian) the literary a time when ern national and Markevych's writers populist Ukrainian provided History (and with and archetypes for subjects The of at latter were, course, highly imagination. significant was a in Ukrainian the of mod process society developing consciousness. The of the Jew as leaseholder, stereotype Romantic the one holding the keys to the Christian spy or church, as Polish or as someone not to be trusted agent, simply go-between certainly in nineteenth-century became Ukrainian literature and was prominent often in early twentieth only displaced as natural Jews sympathetically its struggle for freedom.60 century with works allies of the Ukrainian which portrayed intelligentsia This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions in ZENON E. KOHUT 158 Modern Ukrainian E. has Frank Sysyn ideals socialist and history shown, entered evolved similar lines. As writing along new liberal the advent of positivism, with Ukrainian populist historiography, grad traditional dissolving historian Ukrainian greatest anti-Jewish ually of the For rhetoric.61 twentieth early example, the century, Mykhailo as so primarily understood the Khmelnytsky Hrushevsky, Uprising cial movement, with national and religious "motifs" present although as well. shows great appreciation of Nathan Incidentally, Hrushevsky account Hanover's of pre-war social antagonisms: more from Volhynia into the founda penetrated deeply an even the uprising from which and developed produced causes our own its of social and ethnic broader than analysis "Eye This Jew tions witness," who, on without concentrating refers to some of the condition general of its secondary and enserfment, symptoms merely manifestations: the arbitrary behaviour of the leaseholders, Jewish ones in particular. attention to various Such superficial details of social relations under with serfdom, no of the thorough analysis is quite typical: we encounter class and ethnic antagonisms, primary as well.62 it in other authors The Khmelnytsky Uprising, Ukrainian historical of shaping Although ades after Jewish but early modern the uprising, leaseholders the main cution of together focus with the no Ukrainian it focuses are mentioned image memory of Jews, and the some dec writing began on Jews nor on the massacres. historical neither in a long catalogue of Polish abuses, of Cossack rights and the perse is registered The of Jews slaughter is on the violation the Orthodox with the Church. of Poles, slaughter at Catholics, and and others, or moralizing. is attempt explanation, justification is no Jewish literature historical there issue, early modern one. It is the perfidy that allows a Christian of the Poles only a Polish an image gradually people be lorded over by the infidel Jews. However, reported In all the of the Jew as ultimate economic the leasing emerges exploiter: through of virtually trade monopolies, and tax-farming; everything, legal and over to exert his ability and power peasants, physical through legal at times, Cossacks in the name of the lord; and spiritual his through to him of the the which control church, possession keys gives alleged over access to the sacraments and salvation control that represents a profanation of true Christian faith. Elements of this image appear This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 159 THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING (1709); it gains resonance in Lukomsky in Hrabianka in Istoriia fully developed at the beginning from of Rusov, which, probably, nineteenth This century. historical Polish writing, the seventeenth-century to explain the great both on the Jews. revolt began to circulate image which is borrowed attempted in part, to lay the blame for it this image was embellished and and, that contention It is my (1770), and is in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries of because the renewal of the Uniate relevance of the Polish problem, continuing of Poland, the emergence of and, as a result of the partitions question, codified a Jewish question. which marked the Thus, century, by the turn of the nineteenth a end of early modern Ukrainian Jewish history stereotype writing, to immense the of had emerged. Istoriia and Rusov, popularity Owing the specific interests of Ukrainian Romantic that populism, stereotype was incorporated into the new into modern Ukrainian and made historiography it was fiction. But its not the only one. For the populists, important of oral folk literature, the dumy, were as important as any early modern source. Moreover, Ukrainian on the Khmelnytsky was the anti-Jewish Polish literature Uprising genre of historical the most perhaps, and exciting images way source or even, the more vivid also to nineteenth-century strands coalesced available All writers. Ukrainian and historians, poets, to shape modern histor Ukrainian of the twentieth the beginning century three ical memory. And although by intellectuals the anti-Jewish Ukrainian rejected stereotypes, leading in historical to modify. their embodiment would difficult prove memory the Notes 1. I would to like Yekelchyk to thank for thank Moshe to use for permission Ukraine's Intellectual tions Zvi and of Central et Gitelman, Frank Serhii and Plokhy, Sysyn, colleagues Serhy to my these I would about issues. Also like thinking and Adam the of editors this Teller, collection, original my contributing Rosman some materials Tradition: Eastern al., The Europe. (Cambridge: from this Role of article in Istoriia in Honor Essays Ukrainian "The Research of Roman Institute in of Jews Image Cultures Rusov" and Na ed., Szporluk, Publications, 2000), 343-358. 2. A convenient Cultural Uprising A Process: Russian, (Edmonton: the Russian, Cossack-Polish of survey Khmelnytsky the Russian, Polish Survey of the and Ukrainian Historical CIUS Press, Ukrainian war, and Ukrainian An 1992). and Soviet is John Basarab, Writing earlier views from work, on the Pereiaslav National of Ukraine's Interpretations of the interpretations is provided by Stephen Velychenko, Past the Earliest documenting results and in Polish, Times the This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions to 1914 evolution significance 1654-' A Historiographical as History of of the Study ZENON E. KOHUT 160 The CIUS, 1982). (Edmonton: Between Remembrance of the Polish in Contemporary Commonwealth Monographs, 3. Hans Feodosii and Sinopsis, Kiev in Joel is analyzed in Jews the Wars as the Mid-Seventeenth during Century Historical Research East (Boulder: Writing ed., Shown European einer Einleitung (K?ln: went Hrabianka, Hryhorii historical distinctiveness. further He any distancing further traced than with affinity 1992), 228. others the Cossacks' in affirm genealogy Russia. Fink Verlag, (Kyiv, 1878; repr. Munich: Wilhelm Samovidtsa commentary (Kyiv: Naukova Dumka, chronicler, thus ed. with starodavnikh, and V. M. Kravchenko ing the Ukrainians' to the Khazars, 6. Letopis' mit Facsimile z litopystsiv Khronika Sofonovych, Cossack 1681: 1983), 365fT. by lu. A. Mytsyk 5. One the of 1995). Rothe, B?hlau Verlag, 4. events of the image Denial: The Fate Jewish and Raba, 1972), 3-5. 7. 11. For Ibid., and Belarusian 8. Ibid., 12, 13. 9. Ibid., 13, 15. time this population to the term "Ruthenian" refers period, of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Deistviia 10. Hryhorii Hrabianka, valoi brani Bogdana getmana 1854) repr. in Hryhorij Hrabjanka's (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Ukrainian 11. 32, Ibid., 51. 13. Ibid., 52. The indicating next very that Samiilo this 15. Ibid., 32. 16. Ibid., 80. 17. Ibid., 84. 18. Ibid., 89. 19. Ibid., note 20. Stefan 150 on p. 84, 21. 23. Ibid., 48, 49. Ibid., 40, 41. The "The Grabowicz, Ukrainian introduction on a Polish by Valerii lament, source. Shevchuk 90. p. in Letopis' his samovidtsa (Kiev, 1878, 1972), 371, 372. Some scholars argue that narrative of which istoricheskoe," 371, Theme in ed., in Historical Studies, (Moscow, translation Jewish Literature," Relations Ukrainian on with was his own translation lost eventually of Twar (Introduction by xi). "Sobranie 24. Wisniowiecki's based an text 22. Istoriia Rusov HiMaloi Rossii Jewish neby (Kiev, 10. p. Fink Verlag, the Princess be footnote with istoricheskoe," domowa, Levytsky, Lukomsky, cf. also to continue planned Wojna on well may 23 and 1, p. "Sobranie repr. Munich: Wilhelm Orest krvavshoi s poliaki The Great War of Bohdan Xmel'nyc'kyj Research Institute, 1990), 30 (314). reports text the trans, Litopys, vol. 1991), Lukomsky, Lukomsky dowski's sentence of part Velychko, Dnipro, (Kiev: poliakov zaporozhskogo, Ukrainian 48. Ibid., 12. 14. i ot nachala prezeVnoi KhmeVnitskogo, the 372. 1846), 40, 41. is adapted (with in Nineteenth- Howard Aster Perspective 1988), 327-342, minor and changes) from George G. and Early Twentieth-Century Peter Ukrainian J. Potichnyj, (Edmonton: Canadian here 331. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Institute of THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING 25. Istoriia p. Ibid., 65. 27. 67, Ibid., 70. 29. Ibid., 76. 30. Ibid. 31. Ibid., 80, Ibid., 118. Ibid., 122. author his defense as to referred the Polish spies on again 82. To substantiate claimed nia's union 34. Mykhailo that with with united Poland Istoriia Cossack and equal Ukrainy-Rusy 2, 120, 121. 8, part Remembrance and toria belli Cosacco-Polonici 32, with "as equal Muscovy Between Raba, of and the privileges, in 1654, like Lithua the Cossack state rights of union with Muscovy treaty a clause in 1569, contained whereby Ukraine's Hrushevsky, vol. 1956), hospilka, 35. are 74. Ibid., 28. 33. Jews 106. 26. 32. The 52. p. Rusov, 161 free with 1922; (Kyiv, 111-12, Denial, free" repr. K. quoting 6, 7, 209). (Ibid., New York: His ed., Koppi, authore Samuele Grondski de Grondi Kny (Pest, 1789), 33. Istoriia vol. 125. 36. Hrushevsky, 37. on Both "A Curse Their Houses: Catholic toward the Attitudes Sysyn, the Khmel'nyts'kyi Jews and Eastern Orthodox in Father Pawel during Uprising in Israel Ruszel's Fawor and the Nations: Presented in Honor niebieski," Essays of Shmuel Ettinger for Jewish Center 38. Ukrainy-Rusy, 8, part 2, 124, Frank Istoriia Hrushevsky, v Iuzhnoi Historical (Jerusalem: History, Rusi and Zalman of Israel Society here xvii, xviii and xxiii. xi-xxiii, 1987), vol. Ukrainy-Rusy, kanonika 8, lana l'vovskogo part 122. 2, Iuzefovicha, Cf. k istorii Iuzhnoi i Zapadnoi Rusi letopisei otnosiashchikhsia "Letopis' 1624-1700," Shazar sobytii in Sbornik (Kyiv, 1888), 121, 122. 39. historical nent the among place late relatively a prominent to occupy historical antisemitism," of this arguments vol. 8, part 2, 122-126, Ukrainy-Rusy, evidence documentary so been uncovered in comes accusation this has here of far. [Ukrainian] and perma (Hrushevsky, 126). na Ukraine," I. Galant, li evrei pravoslavnyie "Arendovali tserkvi sta Ievreiskaia rina 1 (1909): This had been also debated in Israel. Most 71-87. topic recently, a rare phenomenon, Judith Kalik of Hebrew indicated that although University is clear documentary there of the leasing of both Catholic evidence and Orthodox to Jewish out churches leaseholders. This fact was in the discussion of brought her 41. but tradition, Istoriia 40. no a certain in this matter, interest "Notwithstanding or any of churches related Jewish conflicts leasing The of Jews for such misdeeds emerges blaming paper "The monwealth" at Jewry in 18-20, 1998. M. J. Context The Rosman, Lord's Commonwealth Ukrainian and Church International 1648-1649: Lithuanian Harvard Orthodox the Research the Jews Conference and in the Jews: Institute, the Eighteenth 109, Century Com European University, in Relations Magnate-Jewish 1990), Tah-Tat-East at Bar-Ilan Consequences" during Polish-Lithuanian "Gezeirot the May Polish (Cambridge, MA: 110. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ZENON E. KOHUT 162 42. Istoriia Rusov was point "Do mentions taken think that written Istoriia Rusov "Istoriia Ohloblyn, of Toronto Press, sity 44. Cf. 45. Both Press, Russia are to and nawsky provides 46. Patricia the of story have the 1850s texts orendari Kulish's the and ed. dumy, Derzhavne 49. this combining 51. been In 53. 54. 45 44, 1965), Ivan Ierofeiev, voho tovarystva that standably as first "merchants." flight with researchers in rewritten, Ukrainskii entirely P. Kirdan, B. edition of the Ukrains'ki Plisets'kyi, 1994), 218, 219. o Iuzhnoi Zapiski duma Rusi, vol. from Andrii 1 (St. Peters in the Shut the narodni of possibility of conclusions dumy, u Kyievi nineteenth and the dumka, i ikh dumy (Kyiv, 1910), early twentieth 217. do pisen', direct on that the authenticity interwar the Western similarities "Cossack of tradition," the dumas most dumy. I rely Ukrains'koho 45, students and, between the Soviet oral nauko 46. Ukraine as the publication, redaktsii," Zapysky kn. 7, 17-64, here centuries, on influences literary and Peretts, Zhytetsky, Volodymyr influence of contemporary written literature depended on the insisted i virshiv 131 (1921): 1-63, here 49, 50. However, Pavlo in Zibrannia 184. 1986), u vidnoshenniu dumy in his pisniamy," Shatzky's Yiddish-language and Denial, 217. Remembrance "Ukrains'ki lxv. narodnymy (Kyiv: Naukova holosin'," Zapysky NTSh in particular both Hi, 1927), narodni recognized significant Filiaret who worked Kolessa, in Soviet Ukraine, suggested fact if not See and Marko the ukrains'kymy vol. 43 tomakh, Ukrains'ki Between late ed., nad "Ukrains'ki the reporting folklore, text Ukrainy, rejected In the Cana (Toronto: and Tar George vydavnytstvo Kolessa, on Raba, trans. K. Moyle specifically an and with pokhoronnykh 52. Univer "recording" is on pp. 63, 64. For a critical view of Kulish's technique as regards see Ukrains this particular 'ki narodni duma, 1 (Kyiv: introduction vol. Hrushevs'ka, by Kateryna Plisets'kyi, Kolessa Princeton Minor, edited, heavily Kostomarov. Mykola is in P. Kulish, account of "Studii Franko, u p'iatdesiaty tvoriv Filiaret University (Toronto: of Jewish grotesque picture the the second duma. the As from Nauka, (Moscow: Ivan 50. Marko as late In the title English. is rendered mistakenly (leaseholders) his 56-63; 1856), of Oleksandrivka burg, it is very likely scholars Many 1815-1825. See 1979), 163-169 and 156-161. This Studies, publisher, publication village of recording, as (Princeton: narodni dumy: siuzhety i obrazy (Kyiv: Kobza, 47. Ukrainian Dumy: Editio Minor, 157, 159. 48. 'koho 3, 4. chs. Jews, wrongdoings variant had this epos narodnyi Hrushevs century, of Poland. of Ukraine 1800-1917 in Ukrainian a variant by eighteenth Editio Dumy: introduction Natalie by Kilina, Jewish shown, written Her of Ukrainian is also There (This Iershov, avtora ii," i pro Serhiievycha in Ukrainian found parallel the word duma, Anatolii See a pochasty partition or edited Encyclopedia 2, 360. A Portrait, Gathers be dian Institute vol. 1793 the was Rusov," Kiev: in 1792. found 1928. 55-81. 1993), Klier, in the circulate after 1988), F. Hamm, Michael to was work O. 43. time considerable the in here 288, 289.) Since news of the find would have (Kyiv, 1928), vol. 1, 286-291, that was which stone, Iershov Anatolii 'Istorii Rusov,' napysannia akademika poshanu Mykhaila na zbirnyk Iuvileinyi Tmutarkan by chas pro pytannia the made originally of Ukrainian Ivan on dumy. subsequently, two reflect folklorists literature. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Ierofeiev, the the under Western THE KHMELNYTSKY UPRISING and Ukrainian post-Soviet on the culture's influence folklorists are more open Ukrainian folklore. See: 163 to the P. question Zhitetskii of the high [Zhytets'kyi], "Ukrains'ki o narodnykh dumakh malorusskikh I. Ierofeiev, (Kyiv, 1893); i ikh redaktsii;" imaterialy V. N. Peretts, Issledovaniia starinnoi po istorii dumy vv. ukrainskoi XVI-XVIII vols. 1-3; Filiaret literatury (Leningrad, 1926-1929), Ukrains'ki narodni here Ukrain p. 83; Kirdan, Kolessa, dumy (L'viv, 1920), Mysli skii narodnyi 55. Frank See Sysyn, Culture 57. N. "The and Istoriia Markevich, 191. I. Kostomarov, in Sobranie "Iudeiam," is adapted, of troversy Historical 59. N. 60. For a more Frank E. Potichnyj, 62. no. minor Hrushevsky, and Harvard (Moscow, the Development of Modern Studies Ukrainian 14, nos. vol. 1, 121, 127, 128, 171, tvorch pesennogo iuzno-russkogo here translation 38-58, 43, 44. The English from Roman "The Sion-Osnova Con Serbyn, and Potichnyj, in Ukrainian-Jewish Relations here 99. Khmel'nitskii (St. Petersburg, see George G. Grabowicz, discussion, Ukrainian Early Twentieth-century "The Jewish Sysyn, Ukrainian-Jewish Istoriia (1862), 85-110, Bogdan and 1 znachenie 1842), 8, 809. changes, in Aster 1861-1862," detailed in Nineteenth61. Malorossii Perspective, Kostomarov, Chronicles Identity," sochinenii Osnova, with Cossack National "Istoricheskoie estva," 58. [the 1990), 593-607. (December 3/4 N. Ukrains'ki narodni dumy view]. E. Ukrainian 56. epos [the Soviet view]; Plisets'kyi, Ukrainian post-Soviet Factor Relations Ukrainy-Rusy, 1904), 638-650. "The in the Khmelnytsky Uprising," in Historical Perspective, vol. 8, part 2, 119, Jewish 120. This content downloaded from 208.103.90.50 on Sun, 1 Jun 2014 01:55:45 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Theme 327-343. Literature," in Aster 43-54, here and 46.