Jewish autonomy in Crimea was a project in the Soviet Union to create an autonomous region for Jews in the Crimean peninsula carried out during the 1920s...
14 KB (1,641 words) - 06:06, 13 January 2025
Jewish colonies there. The Soviets twice sought to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea; once, in the 1920s, with the support of the American Jewish Joint...
95 KB (8,935 words) - 15:11, 13 June 2025
attempts to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea. The first attempt, conducted by the Soviet government with the support of the American Jewish Joint Distribution...
24 KB (1,850 words) - 11:57, 17 April 2025
create Jewish settlements in Crimea. There were two attempts to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea, but both were ultimately unsuccessful. Crimea experienced...
82 KB (8,732 words) - 10:04, 25 May 2025
Veli İbraimov (category National communism in the Soviet Union)
Russian Communist Party in 1918 and became a national communist authority within Crimea. An opponent of Jewish autonomy in Crimea, he met his downfall for...
20 KB (2,271 words) - 19:51, 3 March 2025
League of Nations Mandates. Jewish autonomy in Crimea – a Soviet proposal to create an autonomous region for Jews in Crimea. The Kimberley Plan was a failed...
32 KB (4,047 words) - 18:07, 9 June 2025
Territorialist effort in Ukraine, the Crimea (see: Jewish autonomy in Crimea), and then in the region surrounding Birobidzhan, where a Jewish Autonomous Region...
17 KB (2,161 words) - 12:37, 13 June 2025
nationalism, cosmopolitanism, and planning to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea to serve US interests. In January 1949, the Soviet mass media launched a massive...
12 KB (1,324 words) - 07:55, 18 April 2025
Shakne Epshtein (category Jewish socialists)
minister, with an idea to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea. Both ideas were rejected. Epshtein died in 1945. "Jewish Notables of Soviet Union Pay Tribute...
1 KB (86 words) - 21:59, 22 March 2025
government-backed proposal for Jewish autonomy in Crimea in the early 1920s, the arrest and execution of national communist leader Veli İbraimov in 1928, and the mass...
41 KB (4,715 words) - 12:56, 1 February 2025
OZET (category Jewish settlement schemes in the Soviet Union)
The plan was to settle 500,000 "toiling Jews" in ten years, and to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea. In reality, from 1925 to 1937 only 126,000 were...
12 KB (1,362 words) - 21:56, 27 January 2025
Komzet (category Jewish settlement schemes in the Soviet Union)
1927, following a failed attempt to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea, the Birsko-Bidzhansky region in the Russian Far East was identified as a territory...
4 KB (423 words) - 23:44, 23 January 2025
Night of the Murdered Poets (redirect from Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee affair)
on the rebuilding of Jewish communities, farms, culture, and identity – including a proposal to establish Jewish autonomy in Crimea. Not everyone agreed...
19 KB (2,249 words) - 14:52, 13 June 2025
Solomon Mikhoels (category Jewish male actors)
Soviet Jews and Jewish communities in noncommunist countries, particularly Mikhoels' aims of establishing Jewish autonomy in Crimea, which he regarded...
13 KB (1,501 words) - 00:49, 27 October 2024
Eupatorian Kenassas (category Buildings and structures in Crimea)
Karaite Jewish synagogues located on Karaimskaya Street in Yevpatoria, Crimea, Ukraine. The synagogue complex is the oldest active Karaite synagogue in the...
5 KB (161 words) - 07:38, 17 January 2025
Crimea was initially considered in the early 1920s, when it already had a significant Jewish population. Two Jewish districts (raiony) were formed in...
51 KB (5,285 words) - 05:12, 23 May 2025
Krymchaks (redirect from Jews of Crimea)
qrımçah) are Jewish ethno-religious communities of Crimea derived from Turkic-speaking adherents of Rabbinic Judaism. They have historically lived in close proximity...
19 KB (2,090 words) - 19:25, 11 June 2025
Crimean Tatars (redirect from Mountain Tats (Crimea))
Turkic ethnic group and nation indigenous to Crimea. Their ethnogenesis lasted thousands of years in Crimea and the northern regions along the coast of...
139 KB (13,664 words) - 19:24, 31 May 2025
Brodsky Synagogue (Kyiv) (category Jewish organizations established in 1898)
די בראדסקי שול אין קיעוו), is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue located in Kyiv, Ukraine. Completed in 1898 in the Romanesque Revival style resembling a classical...
12 KB (727 words) - 05:36, 7 March 2025
Gwoździec Synagogue (category 1650 establishments in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth)
Gwoździec Synagogue was a Jewish synagogue located in the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in what is now Hvizdets in Ukraine. Built in the mid-17th century...
13 KB (967 words) - 05:52, 7 March 2025
Karaite Kenesa (Kyiv) (category 1902 establishments in the Russian Empire)
Kyiv is a former Karaite Jewish Synagogue, or kenesa, located at Yaroslaviv Val Street 7, close to the Golden Gates of Kyiv, in the Shevchenkivskyi District...
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biggest Jewish community center opens in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine"". Jewish Journal. Retrieved 1 December 2016. "Historic Synagogue Endures in Face of...
87 KB (1,313 words) - 15:43, 13 June 2025
Crimean Khanate (redirect from Khanate of the Crimea)
The Crimean Khanate, self-defined as the Throne of Crimea and Desht-i Kipchak, and in old European historiography and geography known as Little Tartary...
62 KB (6,561 words) - 12:36, 6 June 2025
Kharkiv Choral Synagogue (category 1913 establishments in Ukraine)
Orthodox Jewish synagogue, located at 12 Pushkinska Street, Kharkiv, in the Kharkiv Oblast of Ukraine. The Chabad congregation worships in the synagogue...
14 KB (930 words) - 14:02, 7 June 2025
Tsori Gilod Synagogue (category 1925 establishments in Ukraine)
known in more recent times as Beis Aharon V'Yisrael Synagogue (transliterated from Hebrew as "The House of Aaron and Israel"), is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue...
10 KB (507 words) - 00:45, 7 June 2025
Golden Rose Synagogue (Lviv) (category Jewish organizations established in the 1580s)
Orthodox Jewish synagogue, located in Lviv, in what is now the Lviv Oblast in western Ukraine. The Golden Rose Synagogue, established in 1582 in the Polish–Lithuanian...
20 KB (1,756 words) - 23:32, 10 March 2025
Golden Rose Synagogue (Dnipro) (category Jewish organizations established in 1868)
Orthodox Jewish synagogue, located on Kotsyubinskiy Street/Sholom Aleichem Street, in Dnipro, Ukraine. The Golden Rose synagogue was built in 1868 (when...
8 KB (433 words) - 11:01, 7 June 2025
Brodsky Synagogue (Odesa) (redirect from The Brodsky Synagogue in Odessa)
The Brodsky Synagogue is a Reform Jewish synagogue, located at Zhukovskoho Street 18, in Odesa, Ukraine. Completed in 1868 by Jews from Brody, it was the...
20 KB (1,415 words) - 23:55, 23 January 2025
Great Choral Synagogue (Kyiv) (redirect from Synagogue in Podol)
Chief Rabbi of Kyiv and Ukraine since 1990. In 1891, Kyiv had 12 Jewish prayer houses but no large synagogues. In July 1893, the Minister of Interior stated...
9 KB (513 words) - 07:20, 9 April 2025
Great Suburb Synagogue (category 1632 establishments in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth)
Neoclassical. The placement of the Bimah in the middle of the prayer hall became the prototype of many subsequent Jewish temples of significant size. Also unique...
8 KB (433 words) - 19:27, 20 November 2024