Tales of Tolochin: The Story of A Classical Shtetl
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Tales of Tolochin presents the history of a classical shtetl told through the experiences of two Jewish families, the Poretzkys and the Rutsteins. Come follow the rise and decline of the village of Tolochin in Belarus and learn how these two families fled the pogroms that ravaged their homeland and how, with their help of their most famous son,
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Tales of Tolochin - Yehuda Rothstein
© Copyright 2020
Tales of Tolochin: The Story of a Classical Shtetl™
registered by Invictus Holdings LLC.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any manner
without the written permission of the copyright owner
except for use of quotations in a book or book review.
For more information, visit www.jrrothstein.com.
First Hardcover Edition, September 2020
ISBN: 978-1-7353986-1-7
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020917774
וזכני לגדל
בנים ובני בנים
חכמים ונבונים
אוהבי ה'
יראי אלקים
אנשי אמת
זרע קדש
בה' דבקים
ומאירים את העולם
בתורה ובמעשים טובים
ובכל מלאכת
עבודת הבורא
May I merit to raise children and grandchildren,
those who are wise,
intelligent and understanding,
who love and fear God,
and who always speak the truth.
May my descendants be a holy legacy,
who cleave to the divine.
May they be lights to the world,
lights filled with Torah and good deeds,
and be of service to the creator and his creations.
- The prayer of Esther Sarah Dubrow and
Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Poretzky
Introduction
Through the lens of two Jewish families, this books attempts to capture the lives of the inhabitants of Tolochin, Belarus, a classical shtetl, prior to its destruction during the Holocaust.
The book traces the history of two Jewish families, the Poretzkys and the Rutsteins, the events surrounding their persecution in the pogroms of the dawn of the twentieth century, their resettlement as refugees in the United States, as well as the rise to fame of their most famous son, Jacob Rutstein.
It is through this book, modeled after the yizkor books of yore, that I hope their memories will be memorialized and their legacies endure.
Yehuda Rothstein
New York, New York
October 1, 2020
PART I
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF JEWISH TOLOCHIN, BELARUS
Before the Russian Revolution, the Jews of White Russia, a region which covers most of modern-day Belarus, including the shtetl or village of Tolochin, were forced to live in a region known as the Pale of Settlement,
which spanned from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea. About five million Jews (94% of the total Jewish population, about 12% of the Russian population) lived in this region. The poverty rate was high. The Jews had the worst jobs and worked for the lowest wages and in the most demeaning positions. Pogroms occurred frequently throughout the Russian Empire. Tolochin or Talachyn (Belarusian: Талачы́н, Łacinka: Tałačyn, pronounced [taɫaˈtʂɨn]) or Tolochin (Russian: Толо́чин; Polish: Tołoczyn, Lithuanian: Talačynas, and Yiddish: טאָלאָטשין) was and is a small village in the Viciebsk Region of Belarus, an administrative center of the Talachyn district. It is perhaps the coldest city in Belarus during winter, with a record low of -42.2C. The hamlet of Tolochin was founded in 1433, in the Vitebsk province of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (which later became the Kingdom of Lithuania.) The town ran across a famous trade route, and for this reason, the city was often subjected to conquest, destruction, and ruin through the centuries.
In 1604, Lev Ivanovich Sapieha founded here a Christian Basilian monastery, a hospital, and a school. Since at least the mid-17th century, Tolochin became a significant center of trade, and the settlement held major market fairs at least three times a year. During the war between Russia and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1654-1667), the hamlet had 314 houses which were all burned down.
Some claim that the town itself was first settled by Jews. Other references suggest a Jewish presence as early as the 16th century, while others place it as only beginning as late as 1717. However, from the third quarter of the 17th century, historical documents mention Jewish settlements in the greater Tolochin region – settlements such as Bobr, Belynichi, Gory, Glusk, Dubrovno, Krynki, Mir, Ross, Staroselie, and our Tolochin. In 1766, 648 Jews were enrolled in the Tolochin Kahal and its parishes.
In 1772, Tolochin, then a city of Poland, became a border crossing point between the Russian empire and Poland. In this city, as an important settlement on the way from Poland to Moscow, a custom house was also established. At this time, the eastern part of the town became Old Tolochin and the Western part New Tolochin. The border check-point and a customs house functioned in the town until 1793.
John Ledyard, the American explorer and adventurer, visited Tolochin in or around 1788. After several weeks of traveling, he arrived at the Russian-Polish borderlands. The region was a thicket of disputed boundaries between numerous states, with Tolochin at its center. Ledyard describes his journey to the Drut River, from which he crossed into Poland, and entered Tolochin.
He writes:
At last, the dear moment came that I was conducted over a Bridge across a little River, across the Barrier into the little Village Tolochin in Poland.… I was conducted for quarters to the house of a Jew. Not being permitted to enter the Dominions of a people more destitute of principle than themselves, they hover about its boundaries here in great numbers. It was a large dirty house filled with dirt & noise & children.… [The region] is besides almost solely inhabited by Jews who are ever nuisances except in places totally Commercial.
The Jews of Tolochin were at the center of the Russian Empire’s decision to censor Jewish books. In or around 1790, Jewish books were imported by Tolochin locals from Poland into the town. The Governor of the Tolochin region, General Passek, discovered these books as they passed through Tolochin. Upon their inspection at the custom house, the authorities ordered the Jewish books to be detained and confiscated. Catherine II of Russia, upon learning that Jewish books were being imported into the Russian Empire, thereupon took the informal local ban and formally prohibited the importation of Hebrew books throughout the Russian Empire. The edict provided that the Jews could obtain their supplies of religious literature only from Russian printers.
Around the same time, the famous Rabbi Shlomo of Tolochin, who was one of the greatest disciples of the Vilna Goan, Rabbi Eliyahu Kraner of Vilna (known as the Vilner Gaon or Gra), migrated to the holy land. Rabbi Shlomo was the only one among the Gaon’s disciples to make aliya emigrate to the Land of Israel while his teacher was still alive. Rabbi Shlomo of Tolochin reached the Land of Israel on the first of the month of Nissan, 1794. He was known as a great Torah scholar and a miracle worker. Research creates the impression that Tolochin had a minimal Chasidic presence and that its inhabitants considered themselves Litvaks under the guidance of the Vilna Goan and his disciples.
The horrid living conditions of those living within Jewish Tolochin continued to astound those outsiders that visited, like John Ledyard. Napoleon Bonaparte and his expedition on November 22, 1812, passed through Tolochin during his eastern military expedition and encountered local Jews living in poverty. The terrible crowding of the Jewish population of Tolochin was the result of formal government measures to evict Jews from the countryside to cities and towns. History records numerous complaints and petitions to the state from the Jews of the region. For example, in 1825, the Jews of Tolochin characterized their situation as follows: from great oppression in one house of two or more families, they were punished by extreme poverty so that we can’t have any daily food.
New Tolochin or Zarechny Tolochin
was founded in the second quarter of the 19th century, on the western bank of the Drut River, and was a part of the Mogilev province of the Russian Empire which had previously incorporated the town. The word old
or Starro was added in due course to the name of the original part of the town. In the 1870s, the Tolochin railroad station (Moscow-Brest) was built four (4) kilometers outside of town. In 1880, Old Tolochin had 160 wooden houses, 110 of which belonged to Jewish families. New Tolochin had 93 houses, 27 of which were Jewish. There were also four houses made of stone – three in Old Tolochin and one in the new part. On the whole, 1,119 Jews were working in Old Tolochin and 253 in New Tolochin in 1880. In 1886, Old Tolochin had three Jewish schools and numerous synagogues.
In 1888, a boy was born in the family of Moysi and Lei Baileen. The newborn was called Israel Baileen. In 1893, the family moved to New York. Israel in America became the famous Irving Berlin. In 1911, Irving created the famous Alexander’s Ragtime Band. He would become one of Tolochin’s most famous children.
Between 1750 to 1940, the Jews of Tolochin constituted the overwhelming majority of the population, at times as high as 90%. This created a great sense of attachment by the local Jews to the village, which can be categorized as a classical shtetl. Shprintsy (Sophia) Lvovna Rohkind (1903-2000), a well-known linguistic scholar, author of a Yiddish-Russian dictionary, and a native of Tolochin, in her unpublished memoirs, described the pride the local Jews felt towards their town. She writes:
Tolochin is my homeland and the homeland of our ancestors - preserved in my soul as a memory of childhood and adolescence, about close and dear people, about family joys and sorrows, about what is dear to every person, which cannot be forgotten even until old age.
According to a former Jewish resident of Tolochin, Anatoloy Schneider, the Russian authorities put a lot of effort into the military and financial development of this region. People from other towns would come to Tolochin to buy things – there were a lot of wholesale shops, stores, kiosks, and a big trade square. Jews were traditionally involved in selling timber, cereals, vodka, fish, confectionery, and small wares. Jews were also known to be excellent craftsmen: blacksmiths, potters, tailors, shoemakers, tanners, barbers, and bakers. Trade, however, remained their major occupation and the Jewish inhabitants were heavily dependent on the trade fairs, and other trade-related migration. The shops sold groceries, haberdashery, pottery, fabrics, clothes, and meat. Fish was brought three times a week from places that had lakes or rivers.
Schneider also describes the geographic layout of Tolochin. The shops were also close to the post office and the telegraph. Craftsmen also lived here: tailors, shoemakers, and blacksmiths. The street ended with a highway. Immediately after the market square, the main street - Orsha Street (now Lenin Street) began. On it were a large synagogue and two smaller ones. Men prayed on the first floor of the large synagogue, women prayed on the second floor. At the synagogue courtyard, wedding ceremonies usually took place. The crowds brought the groom and the bride, accompanied by relatives and friends, put up a chuppah (wedding canopy) and held the wedding ceremony.
Zarechnaya (Zarechenskaya) Street, now Engels Street, was one of the longest. It began near the bazaar, crossed the Drut River, and stretched far to the west, intersected by many alleys and streets. The street lighting was bad. In some places, the kerosene lamps were dimly lit. The main source of lighting was a weak light falling from the windows of the houses. Not all the streets in Tolochin were paved. In the fall, they had to walk on the dirt; only on the sides were wooden sidewalks. The streets were poorly lit. Here and there, lanterns with kerosene lamps were near the houses, but mostly they were satisfied with the light from the windows, which were also not very abundant.
A big challenge for the city was frequent fires. The housing stock consisted mainly of wooden buildings and fires occurred frequently. In 1897, a Jewish fire brigade was created in the city. As evidenced by the archival documents, the members of the squad had good training and discipline. A newspaper report captures one such fire which occurred in 1884:
The fire which took place on the 10th of March destroyed the Jewish community mikva and five private houses with their belongings. The owners of the houses were local Jews: Israel Berka Rodshtein, Leiba Zusin, Chaya-Ryvka Khotovkin, Abram, and David Alkins.
The investigation showed that on the night of March 9, a local peasant, Ivan Shopik, was using the stove to make the mikva warm and negligently fell asleep. The fire began and destroyed all the neighboring houses belonging to the named above persons.
The fire has damaged Staro-Tolochin Jewish community for 2000 rubles, Rodshtein for 1000 rubles, Zusin for 300 rubles, Khotovkin for 150 rubles, Abram Alkin for 650 rubles, Dovid Alkin for 50 rubles, and Ryzh for 100 rubles.[1]
However, not all fires in Tolochin were accidents. Many were arson attacks by non-Jews against their Jewish neighbors in the contexts of pogroms. Pogroms against the Jewish community occurred frequently throughout the 1890s and the first decade of the twentieth century.
Irving Berlin, the great American composer and musician, and Tolochin’s most famous son, told his first biographer, Alexander Woollcott, that his first memory occurred laying with the rest of his family beside a dirt road, wrapped in a blanket at night, watching as his home and other homes in Jewish Tolochin being burned in a pogrom by non-Jews. Aaron (Harry) Paretzky, a Tolochin resident, reported that in approximately 1900, non-Jewish locals rounded up some of Tolochin’s Jews, herded them into one of the local synagogue’s, and lit the building on fire. These Jews consisted of women, old men, and children. They were freed by Aaron, along with a group of teenage boys who had been hunting and/or playing in the forest. The group, upon returning to the village, heard the cries of their friends and family in the process of being burned alive. The boys broke up the door