A. Bryzhuk, PhD Student, Deputy Director for Research
Ostroh Academy National University, Ostroh, Ukraine,
State Historical and Cultural Reserve of Ostroh, Ukraine
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17721/1728-2640.2020.147.2
EVERYDAY LIFE OF VOLYN JEWS IN THE INTERWAR PERIOD (ACCORDING TO THE HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM IN THE USA)
The interview is an important historical source of studying the problematic issues of the history of Ukraine in the XX century. The interview has a lot of factual materials, interpretations, impressions, observations, and development of the interviewees about the described events. Between the two world wars, Western Volhynia remained a part of Poland. About 10% of its population was Jews. This article examines historical evidence of the life of the Jewish population in the cities of Volhynian Voivodeship in the interwar period from the collection of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). USHMM documents, studies, and interprets the history of the Holocaust. The mission of the museum, due to the museum's strategy, is to help citizens of the world to fight hatred, to prevent genocide, to promote human dignity and to strengthen democracy. Interviews from the USHMM collection are semi-structured and focused, thus aimed at studying a person’s "experience" of individual historical divisions and situations that arose.
The examined memoirs show the construction and spread of Jewish public cities of Volhynian Voivodeship, which was inhabited by about two-thirds of their inhabitants. Education issues are most often addressed to in interviews for those reasons that the interwar period lead to the formation and maturation of respondents. The articles describe the construction, professional employment, religious and social life, as well as the perception of urban space. The analysis of memories gives us idea of a young resident of the Jewish community. On average, this was a person from a religious family which had own small business. Such person attended public and religious school, had acquaintances or friends from different ethnic groups, knew several languages and was not interested in politics at all.
The material presented in this article represents the experience of Holocaust victims. Attention of the researchers in this group is evidence of one-sidedness — one of the main methodological problems of oral historical research. The exploitation of traumatic experience in this article is changed due to the chronological limits of the interwar period. Despite the above problem of oral historical research, methods permit us to add some kind of personal to the general narrative.
Keywords: Poland, Volhynia, the interwar period, the city, the town, everyday life, Poles, Jews, Ukrainians.
Received by the editorial board: 15.12.20
References:
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview Shapiro RG-50.030.0519 / Oral history interview with Asa.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview RG-50.233.0120 / Oral history interview with Charlene Perlmutter Schiff.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview RG-50.030.0203 / Oral history interview with Charlene Perlmutter Schiff.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.120.0290 / Oral history interview with Efraim Fishman.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.030.0553 / Oral history interview with Ellen Kaidanow.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.030.0188 / Oral history interview with Eve Wagszul Rich.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.030.0750 / Oral history interview with Ezra Sherman.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.226.0013 / Oral history interview with Fiodor Isakovich Intergois.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG: RG-50.233.0048 / Oral history interview with Gerald Grossman.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.493.0015 / Oral history interview with Henry Palmer.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.477.0830 / Oral history interview with Jacob Harari.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.030.0168 0518 / Oral history interview with Lisa Dawidowicz Murik.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.462.0091 / Oral history interview with Luba Margulies.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.156.0018 / Oral history interview with Max Grosblat.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.030.0518 / Oral history interview with Sara Shapiro.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, Washington, DC. Oral history interview. RG-50.010.0015 / Oral history interview with Zew Budansky.
Volontyr, O. (2018). Polish government's education policy in the Volyn Voivodeship (1921−1939). Unpublished thesis (PhD in History), Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. [In Ukrainian].
Hon, M. (2006). Ethnopolitical Contradictions and Conflicts in Western Ukraine (1926–1939). Ukrainian national idea: realities and prospects of development, 18, 64–69. [In Ukrainian].
Hon, M. (2005). The Jewish question in Western Ukraine on the eve of World War II (based on socio-political periodicals of the region), Тhe Holocaust and the present. Studies in Ukraine and the world, 1, 9–27. [In Ukrainian].
Hon, M. (2005). With resentment in solitude. Ukrainian-Jewish relations in the western Ukrainian lands as part of Poland (1935–1939). Rivne: Volyn charms. [In Ukrainian].
Kichyi, S. (1994). National composition of the population of Western Ukraine in the early 1930s, Materials ХL scientific conference of Volyn University named after Lesya Ukrainka, 2. Lutsk. Рp. 78–80. [In Ukrainian].
Kolesnyk, V., Supruniuk, A. (1992). Population of Volyn Voivodeship: (1921–1939): based on census materials in modern Ukrainian and Polish. Past and present of Volyn. Local lore: History, achievements, prospects, 119–120. [In Ukrainian].
Kramar, Yu. (2015). National-cultural and religious policy of the Polish governments in Volhynia (1921–1939). Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Lesia Ukrainka Eastern European National University. [In Ukrainian].
Kubiiovych, V. (1996). Western Ukrainian lands within Poland 1920–1939. Scientific works. Pp. 246–265. [In Ukrainian].
Kucherepa, M. (2005). Ethno-demographic changes in the Volyn Voivodeship in 1921–1939. In: Futala, V. (Ed.), Poles, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Lithuanians in interwar Poland (1921–1939): materials of the international scientific conference, Oktober, 8-9. Drohobych. Pp. 19–33. [In Ukrainian].
Levchuk, I. (2018). Activities of Polish, Ukrainian and Jewish women's organizations in the Republic of Poland: a comparative analysis. Unpublished thesis (PhD in History), Rivne State University of the Humanities; Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University. [In Ukrainian].
Makarchuk, S. (2008). Western Volhynia in the 20-30s of the twentieth century. (ethnosocial and political relations in the region). Ukraine: cultural heritage, national consciousness, statehood, 17, 226-237. [In Ukrainian].
Marchuk, V. (2014). National composition of urban settlements of Western Volhynia in the early 1920s. Scientific notes of the National University "Ostroh Academy". Series "Historical Sciences", 22, 111–127. [In Ukrainian].
Pastushenko, T. (2010). The method of oral history and oral history research in Ukraine. History of Ukraine, 17-18 (657 - 658), 10-15. [In Ukrainian].
Fedyk, I. (2013). National policy of interwar Poland in Galicia: the Jewish context (On the example of law enforcement). Scientific notebooks of the historical faculty of Lviv University, 13-14, 589-595. [In Ukrainian].
Khonyhsman, Ya. (1998). The catastrophe of the Jewry of Western Ukraine. Jews of Eastern Galicia, Western Volhynia, Bukovina and Transcarpathia in 1933-1945. Lvov: [s. n.]. [In Russian].
Hazzan. Jewish Encyclopedia URL: http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/3990-cantor/
Phillips, E. (2015). Fiddler on the Roof: A Balancing Act. The Montag, 4, 130–143.
Shindler, C. (2006). The Triumph of Military Zionism: Nationalism and the Origins of the Israeli Right. London: I. B. Tauris.
Bystrzycki, T. (Ed.). (1933). Index of places of the Republic of Poland with indication of territorially competent authorities and offices as well as communication devices. Przemyśl; Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Książnicy Naukowej. [In Polish].
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. URL: https://www.ushmm.org/
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Strategic plan summary 2013–2018.
Wróblewska, U. (2011) Educational policy of the Polish state towards national minorities, ethnic and religious groups living in the Eastern Borderlands in the Second Polish Republic. Science, 2, 109–124. [In Polish].