
Map of the Pale of Settlement
The
Pale of Settlement ( , cherta osedlosti)
was the term given to a region of Imperial Russia
, along its western border, in which permanent
residence of Jews was allowed, and beyond which
Jewish residence was generally prohibited. It extended from the
pale or demarcation
line to the Russian border with Germany
and Austria-Hungary.
Though
comprising only 20% of the territory of European Russia, the Pale
corresponded to historical borders of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth and included much of present-day Lithuania
, Belarus
, Poland
, Bessarabia
, Ukraine
, and parts
of western Russia. Additionally, a number of cities within
the pale were excluded from it. A limited number of categories of
Jews were allowed to live outside the pale.
The word
pale derives ultimately from the Latin word
palus, meaning stake (
palisade is derived from the same root). From
this derivation came the figurative meaning of "boundary", and the
concept of a pale as an area within which local laws were
valid.
History
- For more information about life in the Pale, see: History of the Jews in Poland
and History of the Jews in
Russia
The Pale was first created by
Catherine the Great in 1791, after
several failed attempts by her predecessors, notably the
Empress Elizabeth, to remove Jews from
Russia entirely unless they converted to
Russian Orthodoxy. The reasons for
its creation were primarily economic and nationalist. While Russian
society had traditionally been divided mainly into
nobles,
serfs, and
clergy, industrial progress led to the
emergence of a middle class, which was rapidly being filled by
Jews, who did not belong to any sector. By limiting their area of
residence, the imperial powers attempted to ensure the growth of a
non-Jewish middle class.
The institution of the Pale became especially important to the
Russian authorities following the
Second Partition of Poland in
1793. While Russia's Jewish population had, until then, been rather
limited, the annexation of Polish-Lithuanian territory increased
the Jewish population substantially. At its heyday, the Pale, which
included the new Polish and Lithuanian territories, had a Jewish
population of over 5 million, which represented the largest
concentration (40 percent) of world Jewry at that time.
Between 1791 and 1917, when the Pale officially ceased to exist,
there were various reconfigurations of its boundaries, so that
certain areas were open or shut to Jewish settlement, such as the
Caucasus.
Similarly, Jews were forbidden to live in
agricultural communities (as well as in Kiev
, Sevastopol
and Yalta
), and forced
to move to small provincial towns, fostering the rise of the
shtetls (from Yiddish שטעטל shtetl "little
village"). Jewish merchants of the 1st
guild, people with higher or special education,
artisans, soldiers, drafted in accordance
with the Recruit Charter of 1810, and their
descendants had the right to live outside the Pale
of Settlement. In some periods, special dispensations were given
for Jews to live in the major imperial cities, but these were
tenuous, and several thousand Jews were expelled to the Pale from
Saint Petersburg and Moscow as late as 1891.
During the
Second World War, the whole area of
the former Pale found itself within the furthest extent of Nazi German control on the Eastern front, resulting in
many mass killing sites by the Einsatzgruppen
in one of the Nazis' largest planned systematic
operations of Jewish extermination, as part of the Holocaust. This led to the virtual
disappearance of Jewish life in the area of its once greatest
concentration.
Life in the Pale
Life in the
shtetls (
Yiddish שטעטלעך
shtetlekh "little
towns") of the Pale of Settlement was hard and stricken by poverty.
A sophisticated system of volunteer Jewish
social welfare organizations developed to
meet the needs of the population, following the time-honored Jewish
tradition of
tzedakah (charity).
Various organizations supplied clothes to poor students, provided
kosher food to Jewish soldiers conscripted
into the
Czar's army, dispensed free medical
treatment for the poor, offered dowries and household gifts to
destitute brides, and arranged for technical education for orphans.
According to historian Martin Gilbert's
Atlas of Jewish
History, no province in the Pale had less than 14% of Jews on
relief; Lithuanian and Ukrainian Jews supported as much as 22% of
their poor populations.
The concentration of Jews in the Pale made them an easy target for
pogroms and massive, anti-Jewish riots.
These, along with the repressive
May Laws,
often devastated whole communities. Though pogroms were staged
throughout the existence of the Pale, particularly devastating
attacks occurred from 1881–1883 and from 1903–1906, targeting
hundreds of communities, killing thousands of Jews, and causing
tens of thousands of
rubles in property
damage.

Right
A positive outgrowth of the concentration of Jews in a
circumscribed area was the development of the modern
yeshiva system. Until the beginning of the 19th
century, each town supported its own advanced students who learned
in the local
synagogue with the rabbinical
head of the community. Each student would eat his meals in a
different home each day, a system known as "
essen teg"
("eating days").
The
Jewish quota existed for education:
after 1886, the percentage of Jewish students could be no more than
10% within the Pale, 5% outside the Pale and 3% in the capitals
(Moscow, St. Petersburg, Kiev). The quotas in the capitals were
slightly increased in 1908 and 1915.
Despite the difficult conditions under which the Jewish population
lived and worked, the courts of
Hasidic
dynasties flourished in the Pale. Thousands of followers of
rebbes such as the Gerrer Rebbe
Yehudah Aryeh Leib Alter (known as
the
Sfas Emes), the Chernobyler Rebbe and the Vizhnitzer
Rebbe flocked to their towns for the
Jewish holidays and followed their rebbes'
minhagim (Jewish practices) in their
own homes.
The tribulations of Jewish life in the Pale of Settlement were
immortalized in the writings of
Yiddish
authors such as humorist
Sholom
Aleichem, whose stories of
Tevye der Milchiger (Tevye
the Milkman) in the fictional shtetl of Anatevka form the basis of
Fiddler on the Roof.
Because of the harsh conditions of day-to-day life in the Pale,
some 2 million Jews emigrated from there between 1881 and 1914,
mainly to the United States (see
History of the Jews in
the United States). However, this exodus did not affect the
stability of the Jewish population of the Pale, which remained at 5
million people due to the high
birthrate.
During World War I, the Pale lost its rigid hold on the Jewish
population when large numbers of Jews fled into the Russian
interior to escape the invading German army. On March 20 (April 2),
1917, the Pale was abolished by the
Provisional Government
decree,
On abolition of confessional and
national restrictions (Об отмене вероисповедных и национальных
ограничений). A large portion of the Pale, together with its Jewish
population, became part of Poland (see
History of the Jews in
Poland). The
Bolshevik
Revolution and the wars of 1918–1920 also resulted in many
pogroms and military excesses—over 1,236 of them in the Ukraine
alone during which, conservatively, 31,000 Jews were killed
(Abramson, Henry).
Territories of the Pale
The Pale of Settlement included the following areas.
1791
The
Ukase of
Catherine
II of December 23, 1791 limited the Pale to:
1794
After the
Second partition of
Poland, the ukase of June 23, 1794, the following areas were
added:
1795
After the
Third Partition of
Poland , the following areas were added:
1805–1835
After 1805 the Pale gradually shrinks, by the exclusion of the
following areas:
Rural areas for 50
verst (kilometers) from the
western border were closed from new settlement.
Final
- Vilna guberniya
- Kovno guberniya
- Grodno guberniya
- Minsk
guberniya
- Mogilev
guberniya
- Vitebsk
guberniya (some parts of it are in Pskov Oblast and Smolensk Oblast
now)
- Kiev
guberniya
- Volhynia guberniya
- Podolia guberniya
- Warsaw
guberniya
(Варшавская губерния (Мазовецкая губерния 1837-1844))
- Lublin
guberniya
(Люблинская губерния)
- Płock
guberniya
(Плоцкая губерния)
- Kalisz
guberniya
(Калишская губерния)
- Piotrkow
guberniya (Петроковская губерния)
- Kielce
guberniya
(Келецкая губерния (Краковская губерния 1837-1844))
- Radom
guberniya
(Радомская губерния)
- Siedlce
guberniya (Седлецкая губерния (Подлясская губерния
1837-1844))
- Augustow
guberniya (Августовская губерния 1837–1867), split
into:
- #
Suwałki
guberniya (Сувалкская губерния)
- #
Łomża
guberniya
(Ломжинская губерния)
Others:
- Chernigov
guberniya (some parts of it are in Bryansk Oblast
now)
- Poltava
guberniya
- Tavrida
guberniya (Crimea
)
- Kherson guberniya
- Bessarabia
guberniya
- Ekaterinoslav
guberniya
In 1882 it was forbidden for Jews to settle in rural areas.
The following cities within the Pale were excluded from it:
See also
References
- Abramson, Henry, "Jewish Representation in the Independent
Ukrainian Governments of 1917-1920", Slavic Review, Vol. 50, No. 3 (Autumn
1991), pp. 542-550.
External links