News

The State monopoly of trade has crowded out Jewish traders and forced them to scratch and sow the ground. During 1927 not less than 8,000 Russian retailers became farmers, according to Soviet ...
"There's no question that the Jews there feel much more Jewish than anywhere else in Russia, and not because ... Most were "tailors, hat-makers, shoemakers, barbers, hairdressers," Toytman said.
My great-grandfather, a Russian-Jewish immigrant turned first-time farmer on the Dakota plains, is buried there, along with other members of the largest Jewish farming community ever in the ...
Jewish collective farmers in the Samarkand district of Uzbekistan, in Soviet Asia, who have contributed 500,000 roubles to purchase tanks and bombers for the Russian Army, were today in receipt of ...
Many Jewish peasants in Soviet Russia have lost their right to participate in the Soviet elections as a result of the new electoral law. It is learned that the local electoral committees are ...