
The Community of Lenin; Memorial Book (Lenin, Belarus)
Moshe TamariThe main occupation of the Jewish population was crafts: there were cobblers, tailors, carpenters, ironsmiths and later there were some shopkeepers, mostly grocers. Forest and lumber-related occupations also played a key role in the economy. But Lenin Jews - with very few exceptions - lived a difficult life, hemmed in by a lack of industry in the region and restrictions on livelihoods and landownership, particular in the times of the Russian Czar.
The town was situated in a region of forests and marshes. The area was prone to flooding when rainy autumns and melting winter snows caused the Pripet River to flood, cutting off connections to other towns. The book describes what this setting meant in the town center which was located in an area so muddy that all of the sand wagons that stumbled in it were not able to manage. Even during the summer, when the land had dried up around it, the mud reached to the knees. On the main street, a walkway made of thick wooden planks was constructed leading from one end of the street to the other, and ditches were dug on both sides.
The sanitary situation was less than ideal. Houses, clustered in a small space surrounded by water and swamps, did not have the necessary sanitary facilities Pigs and goats wandered through the street, going wherever they wanted to. Epidemics were common.
Following World War I, Lenin became part of the reborn Poland and its Jews endured lawlessness and violence, often at the hands of gangs comprised of liberated Polish soldiers. In 1939, the Soviets annexed eastern Poland, including Lenin, but two years later, the Nazis invaded and occupied the town. Most of the Jewish population was exterminated in 1942.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Jewishgen.Inc
Published: 09/25/2025
ISBN: 9781962054287
Pages: 432
Weight: 2.82lbs
Size: 11.00h x 8.50w x 0.94d
