Pale of Settlement, Jewish

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Pale of Settlement, Jewish


Created by imperial decree, the Jewish Pale of Settlement was that part of the Russian Empire within which Russia's Jewish population was required to live and work for more than 130 years between the late 18th and early 20th century. Intended initially to forestall commerce between Jews and the general population of Russia, the restrictions imposed by the Pale fostered the development of a distinctive religious and ethnic culture in an area covering roughly 386,000 square miles (1 million square kilometers) between the Baltic and Black seas.

The word pale, as used in this sense, comes from the Latin palus, or stake, such as might be used to indicate a boundary. A pale is thus a district separated from the surrounding country. It may be defined by physical boundaries, or it may be distinguished by a different administrative or legal system. The Jewish Pale of Settlement was both a defined area within the Russian Empire and a legal entity regulated by laws that did not apply to the Russian Empire as a whole.

In 1772 Poland underwent the first of three successive partitions, which resulted in the distribution of large parcels of its territory among the neighboring countries of Austria, Prussia, and Russia (see Poland). Its absorption of the largest of these parcels forced Russia to accept within its borders a sizable population of Jews, who in the past had frequently been the target of official intolerance there. Fearing economic competition from Jewish commercial enterprises, the Russian government sought a way to prevent the Jews from integrating with the general Russian population.

During this same period, Russia also annexed territories acquired from Turkey that ranged southward to the shores of the Black Sea. Settlers were needed to quickly populate these new lands and establish commercial control of the strategic Black Sea region.

The solution to both problems facing the Russian government was what came to be called the Pale of Settlement—in Russian, Cherta Osedlosti. In three decrees, issued in 1783, 1791, and 1794, Catherine the Great restricted the commercial rights of Jews to the areas newly annexed from Poland and Turkey. Over time, as Jewish settlement elsewhere in Russia was subject to increasing proscription, these areas became known collectively as the Pale of Settlement. By the end of the 18th century the Pale also encompassed parts of Lithuania, Byelorussia (now Belarus), and most of Ukraine.

In the early 19th century, Russia steadily enlarged its jurisdiction, and the Pale expanded to include much of the northern Caucasus, as well as Moldavia (now Moldova) and the Crimea. With the annexation of more Polish territory in 1815, 10 Polish provinces known as the Vistula region were unofficially incorporated into the Pale.

Ascending to the throne in 1855, Czar Alexander II introduced a number of exceptions to the repressive laws regulating life in the Jewish Pale. Jews in certain professions and with particular educational backgrounds were allowed to settle outside the boundaries of the Pale. This relaxation of the laws initially affected only some merchants but was gradually extended to persons with higher levels of education; doctors, nurses, midwives, and others in the medical profession; some artisans and craftspeople, such as tailors and shoemakers; and those who had completed their military service.

As the nation reacted to the assassination of Alexander II in 1881, the pendulum swung back toward greater restriction of the Jews. The new czar, Alexander III, issued a series of edicts known as the Temporary Laws (also called the May Laws), which prohibited new Jewish settlements outside the Pale; permitted Christians living within the Pale to expel Jews from the areas in which they lived; and prevented Jews already living outside the Pale from moving to other areas outside the Pale. Occasionally, new areas were proscribed, such as the city and province of Moscow. Between 1891 and 1892 thousands of Jews were expelled from Moscow and forced to return to the Pale.

Unfounded suspicions of Jewish involvement in the assassination of Alexander II led to a wave of pogroms, outbreaks of mob violence directed specifically against the Russian Jewish population, in 1881 and 1884. These pogroms, along with the increasing official repression of the Jewish population, precipitated a mass emigration of Jews, most of whom settled in Western Europe and the United States. Within the next 40 years, two more waves of violence would arise within the empire, leading to continued high levels of emigration from the Pale and spurring the growth of Jewish nationalist movements. (See also pogrom.)

The 1897 Russian census indicated that most of the Jewish population in the empire remained confined to the Pale. Almost 5,000,000 Jews lived within its boundaries, while roughly 200,000 lived elsewhere in European Russia. The majority of Jews lived in towns and townlets, though the largest communities were in the cities of Warsaw, Lódz, Vilna (now Vilnius), and Kishinev (now Chisinau). During the early 20th century, the government eased the restrictive laws somewhat, granting Jews slightly more freedom and permitting them to live in the small towns that developed from rural villages. The Pale effectively ceased to exist during World War I, when Jews in great numbers fled to the Russian interior to escape invading German forces. Following the Revolution of 1917, the provisional government abolished the Pale, along with other anti-Jewish restrictions. (See also Russia.)

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