64 Friday, June 24, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The Wikolayevski' Cantonists' Tale of Kidnapping Horror: How the Russian Jews Resisted the Tyranny of Conscription Oppressive Russian measures that fanned anti-Semitism covered many eras in a history marked by numerous struggles. The means used for survival and to resist the discriminating forces were numerous and they con- tinue to this time, with the Czarist bigotries serving as legacies for present-day anti-Semitism. An era marked by bitter- ness and strife, which also contributed toward divi- siveness in the Jewish communities, is described in a most revealing histori- cal chronicle. In "Tsar Nicholas I and the Jews" (Jewish Publication Society), Columbia Univer- sity Prof. Michael Stanis- lawski summarizes the transformation of the Jewish communities in Russia from 1825 to 1855. It covers the period when Jewish children were snatched from their parents and homes to be enlisted in the Russian army for a 25- year period. They were the victims who became known as the Cantonists, and their plight is part of the story recounted in this im- portant volume. Students of Russian Jewish history also will be- come better informed on the Pale of Settlement — the Cherto Ossiedlosti — in which Jews were hemmed in by Czarism and were re- stricted into the ghetto that was the making of the Czars. Prof. Stanislawski, a native of Montreal who was educated at Harvard University and whose specialty at Columnbia is East European history, gives details of the 70,000 children, the Cantonists, who were the victims of the Nicholas I tyranny, few having returned to their homes and to the Jewish faith. Mary perished, many were converted to the Russian state religion. It was a period of many shocks. Tried and tested by the desire to retain and pro- tect their children, some parents were willing to pay for substitutes to suffer the Cantonist fate. Meanwhile, there arose an element of cruelty, the "khappers," those who captured children to fulfill Czarist demands. _ The unfortunate Can- tonists were the "Nikolayevskiye Soldati," as the reference to them re- mained known in history — "Nicholas' soldiers." The "khappers" were the cruel tool of the Czar, thus de- scribed by Dr. Stanislawski: "Since the proportion of the pious Jews to view such truly assuaged for they laws passed in the interim. underage recruits in the an edict as a punishment were of an entirely novel or- The Pale of Settlement ranks of the conscripts was from God was reinforced by der. Now it was Jew oppres- was finally clearly de- so high, and parents fought the coincidence of the publi- sing Jew. lineated, its borders re- the recruitment of their cation fo the recruitment "Perhaps the most poig- maining in effect until children so strenously, the statute with the beginning nant evocation of the shock World War I, It consisted of kahal leaders had to hire of the penitential Selihot that resulted from this new the provinces of Grodno, special deputies to find and period of the Jewish year. predicament was provided Vilna, Volhynia, Podolia, abduct suitable candidates "Preachers found ancient by the Hebrew writer Buki Minsk and Ekaterinoslav in for the draft. These posses, texts which proved that the ben Yagli (Y.L. Katsenel- their entirety; the Bessara- called khappers by the Jews decree would be revoked if son) in his description of his bian and Belostok oblasts; (from the Yiddish verb the Jews would repent. grandmother's response to the Kiev Province, except Khapn, to catch), soon be- Synagogues were filled day the khappers. At first, the for the city of Kiev; the came permanent fixtures in and night, fasts proclaimed old woman believed that the Kherson Province, except the Pale and earned the and prolonged, contribu- khappers in her town' must for Nikolaev; the Taurida hatred and the scorn of the tions to charity increased, be Philistines or Amale- Province, except for Sebas- masses of Jews.. all in the belief, as the kites; soon she discovered, topol; the provinces of "In the early years of MICHAEL STANISLAWSKI 1 iturgy has it, that (peni- as she told her grandson., Mogilev and Vitebsk, ex- Nicholas' regime, the ence, prayer and charity main duties of these " 'No, my child, to our cept for the rural settle- would capture a child or annul a severe verdict.' khappers were to search adult and hand him over to While the communal lead- great horror, all khappers ments; the Chernigov and out fugitives and to kid- the khappers as a substitute e rs called meetings to dis- were in fact Jews, Jews Poltava provinces, exclud- nap young children from with beards and ing the Crown and Cossack for a son or a brother." uss the crisis, the masses their mothers' arms. The * * * sidelocks. And that is in- Settlements; and and the flocked to the cemeteries to existing Jewish com- work • was lucrative; lead for the intercession of deed our greatest prob- munities of Kurland, Riga Jews Attempted apart from the rewards lem. We Jews are accus- heir deceased parents. to Evade System and Shlok, and all villages paid by the government "One town solemnly tomed to attacks, libels, and rural settlements Some of the "khapper" de- and the salary from the and evil decrees from the watched folk preacher tails are immensely horrify- p kahal, the khappers fre- non-Jews — such have within 50 versts of the west- lace a letter to God in ing. The author of this reve- quently released kid- happened from time im- ern frontiers of the empire. aling book relates this inci- t he hands of a corpse in napped children for ran- memorial and such is our "Within these areas, the he hope that this would dent: som money and replaced Jews were permitted to onvince Him to change lot in exile. "A poor peasant woman N icholas' mind. them with others. move from place to place as asked a Jewish butcher's " 'In the past, there were they desired and to acquire "Specific examples of the "When it became appar- wife for some kosher meat to e Gentiles who held a cross in land and property of any treachery of the khappers feed to Jewish boys who w nt that pentitence alone one hand and a knife in the sort, save estates settled abound in the memoir liter- ould not suffice, the Jews were hiding in her village. ature of the period. The fol- with serfs. did not resign themselves to other, and said: 'Jew, kiss The butcher's wife, assured the cross or die,' and the lowing two accounts are serving the tsar obediently. "There was to be no by her husband that their Jews preferred death to paradigmatic. The methods they used to more forced resettle- own two sons were hiding in apostasy. But now there "In Kamenents, despite town with a Christian evade the draft were similar come Jews, religious Jews, ment, that is, expulsions the efforts of his friends and friend, seized on the oppor- to those employed by the who capture children and from the villages; this schoolmates, the khappers Russian peasants. They hid tunity of finding replace- send them off to apostasy. most important provision caught Yosl, the eight- ments for her sons and in forests, amputated their Such a punishment was not was enacted in a separate year-old son of a rich fingers or toes, or escaped even listed in the Bible's list law preceding the full coachman who had died. asked the naive peasant across the frontiers. of the most horrible curses. statute. Temporary Yosl's mother folloWed him where the two boys were "The governor of Vol- hiding. She then hurried to Jews spill the blood of their sojourns outside the Pale to Brest-Litovsk, but she hynia reported that such inform the local brothers, and God is silent, were permitted for the khappers of was sent back to Kamenets, evasions were so wide- acquisition of inheri- the rabbis are silent . . where she died a few days - her discovery. spread among the Jews of tance, the securing of "When the khappers re- his jurisdiction that it was later. "This shock was soon rights at judicial venues, "A year passed, and Yosl turned with the boys, the quite common not to find translated into anger and study at academic in- returned to Kamenets with butcher's wife was as- even one eligible recruit in bitterness, which could not stitutions, and some a battalion of soldiers, but tonished to see that these many Jewish communities be vented through the commercial affairs. he was now an unresponsive were her own two sons." during the conscription sea- time-honored modes of in- What was the reaction son. "First-guild merchants idiot, doomed to die within a ternalized protest. As a re- were permitted to travel to to this cruel dictate of short time. "When the Jews could not sult, an entirely unprece- both capitals and to sea- "The Hebrew writer 1827? The Kahal, the escape the draft by such dented breaking of the ports and to reside in Mos- community organization Y.L. Levin was walking means, they found refuge in ranks occurred in Jewish cow for periods of up to six along the streets of Minsk already in the throes of their traditional channels of society; numerous riots and months at a time — a sub- , when he saw six men collapes resulting from resistance to external attacks against the khap- stantial extension from the emerge from a coach and the state of horror, is thus threat, an adamant consoli- pers and their kahal em- one-month period prev- enter a Jewish house. A recorded: dation and intensification of ployers erupted throughout iously allowed. few moments later the "Before such acts of desp- their religious armor. Con- the Pale, cases of informing "For the first time, men came out, dragging a eration became common, sequently, the number of to the government mounted Jewish merchants were of- child whom they had the Russian Jews reacted to students in the traditional both in frequency and in ficially permitted to travel gagged. The child's the conscription policy Jewish schools, the scope, and several groups of to both capitals and to sea- mother soon followed, within their traditional hadarim and yeshivot, rose Jews even took the radical ports and to reside in Mos- screaming and sobbing, world view. Their initial re- significantly during step of applying for legal cow for periods of up to six but the khappers threw sponse to the 1827 decree, Nicholas' rule. separation from the rest of months at a time — a sub- her to the ground and therefore, was a mixture of "Many parents who prev- the Jewish community. stantial extension from the rode off with the child. gloom, fear and mystical iously could not afford to "The institution of the speculation. 'All artisans' send their children to school "These actions seriously one-month period prev khappers flourished, how- shops were abandoned,' re- for long periods of time now debilitated the autonomous iously allowed (no. 51). ever, after the introduction ported the Yiddish writer realized that they could not communal structure, whose "For the first time, of a law in July 1853 which A.M. Dik in Vilna, 'no afford not to keep them in powers were steadily being Jewish merchants were of- allowed the Jewish commu- matches were made, and school, fearing that they diminished by the govern- ficially permitted to travel nity to present any Jew many were broken off. would be conscripted with- ment." to the important commer- found traveling without a Many Jews prepared to go to out a sufficient knowledge cial fairs outside the Pale, at "Tsar Nicholas I and Nizhnii-Novgorod, Irtbits, passport as a substitute for Palestine, others rushed to of Judaism to resist conver- the Jews" has the added Koren, Kharkov and a recruit required from the join the merchant guilds. A sion and calculating that value of recording Sumsk." community. Groups of cripple was considered a the kahal leaders were re- numerous other major khappers would roam saved man, an only son a luctant to draft good Tal- Dr. Stanislawski's Jewish experiences in through the streets abduct- joy, a hunchback an aristo- mud students." commendably-researched Russia. It provides an ac- ing anyone who passed by. crat.' * * * count of the establish- study of a tragic Russian Often, an ordinary Jew "The natural tendency of Jews Turned ment of the Pale of Set- Jewish experience, together Against Each Other tlement and a brief por- with additional cumulative tion of that descriptive material, is among the most It was a state of horror informative works on the analysis explains: and its effects were disastr- subject. It enriches the ous. The "state of mind" of "The resulting Statute on Jewish Publication many Jews is indicated in the Jews, published on Society's creative Jewish this portrayal in the April 13, 1835, did contain historical library. It is a deeply-moving Stanis- some important innova- work of vital importance as lawski volume: tions, along with a restate- a guide to understanding all "The antagonisms that ment of most of the pro- of the elements in the Rus- resulted from the conscrip- visions of Alexander's 1804 sian anti-Semitism. tion system were never statute collated with the —P.S.