The Jewish Community of Harbin
Harbin
哈尔滨
Province and city in north east Manchuria, China.
Early History
The city of Harbin is the capital of Heilung Kiang province in northern Manchuria, northeast China. In the 19th century, Harbin was not a city, but only the general reference to a cluster of small villages on the banks of the Songhua River. Harbin’s development began with the start of the Russian invasion of Manchuria towards the end the 19th century. The Russo-Manchurian treaty of 1897, granted Russia the concession to build the Chinese Eastern railway and Harbin then became its administrative center with a 50 km. wide zone along the railway. The chief engineer of the building board of the Chinese Eastern railway was Alexander Yugovich. Born into a Jewish family that converted to Orthodox Christianity, he was a civil engineer and specialist in constructing of railways in deserts and highlands. The Chinese Eastern railway was to cross Manchuria, Harbin, Pogranichny, and Changchun with Port Arthur in Korea as its final destination. The construction of the line began in August 1897
and opened for traffic in November 1903. In the same year, several Russian Jewish families moved to Harbin. They had the approval of the Czarist government that was interested in developing the area as rapidly as possible. The Jews who settled in Harbin were granted better status than were the Jews in Russia.
The Jews, along with other minority groups, such as Karaites, were granted plots of land on the outskirts of the town. They were not allowed to work directly on the railway. With the development of the area, however, they were able to establish businesses as shopkeepers and contractors.
Early 20th Century
By 1903, a self-administrated community of about 500 Jews existed in Harbin. After the Russo-Japanese war of 1905, many demobilized Jewish soldiers settled in Harbin. They were followed by refugees from the 1905-07 pogroms in southern-western Russian guberniyas (regions). By 1908, there were about 8,000 Jews in the city. The growing Jewish population decided to build a new synagogue, which was called the "Main Synagogue”. It was built on Artilleriiskaya street, in the Pristan' district (now Tongjiang street, Daoli district). Its foundation was laid on May 3, 1907 and the building completed in January 1909. The first Jewish cemetery in China was opened in Harbin in 1903, which later had more than 2,000 tombs. Several institutions came into being within the community, including clubs, a home for the aged, and a hospital, which provided care for Jews as well as the general population. A heder (religious elementary school) was established in Harbin in 1907 and a Jewish secondary school
(Evreiskaya Gimnaziya) in 1909, which had over 100 pupils by 1910. Seventy percent of the Jewish pupils, however, attended non-Jewish schools since there were not enough classes for in the Jewish schools in Harbin.
In1913 the chief rabbi of the Jewish community of Harbin was Alexander Kisilev (1866- 1949) – author of several works on halakha and books (Natsionalizm i evreistvo – "Nationalism and Judaism") which were published in Russian in 1941. Family dynasties, such as the Bonner, Kabalkin, Krol, Mendelevich, Samsonovich and Skidelsky families, played an important role in development of the local industries, especially wood and coal industries. They were also instrumental in expanding trade relations with the Russian empire as well as European countries, Japan and the United States.
In November 1914, following the outbreak of the World War I, the Jewish community of Harbin joined EKOPO (Jewish Committee for the Help of War Victims). This voluntary organization was active during the war years and disbanded in 1920 under the demand of the Bolsheviks. For example in February 1914, Dr. Abraham Kaufman, head of the Harbin branch of EKOPO, received a telegram from the Committee of Assistance to Pogrom Victims from the city of Samara on the Volga River with a plea for assistance. During their operation, EKOPO helped more than 200,000 war refugees. The Committee organized distribution of food among refugees, established dormitories, hospitals, professional courses and more to help the people.
After World War I
The Jewish community was sharply increased by the influx of Jewish refugees during World War I, the Russian revolution (1917), and Russian Civil war. It reached its peak, 10,000 – 15,000, in the early 1930's, but declined to about 5,000 in 1939. Several Jewish organizations were established in Harbin. Among these was a Jewish secondary school (1919-1924), Talmud Torah (later Jewish national school 1920-1950), a hospital Mishmeret Holim (1920-1934), a hostel for aged people Moshav Zkenim (1920-1943), a school for professional education for women (1922 – 1940), a Jewish library as well as the "New Synagogue".
A Jewish National bank was created in 1923 following the efforts of A.M Pataka, D.N. Ganansky, Dr. A Kaufman, M Y. Elkin, M.I Trotsky, Dr. S.M.Vechter, G. B. Drisin, M.I Schister, and Y. Beiner that initiated this project already in 1919. The bank's prime customers were Jewish businesses in need of cheap credit, but later it also catered to the needs of the wider business community. The bank ceased operation in 1950.
The city's first branch of modern hotels, banks, shops, cafes, newspapers, and publishing houses were initiated by members of the Jewish community and helped boost the city's business. Practically all the enterprises in Harbin at that time, whether bakeries or coalmines or mills, were closely connected with Jewish economic activity. In 1926 there were businesses owned by Jews. They comprised 28 industries in several commercial categories.
Harbin also was a well-known cultural center. During the 1920's and 1930's, many famous Jewish actors came to Harbin to give performances. These helped promote the spread of western music in China where the Jewish influence on Harbin music education can be seen today.
Between 1918 and 1930, about 20 Jewish newspapers and periodicals were also established. All were in Russian except the Yiddish Der Vayter Mizrekh ("The Far East"), which was published three times a week. It had a circulation of about 300 copies in 1921-22. The Russian-language weekly Yevreiskaya Zhisn’ (“Jewish Life”, which until 1926 was called Sibir-Palestina) appeared from 1929 to 1940 with a circulation throughout Manchuria and north China. An English supplement was added to coincide with the establishment of the Jewish National Council in the Far East.
The Zionist Movement
The Zionist movement, led by Abraham Kaufman, and several youth clubs played a major part in the life of the community. Until 1921, Zionists of Harbin were affiliated with the Russian and Siberian Zionist organization and participated in their conferences. To further the activities of the Zionist movement a branch of the Maccabi Jewish youth movement was established in 1921 and it functioned until 1925. The Harbin Jewish Women's Association linked to WIZO was established in Harbin in 1922 and the first meeting of WIZO was held the same year. From 1921 to 1925, several groups of youths from HaShomer HaTzair Zionist movement emigrated to the Land of Israel. The Harbin branch of the HaShomer HaTzair was set up in 1927, and in 1929, the Zionist youth movement Betar was founded, mainly by a large group of former members of the HaShomer HaTzair movement.
The introduction of the New Economic Policy (NEP) in the Soviet Union, in 1925, stimulated another wave of Jewish emigration, some crossing the borders illegally while others received assistance from the Jewish community in order to pay the large amounts of money in foreign currency required by the Soviet government for issuing visas.
When Zionism was outlawed in the Soviet Union, Harbin became an island of Russian- language Zionism. In the years from 1924 to 1931, the Soviet regime, largely preoccupied with internal problems, exercised limited influence on Manchurian territory. In 1931, the Japanese army occupied Harbin and the Manchurian territory.
The first of three Zionist conferences of the Jewish communities of the Far East was held in Harbin in December 1937. During this first conference, because of ideological differences, a revisionist Zionist wing moved to lead an independent political activity. The revisionists-Zionists held three more conferences, which were attended by Japanese and Manchurian authorities. The Japanese tried to use Harbin and Shanghai Jewish communities to entice western investment into their "co-prosperity sphere”. At the second conference, the possibility of a Jewish flag was proposed, green, and white with a Star of David or blue-white flag of the Zionist Revisionist party. The Japanese maintained relations with the Jewish communities of Harbin and Shanghai, hoping, through them, to win investment and favorable influence from western Jews (the so-called "Fugu plan"). The second conference was held in 1938 and the third in 1939. At the last conference, discussions were held of the possible
integration of German and Austrian Jews who sought refuge in China. These conferences were important in leading to the consolidation of the Jewish communities of China. The Japanese authorities did not allow the fourth conference that was supposed to be held in 1940.
Under the Russian rule, the Jews of Harbin enjoyed the same rights as all other foreigners, and were left alone to develop in their own way. However, in 1928, when the Chinese Eastern Railway was handed over to Chinese, an economic crisis broke out and many Jews left Harbin. Some went to the Soviet Union, others to Shanghai, Tien-Tsin and other cities in China. This situation changed drastically for the worse with the Japanese occupation of Manchuria (1931-45) and the establishment of a puppet regime, under which Jews were subjected to terror and extortion.
World War II
The attitude of the authorities towards the Jews became even more oppressive in the World War II (1941-1945) when the Japanese, as Axis partners, and under the influence of Russian right-wing יmigrיs, adopted an anti-Semitic policy. During Japanese rule, Jewish national life was kept alive by the Zionist youth movement, particularly Betar and Maccabi who organized Jewish cultural activities. Betar, which was the strongest Zionist youth organization, published a Russian- language magazine Ha-Degel ("The Flag"). Alexander Y. Gurvich as editor headed it until his departure from Harbin in 1941, when the position was taken by Shmuel A. Klein, who edited the magazine for a year until the Japanese closed it in 1942. In 1943, under the pressure of the German Embassy in Tokyo the Japanese authorities in Harbin ordered the closing of the ''Jewish Life'' magazine.
Following World War II
Four synagogues functioned in Harbin until 1950. Many Jews left Manchuria before the outbreak of World War II, emigrating to the U.S., Australia, Brazil, and other countries. During 1945-47, Harbin was under Soviet occupation. Jewish community leaders were then arrested and sent to the Soviet interior. Rabbi Alexander Kiselev, the Chief Rabbi of Harbin and the Jewish Communities in the Far East passed away in Harbin in 1949. The same year an illegal Jewish Committee was formed in Harbin. It was headed by Shlomo Spivak, representing the Zionist Movement, Teddy Kaufman, and Pavel Shmushkovich representing Maccabi, Yacov Tandlet, Boris Mirkin, and Vera Klein representing Betar.
However, Most Jews of Harbin emigrated to the West in the years after World War II. During 1951-1953, about 3,500 of the former “Chinese” Jews, most of them from Harbin, settled in Israel where they established a society of Chinese Jews. The cemetery was moved from its old location to Huang Shan during 1968-1962, the year that marked the end of the Jewish community of Harbin. The last Jew in Harbin left in 1985. Old Jewish schools, streets, and houses are kept intact or have been renovated. Among these old buildings are two synagogues, a rabbinical school, and the biggest Jewish cemetery in the Far East, in which there are about 700 gravestones with Hebrew inscriptions.
One of the prominent reminders of the Harbin Jewish community is the architecture of the old districts of Harbin with the former Jewish quarter serving as a major tourist attraction. Most of the elegant old Western-styled buildings, dating to the early 1900's, which were built by the Jews, have been well preserved. They are scattered throughout the entire city, especially in the neighborhood of Pristan’, an area that used to be the center of the religious, political, economic and cultural activities of Jews of Harbin.
In the early 2000's, Jews who represent Israeli and other international companies are renewing their business interests in Harbin and other principal Chinese cities. A Jewish Research center was opened in Harbin in April 2000. It is affiliated with the Heilongjiang Academy of Social Sciences. The Center's director, Li Shuxiao, has visited Israel twice. One of the Center's major projects is to reconstruct the history of one of the largest Jewish communities in the Far East that was centered in Harbin.
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Title page of special Issue of the Journal "Jewish Life", Harbin, China 1937
(Photos)in Harbin, China, December 1937.
(The Oster Visual Documentation Center, Beit Hatfutsot, Dr. Kaufman Collection,
courtesy of the Kaufman Family, Tel Aviv)
Wedding ceremony in the New Synagogue of Harbin, Manchuria, China 1930's
(Photos)"Beit Hamidrash", Harbin, Manchuria, China 1930's.
Center on platform: Rabbi Aaron Moses Kiseleff,
Chief Rabbi of Harbin. On his left the cantor Jacob Krimachansky.
(The Oster Visual Documentation Center, Beit Hatfutsot,
courtesy of Mark Leef, Los Angeles)
Members of Betar Headquarters in Harbin, China, 1930
(Photos)Members of Betar headquarters in Harbin, China, 1930. Right to left: Mordechai Olmert, Abraham Ipland, Rivka Levin, Leib Piastunovitch, Nissan Lifschitz, Paul Pinsky, Zvi Mordohovitch, Liola Kotovitch.
Beit Hatfutsot Photo Archive, courtesy of Rivka Nadel, Jerusalem
Teachers and Pupils of the Skidelsky Talmud Torah, Harbin, c.1920
(Photos)in Harbin, China, early 1920's.
The curriculum included both Jewish and general subjects.
(The Oster Visual Documentation Center, Beit Hatfutsot,
courtesy of Gerstein Family, Israel)
Abraham Kaufman
(Personality)Abraham Kaufman (1885-1971), a native of Mglin, a tiny Jewish village near Chernihiv, Ukraine (then Chernigov, Russian Empire). On his mother’s side, he was a great grandson of Zalman Shneerson, the founder of the Chabad movement. In 1903, he graduated from gymnasium in Perm, Russia, where he was drawn into Zionist activity. He began his studies of medicine in 1904 at the University of Bern, Switzerland. In 1908, he decided to return to Russia, then settled in Harbin in 1912 and became involved in community life and international Zionist activity.
Kaufman was elected as vice-chairman of the National Jewish Council of Siberia and Ural. Between 1919-1931 and 1933-1945 he was a chairman of the Jewish community of Harbin, chairman of the Jewish National Fund and Keren Hayasod; board member of the World Zionist Organization and the Jewish Agency and chairman of the Jewish Zionist organization of China. Kaufman inspired the activity of practically every cultural and community organization of Harbin Jews. During 1921-1943, he was a chief editor of the Evreiskaya Zhizn ("Jewish Life") – a weekly magazine in Russian. He served as medical director of the Jewish hospital of Harbin. In 1937, he was chairman of the National Council of the Jews of Eastern Asia (Far East). In this position, Kaufman succeeded in persuading the Japanese occupational forces to abolish the decision of their German allies to concentrate the Jewish population into special ghettoes. He was arrested in 1945 by Soviet Red army accused of collaboration with alien forces and spent eleven years in a labor camp.
In 1956, he moved to Karaganda (now a city in Kazakhstan) and in 1961 immigrated to Israel where he died in Tel Aviv in 1971.
Michael (Misha) Kogan
(Personality)Michael (Misha) Kogan (1917-1984), businessman and industrialist, born in Odessa, Ukraine (then part of the Russian Empire). His family fled the anti-Jewish persecutions and pogroms of the 1920s and settled in Harbin, China. Kogan attended "The First Commercial School" in Harbin
in 1937, and was an active member of the local branch of Betar Zionist youth movement. He then continued his studies at the UMCA college in Harbin and in 1938 went to Japan, where graduated from the prestigious Waseda University in Tokyo, having acquired an excellent command of the Japanese language and culture.
In 1944 Kogan returned to China settling in Tianjin, where he opened his first company that dealt in natural hair wigs and floor coverings. After the establishment of the Communist regime in China, he returned to Tokyo in 1950. In 1953 he founded Taito Trading Company, later known as Taito Corporation, a company that began by importing and distributing vending machines and then jukeboxes before turning into a video game company and a developer of video game software and arcade hardware. He spent long periods of time in Israel and in Hong Kong.
During WW2, Kogan was in touch with a number of personalities in Japan, most notably with Yasue Norihiro, a colonel with the Japanese Army's intelligence services and one of the initiators of the "Fugu Plan" of re-settling European Jews in the Japanese-occupied Manchuria. Kogan's archives, known as "Kogan's Papers", contain valuable materials from Japanese sources that relate to the development of the relationship between the Jews and
the Japanese during WW2.
Michael Kogan passed away while on a visit to Los Angeles in 1984.
His widow Asya Kogan nee Kachanovsky (1924-2013) was a major donor to Shamir Medical Center (Assaf Harofeh) in Israel.