In southern Russia, the first outbreak of pogroms
in the spring of 1881 spread quickly to Chernigov province. The
communities of Konotop and Nezhin were the most severely effected.
Pogrom is a Russian word designating an attack, accompanied by destruction,
the looting of property, murder, and rape, perpetrated by one section
of the population against another. The attacks were carried out
in Russia, mainly by the Christian population against the Jews between
1881 and 1921, while the civil and military authorities remained
neutral and occasionally provided their cover, and even open support.
The second wave of pogroms took place from 1903 to 1906. The most
serious pogroms took place in Odessa and Kishinev. Altogether, pogroms
were carried out in 64 towns, and several were in Chernigov.
After the start of the pogroms, the exodus of Jews began from the
Pale of Settlement to America, Britain, Europe, South America and
Palestine. There were many reasons for this mass exodus of the Jewish
population, but the official sanction of pogroms was the major cause.
Another reason that many young Jewish men departed from Russia was
mandatory military service. Jewish boys as young as eight or nine
were forced into military service for as long as twenty-five years.
To evade the draft, some boys would damage their own bodies. They
would puncture their eardrums, give themselves a hernia, or chop
off the finger used for firing a gun
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