“In fact, insistence on the anti-Semitism of Ukrainians was an important point on the agenda of Moscow propaganda, which then disappeared precisely because it was not successful. However, the slogan of denazification remains and continues to operate.”
“Russian culture, one might even say, for the most part the Russian people, which was formed, of course, and Russian governments from the era of Tsarism to Soviet power and to the present day in a very consistent manner simply cannot accept the fact that Ukrainians are not part of the “Russian world”
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According to Pavlo-Robert Magochia, head of the Department of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Toronto, Russian propaganda highlights rare cases of anti-Semitism in Ukraine to justify the so-called “denazification of the country”.
Ukrainian Jewish Encounter (UJE) publishes (ukr) this material.
“A Discussion of Two Important Books from the University of Toronto” was the title of the event, which took place at the F. Guarini Institute of Public Affairs at John Cabot University. After an introduction by the director of the Institute, historian Federigo Argentieri, one of the most authoritative researchers of the history of Eastern Europe and the leading Italian specialist on the revolution in Hungary, the audience was addressed by Pavlo-Robert Magochy, professor of history and political science and head of the Department of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Toronto.
Professor Magocy, a New Jersey native of Hungarian and Rusyn descent, is the honorary president of the World Congress of Rusyns, a small but distinct ethnic group related to the Ukrainians. Professor Magocy is also an expert on nationality in general, and has edited an important collection of essays on the indigenous peoples of Canada. However, he is primarily a student of Ukrainian history. As a Ukrainian-American himself, he is of two ethnic minorities, his works are a powerful response to the narrative of Ukraine as an ultra-nationalist country that oppresses non-Ukrainians on its territory.
One of the books presented at the event was “Jews and Ukrainians. A Millennium of Coexistence” (2016). Professor Magochy co-authored it with Yohanan Petrovsky-Stern, an American Jewish studies specialist born in Kyiv. In their book, the authors try to explain that in fact, there were significantly more peaceful periods of coexistence between Ukrainians and Jews than periods of conflict.
Another book presented is – “Babi Yar: History and Memory” (2023) – Professor Magochii wrote together with Vladislav Hrynevych, a senior research fellow at the Institute of Political and Ethnonational Studies at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. This work tells of a place that during the German occupation became the scene of a terrible extermination of people – Jews, but also Roma, prisoners of war, communists and Ukrainian nationalists. Professor Magochii also recently wrote a short brochure explaining Ukrainian identity – “Ukraina redux: statehood and national identity”.
One of the two books presented offers panoramic view and thematic presentation of two very important peoples living on the territory of modern Ukraine – Ukrainians and Jews.
The book is structured thematically and looks at various aspects of the interaction between the two peoples over the last millennium: settlement patterns, economic structure, music, theatre, art, sculpture, architecture, history. The authors also show that the periods of conflict that were then particularly emphasized were in fact very limited in comparison to the overall period, which includes many more centuries of common everyday life, interaction and coexistence. In modern Ukraine there are traces of Jewish settlements that date back to the period of Roman and Byzantine rule in Crimea two thousand years ago.In addition, there were separate Jewish colonies, which were usually engaged in trade.
In the era before Kievan Rus, there was the Khazar Khaganate. Some of the rulers of this unique entity adopted Judaism in the 9th century, and it was considered the first Jewish state, although it was not located exclusively in Ukraine, but rather in the lower Volga region. However, a truly significant Jewish presence formed in the 15th and 16th centuries and reached its peak in the first half of the 17th century. Therefore, let us leave aside antiquity and turn only to the medieval period of Kievan Rus – this is 1000 years. If we narrow the review even further and begin the count from the moment of consolidation of the Jewish settlement, then this is 450 years. So withHow many of these 450-1000 years were marked by violence between Jews and Ukrainians? No more than 18-20.
First of all, we are talking about about the uprising of Bohdan Khmelnytsky 1648, for which Jewish chronicles record an extremely large number of Jews killed, namely 300 thousand. Israeli scientists and Jews have reduced this number to no more than 18 thousand.The uprising lasted three years. The next period of extermination of Jews began at the end of the second half of the 18th century during the Haidamakchina, which lasted two years.
If we go to the 19th century, the first pogrom on Ukrainian territory occurred in 1880. And here we are talking primarily about the seizure of property, beatings, etc., while there were relatively few human casualties. Such actions culminated in the pogrom of 1906 in Chisinau, a city that is not even technically in Ukraine, since it is the capital of Moldova. However, it is part of our world, so we add another two years. The first larger pogroms actually occurred after the First World War in 1918 and 1919, mainly in Ukraine. Again, this is a period of two years, and then nothing until the Holocaust. Again, if you add it all up, you get 18-20 years of violence over a period of 450-1000 years.
But what about all the other time periods? For at least four centuries, Jews and Ukrainians lived together, traded together, and occasionally even married each other. They certainly shared a common culture. The history of relations between Jews and Ukrainians in Ukraine is largely a history of coexistence, with brief, fortunately, though serious, periods of terrible violence..
