A Belorussian Border Shtetl In The 1920s And 1930s

Smilovitsky, Leonid. “A Belorussian Border Shtetl in the 1920s and 1930s: The Case of Turov.” Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe Summer, 1 (50) 2003: Pages 109-137.

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Notes

These notes relate to the border town of Turov, unless otherwise.

History

Commerce

Home Economics

Jewish occupations were mostly in trade, crafts, merchants. Few were farmers, but most families raised domesticated animals for food and clothing. Called “supplementary economies”.

In 1926, Belorussian farmers refused to allow Jews to pasture their animals, demanding Jews pay 10-15 rubles per cow per summer. Jews' livestock sent to the woods across the Pripyat river to be fed.

Jewish Occupations

Jewish occupations in the 1920s

Occupations in the 1930s

Occupations for Jews (throughout country) divided in 1930s into:

Population