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Kidnapping Ukraine’s children echoes darkest days of the tsars

Putin’s latest evil tactic is all too reminiscent of Jews snatched from their families in Russia’s forced conscription in the 19th century

August 4, 2022 11:46
GettyImages-1383114181
BERLIN, GERMANY - MARCH 08: Boy waits with his mom as people fleeing war-torn Ukraine arrive from Poland at Hauptbahnhof main railway station on March 08, 2022 in Berlin, Germany. Over one million people, mainly Ukrainian women and children as well as foreigners living or working in Ukraine, have fled Ukraine as the current Russian military invasion continues to inflict growing casualties on the civilian population. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)
4 min read

Among crimes committed by Russia in its war on Ukraine is deportation of children, a macabre turn backward two centuries to a Tsarist policy with especially painful historic memories for Jews. For during the reign of Tsar Nicholas I (1825-1855) tens of thousands of Jewish children were forcibly separated from their families, recruited as conscripts (“cantonists”) in the Russian army, and subjected to forced Russification.

Jews came under Russian rule in the partitions of Poland in the late-18th century, and were targeted with dozens of discriminatory laws until the 1917 revolution, with often conflicting motives: to Russify and assimilate them or suppress their assimilation; to oppress or enlighten them; to exploit them economically or make them economically weak; to convert them to Christianity; or to drive them to leave Russia.

Tsarist anti-Jewish laws, including restrictions on residence, mobility and choice of profession, were rarely eased and never removed. The main handicap was the continued existence of the Pale of Settlement on the western frontier of the Russian empire, where the Jews were confined, increasingly impoverished and over-crowded, until the 1917 revolution.

In common with antisemitic laws generally, the conscription laws caused widespread suffering and humiliation. Jewish communities had to fill a quota between the ages of 12 and 25 for 25 years of military service starting from age 18.

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Russia