Navigation
  • Home
  • Recent
  • Most Active
  • Popular
  • Credits
  • RSS
  •  
      Help
  • How to Edit
  • Help



  • [Edit]


    OZET () was public Society for Settling Toiling Jews on the Land in the Soviet Union in the period from 1925 to 1938. Some English sources use the word "Working" instead of "Toiling".


        OZET
            Background
            Tasks and leadership
            Geography and membership
            Propaganda and funding
                OZET-lottery
            Birobidzhan project
            Demise
            Further reading

    top

    Background

    The principal sources of livelihood of the Jews in the Russian Empire were trade and small crafts. After the October Revolution, the Russian Civil War and instability and devastation that followed, these traditional occupations withered. Dictatorship of proletariat, War Communism and command economy were accompanied by persecution of those deemed class enemies or exploiters. As a result, in the early 1920s more than a third of the Jewish population of the USSR were officially counted as lishenets. Significant part of the population of schtetls in former Pale of Settlement moved to big cities.

    top

    Tasks and leadership

    In order to resolve socio-economic difficulties of the Russian Jews and promote agricultural labor among them, on January 17, 1925 the CPSU formally created a government committee, the Komzet, and a complementary public society, the OZET.

    While the land for new kolkhozes was contributed and distributed by the Soviet government via the Komzet, the job of the OZET was assisting in moving settlers to a new location, housebuilding, irrigation, training, providing them with cattle and agricultural tools,
    education, medical and cultural service. The funds were to be provided by private donations, charities and lotteries.

    The OZET was headed by respected Old Bolsheviks, not all of them Jewish: Yuri Larin, later Semyon Dimanshtein, and its board included such figures as Solomon Mikhoels and Vladimir Mayakovsky.

    top

    Geography and membership

    Unlike many Soviet organizations of the time, there was no requirement for a member to be of proletarian ancestry. By the time of its first assembly in Moscow in 1926, the OZET counted over 60,000 members. At its height in the 1930s, it reached 300,000, but in many cases the membership was mandatory and/or formal.

    By the end of 1920s, there were 160 Jewish selsovets (rural councils) in Ukraine, 29 in the Crimean peninsula (Crimea did not belong to Ukraine at the time), and 27 in Belarus. In Ukraine, three Jewish national regions were created: Kalinindorf, Stalindorf and Novo-Zlatopol. Crimea had two: Freidorf and Larindorf.

    The Jewish settlers were given around 5,000 square kilometres of land (not counting Birobidzhan). The plan was to settle 500,000 "toiling Jews" in 10 years. In reality, from 1925 to 1937 only 126,000 were resettled, and only 53,000 of them stayed.

    In Feb. 1928, the OZET's activity in the European part of the USSR was put on hold in favor to implementing the Birobidzhan project in the Russian Far East and JAO was created.

    top

    Propaganda and funding

    In order to mobilize public opinion, the OZET undertook significant propaganda efforts on the West. Almost uniquely in the history of the USSR, it officially declared that it was not politically or ideologically affiliated. In November 1925 it even passed a resolution declaring its neutrality towards Zionism, officially branded as bourgeois nationalist movement.

    Until 1930s, OZET was often represented in Soviet pavilions at internations exhibitions and fairs. This won the USSR many supporters in the West. One particular success was film "A Jew on the Land" («Еврей на земле») directed by Abram Romm and authored by Mayakovsky and Viktor Shklovsky.

    The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (Joint) alone contributed $25 million to the OZET, and established Agro-Joint, an organization specifically dedicated to the project. It is unclear how much of the collected funds was spent on further public relations campaigns, diverted to other prokjects or pocketed by the government bureaucracy in the USSR, but the settlers were frequently left without necessities and had to survive by improvising.

    top

    OZET-lottery

    In total there were five lottery drawings: in 1928, 1929, 1931, 1932 and 1933.

    top

    Birobidzhan project


    The Birobidzhan project appeared in 1928. By 1932, out of 20,000 settlers only 7,000 remained and by 1938 the Jewish Autonomous Oblast (JAO) hosted 20,000 Jews constituting 25% of total population.

    To increase the prestige of settling the Far East, the Soviet government raised the status of the autonomy and in 1934 JAO was declared an autonomous republic; the city of Birobidzhan became its capital and was to become the center of Jewish culture.

    top

    Demise

    The first five year plans, intensive industrialization and militarization programs in the USSR required educated human resources and many Jews were able to find employment. On the other hand, collectivization in the USSR resulted in failure of the Soviet agriculture and many starving peasants of all ethnic backgounds found escape in cities.

    By mid-1930, the OZET lost its uses. In the 1937, its leadership and ranks were decimated in the Great Purge and in May 1938 the agency was liquidated by special order by the Central Committee of the CPSU as a "corner of various counter-revolutionary Bundist elements, turncoats and spies". International contacts, including the Agro-Joint, were discontinued. During 1938, Jewish national regions, councils, schools were shut down.

    top

    Further reading
      Robert Weinberg. Stalin's Forgotten Zion. Birobidzhan and the Making of a Soviet Jewish Homeland: An Illustrated History, 1928-1996 (University of California Press, 1998)) ISBN 0-520-20990-7
      Jonathan L. Dekel-Chen. Farming the Red Land: Jewish Agricultural Colonization and Local Soviet Power, 1924-1941 (Yale University Press, 2005) ISBN 0-300-10331-X
     


    Search more:
     

       
    Source Privacy License Download Contact Us Atlas
    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.41
    MIT OpenCourseWare
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "OZET". link