ABSTRACT

Providing a gripping, first-hand account of the Chmielnicki massacres in 1648-58, in which tens of thousands of Jews perished in Poland and the Ukraine, Rabbi Nathan Hanover describes the events themselves and their effect on European Jewry. Hanover's description of the atrocities commited* by Chmielnicki and his hordes makes it clear that they set the precedent for Hitler's torture chambers. Hanover's account of the events understood in their historical context 'shows how humans can transcend tragedy and rebuild their lives, developing new ways to express their heritage and culture. Professor Helmreich, in his new introduction, describes the- period of relative peace and prosperity for the Jews immediately preceding the massacres. He traces some of the important effects the massacre had on later Jewish history, such as the rise of Messianic and Hasidic movements in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and the migration of Jews back toward the west, where they were situated when the Enlightenment swept through Europe.

chapter I|2 pages

Abyss of Despair

chapter IV|16 pages

The Brutal Oppressions of Chmiel

chapter X|2 pages

The Massacre of the Kingdom of Lithuania

chapter XI|3 pages

The Massacres of the Holy Community of Bar

chapter XII|4 pages

The Massacres in the Capital City of Lwow

chapter XIII|2 pages

The Massacres of the Community of Narol

chapter XV|15 pages

The Second Massacre of Ostrog