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Stepmother Russia, Foster Mother America

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In the late nineteenth century, a group of radical Jewish youths from Odessa attempted to create an agricultural commune on the Oregon frontier, and in so doing developed from assimilated revolutio...
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  • 15 September 2014
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In the late nineteenth century, a group of radical Jewish youths from Odessa attempted to create an agricultural commune on the Oregon frontier, and in so doing developed from assimilated revolutionaries to American Jews. Theodore Friedgut relates the story of these youths and their creation, with special notice paid to the human encounters within the commune, the members’ encounters with America in acquiring land and equipment—and, importantly, their encounters with their neighbors, themselves immigrant farmers on the American frontier. Among the volume’s central sources is the memoir of Israel Mandelkern, which is here published for the first time. This study addresses hitherto neglected aspects of Jewish life in Russia and of the life of one of the more than a hundred Jewish agricultural colonies, and helps us understand the factors that influenced the young colony members in their transition toward becoming Americans. This is a microcosm of the experience of multitudes of immigrants.
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Price: $109.00
Pages: 215
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Imprint: Academic Studies Press
Series: Borderlines: Russian and East European-Jewish Studies
Publication Date: 15 September 2014
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781618113818
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

Social and cultural history

“A colorful portrait of the ups and downs of a small community of young Russian Jewish immigrants who set off in the 1880s from Odessa for what would become New Odessa (in Oregon) in pursuit of a secular, collective existence on the land. The book is enhanced by the inclusion of a previously unpublished vivid memoir by a member of the community decades after the New Odessa experiment had run its course.”
— Susan Gross Solomon
Theodore H. Friedgut is Emeritus Professor of Russian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The most recent of his six books, The Lipton Jewish Agricultural Colony, 1901-1951: Pioneering Canada’s Prairies was awarded the 2009 Switzer-Cooperstock Prize in Western Canadian Jewish History.
Dedication

Acknowledgements

List of Photographs

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: The Beginnings of Am Olam

Chapter 3: The Birth of New Odessa

Chapter 4: First Stop, New York

Chapter 5: Beginnings in Oregon

Chapter 6: William Frey: Background and Beliefs

Chapter 7: Building New Odessa

Chapter 8: The Culture of New Odessa

Chapter 9: Fruition and Decline

Chapter 10: After New Odessa

Chapter 11: New Odessa: A Balance Sheet

Bibliography

Supplement: “Recollections of a Communist” Israel Mandelkern, Edited, with an introduction and annotation, by Theodore H. Friedgut

Index