Black Hundred in Russia
The Black Hundred was an extreme right wing party which emerged at the turn of the twentieth century in Russia. Favoring tsarism and autocracy instead of a parliamentary government, the Black Hundred were the perpetrators of many Jewish pogroms in Russian cities such as Odessa, Kiev, Yekaterinoslav and Bialystok (Horowitz 703). This group of radicals increased in popularity before the beginning of the Russian Revolution when tsarism was in decline. The Black hundred believed that “all Jews were revolutionaries and all revolutionaries were Jews, all Jews were capitalists and all capitalists were either Jews or tools in the hands of Jews.” (Laqueur 17). This view of Jews was a distortion of the truth. In fact, the Jews in most parts of Russia were desperately poor, making barely enough money to support themselves. Only a small fraction of Jews were capitalists. Jews were a minority in most Russian cities. However, their absence did not alter the mindset of the Black Hundred. According to them, “the Jew was the Anarchist, absent and yet omnipresent, a powerful myth helping to mobilize ignorant masses.” (Obraztsov 10) The first organization of the Black Hundred was the Russkoye Sobraniye (Russian Association), which was . . .
The establishment of the Duma was the worst fear of these rightists (Obraztsov passim). “Once again, Anti-Semitism Without Jews. Report of the Black Hundred About the Third Duma. This principle was upheld until the recent collapse of the United Soviet Socialist Republic and the Russia people could only find out their history through underground whispers. Moscow: Sytin Publishing House, 1908. The justification for pogroms is quoted from a speech by a member or the SRN which states that the Black Hundred “never, under any circumstance, appealed for the murder of anyone. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Horowitz, Brian. Moscow: Sytin Publishing House, 1908. Existing for several years without much action toward the Jews, the Russkoye Sobraniye made its first major anti-Semitic step in 1905. In fact, the Tsar himself proclaimed that Jews were the cause of the downfall of Russia, and openly stated that “international Jewry, through its two wings, Jewish capitalism and Jewish socialism, is fomenting revolution aiming to overthrow the Russian regime” (Wistrich 46). Black Hundred: The Rise of the Extreme Right in Russia. At this time, the Sobraniye issued a manifesto which demanded anti-Jewish laws “in view of the Jewish hostility to Christianity and the Non-Jewish nations as well as their aspirations to world power.
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