Gezerd

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Gezerd
FounderSender Burstin
FoundedMay 1930 (1930-05)
DissolvedMarch 1944
Succeeded byJewish Progressive Council
(de facto)
Jewish Council to Combat Fascism and Anti-Semitism
(de facto)
HeadquartersMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
NewspaperThe Gezerd Tribune (1931)[1]
Dos Naye Vort / The New Word (1937)[1]
Membership~100 (c.1931)
"Several Hundred" (Mid 1933)
Ideology
International affiliationOZET (parent)

The Gezerd[a] was a Communist organisation of Australian Jews that promoted the settlement of Jews in Eastern Siberia, along with pro-Soviet positions. It was active in Melbourne and Sydney.[2] The organisation was co-founded by the recent Polish Jewish immigrant & Bundist Sender Burstin.[3] In its early years it cooperated strongly with the Jewish Labour Bund in Australia; including the formation of a Joint Culture Committee,[2] however the two organisations split over the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact along with the expelling of Sender Burstin as a "Social-Fascist".[2][4][5] The organisation supported the activities of the Soviet Komzet in trying to build an alternative Jewish Homeland in Birobidzhan, working as a local wing of the public relations organisation OZET for this purpose.[4] Towards these ends, it raised some £50 (Australian) within its first year to help with the settlement there, along with a microscope and an x-ray in 1934.[2] The group also maintained strong ties with the Communist Party of Australia, although never formally joined or affiliated with the organisation.[2] Beyond its support of Soviet policies, the group also engaged in yiddish culture events; including founding a "Culture House" in Carlton in 1938 and running a Yiddish theatre troupe between 1932 and 1937,[5][6] efforts to support the integration of migrants (such Australian history and English language lessons), and events around international policy; especially the rise of fascism.[2] It also supported the international boycott of German goods, and organised meetings against the political violence of the Nazi Regime against "Jews, Catholics, workers, and intellectuals".[4][7] The group put itself at odds with the traditional Anglo-Jewery of Australia, positioning itself against Religious and ideologically Conservative elements of Australian Jewery: being described as an 'undesirable foreign element' by Newman Rosenthal, right-leaning editor of the Australian Jewish Herald newspaper.[2][5] The organisation continued despite the liquidation of the Soviet OZET in 1938, apparently not aware of this event.[2]

The aforementioned issues regarding the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact would cause a decline in membership and public support from which the organisation would never recover.[2] With the banning of the CPA by Prime Minister Menzies in 1940, the organisation voluntarily went underground for roughly 15 months.[2] It re-emerged following the German Invasion of the Soviet Union, however this could not abate its decline.[2] The organisation would dissolve in May 1944.[5]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Short for: Gezelshaft far aynordnen oyf Erd arbetnidke Yidin in F.S.S.R, Yiddish: געזעלשאפט פאר איינארדענען ארבעטנדיקע יידן אויף ערד אין פ.ס.ס.ר
    English: Society for Settling Toiling Jews on the Land in the USSR

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Yiddish Newspapers and Journals". Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation. Retrieved 2023-08-11.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rechter, David (1991). "The Gezerd Down Under". In Frankel, Jonathan (ed.). Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Volume VII: Jews and Messianism in the Modern Era: Metaphor and Meaning. Contemporary Jewry. Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. pp. 275–280. ISBN 978-0-19-536198-8.
  3. ^ "Sender Burstin (1903-1986)". Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  4. ^ a b c Mendes, Philip (2009-02-19). "From Warsaw to Melbourne: Conflict between the Jewish Labour Bund and The Communists". Melbourne Jewish Museum – via Bund Archive.
  5. ^ a b c d Turnbull, Malcolm J (1999). Safe haven: Records of the Jewish experience in Australia (PDF) (2nd ed.). National Archives of Australia. pp. 122–123. ISBN 0-642-34413-2.
  6. ^ ROZENSTEIN, CHAIM. YIDDISH THEATRE IN AUSTRALIA (PDF). Monash.
  7. ^ "Jews Protest Against Pogroms". Workers' Weekly. 1933-04-14. Retrieved 2023-08-11.