Quite possibly there were very many "Stiblech" and small
synagogues in Czernowitz, in the earlier part of the 20th century.
But in general the tendency among Czernowitz Jews,
was to move away from orthodoxy.
One set of my great-grandparents were very orthodox Hassidim
of the Rabbi of Wiznitz. They moved to Czernowitz in 1880,
but considered it a godless place and sometime before WW1
returned to Maramures. My maternal grandfather, the son of
these great-grandparents, still kept kosher and celebrated
all the holidays, including Friday evenings and Sabath,
but I do not think that he went to synagogue except during
the high holidays.
Mimi
On Mar 21, 2013, at 10:53 AM, Anna Kofner wrote:
> Dear all.
> I dare to disagree with the last statements. The lack of public
> display of devotion does not prove the lack of it. I remember as a
> child going with my parents to pick up my Ungeni born great-aunt
> from the schul (somewhere in the end the Russian str) and
> listening to the shoffar every Yom Kippur.
> I remember her and my mother baking matzos for Passover and my job
> was to prick it with a fork. Later we were getting matzo from
> Joint. My best friend who's mother was a Ukrainian Jew and father
> the deputy director of GAI (Motor vehicle Administration) remembers
> her grand and GG mothers doing the same. She was the fork handler.
> My parents had a regular subscription to the Warsaw Yiddish
> newspaper thanks to a Polish jewish family we met on a train coming
> from Lvov.
> We had Seders. Everybody came for Rosh Hashanah to our house. My
> friend's grandmother, who was born in Poland, lived in Paris and
> came back to build Birobidzan, used to give us dried fruit and
> explain that the fruit grows in Israel and there is a holiday
> called Tu B'Shvat. Her apartment on Kobilanskaya was a salon where
> all the Yiddish writers and intellectuals who still lived in
> Czernowitz would get together. Her son-in-law was Srul (Lulu)
> Richker from Radautz. They were my parent's best friends and my
> best friend's parents.
> I remember my 14 year old friend announcing that knows Hebrew. When
> she started to recite it my parent's Bessarabian friends who all
> studied Hebrew couldn't believe their years. It was Modeh Ani.
> I was surprised to learn that some of my friends who's mothers were
> Russian and the fathers jewish did not eat khametz during Passover.
> My best friend had two 13th Birthdays. One a bar mitzva with the
> rabbi for very close friends (My parents were there, but they did
> not trust the children) and a big one the next day. People had
> Chuppas. I don't remember much Vodka, but I do miss the Vishnyak.
> As for the Ukrainian born Jews, up till 1941 there were Yiddish
> schools all over Ukraine.
> I do know there was a shoykhet.
> As for your question/statement Mimi. That was something that Jews
> struggled all over the world, some even giving up their identity
> (Madeleine Albright's parents among them)
> Maybe there were not to many orthodox Jews in Czernowitz, but the
> traditions and the believes never left.
> Chag Sameach (v'kasher? or not) to all.
>
>
> Channa
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Received on 2013-03-22 09:48:52
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