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Robert Weinberg and Bradley Berman's carefully documented and
extensively illustrated book explores the Soviet government's
failed experiment to create a socialist Jewish homeland. In 1934 an
area popularly known as Birobidzhan, a sparsely populated region
along the Sino-Soviet border some five thousand miles east of
Moscow, was designated the national homeland of Soviet Jewry.
Establishing the Jewish Autonomous Region was part of the Kremlin's
plan to create an enclave where secular Jewish culture rooted in
Yiddish and socialism could serve as an alternative to Palestine.
The Kremlin also considered the region a solution to various
perceived problems besetting Soviet Jews. Birobidzhan still exists
today, but despite its continued official status Jews are a small
minority of the inhabitants of the region. Drawing upon documents
from archives in Moscow and Birobidzhan, as well as photograph
collections never seen outside Birobidzhan, Weinberg's story of the
Soviet Zion sheds new light on a host of important historical and
contemporary issues regarding Jewish identity, community, and
culture. Given the persistence of the "Jewish question" in Russia,
the history of Birobidzhan provides an unusual point of entry into
examining the fate of Soviet Jewry under communist rule.
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