Но до реализации этого плана «светлейшего юдофила» Потемкина было еще бесконечно далеко. Огромное число иудеев продолжало жительствовать тогда в Российской империи. Из их среды и выделились евреи, ставшие героями этой книги. Они вошли в анналы истории, а потому вызывают к себе сегодня наш живой и неподдельный интерес.
Foreword
Lev Berdnikov's book «Jews of the Russian State» is a significantly expanded version of his earlier volume Jews in Livery (Moscow, 2009).
«Oh, Jews, don't you sew livery!» These words, from the well-known song by Alexander Galich, ring out as a bitter admonition to Jews of all times, warning them to keep a safe distance from those in power. Many of the heroes of Lev Berdnikov's book Jews in Livery did not heed this advice and entered history precisely because they made themselves visible and circulated in the highest state and court circles of tsarist Russia. They played a leading role in Russian culture, academics, and enlightenment, both bringing glory to the nation and immortality to their names. The author presents an entire gallery of outstanding Russian Jews of the fifteenth through twentieth centuries. The breadth of their professional activities is striking: here are not only merchants, entrepreneurs, jewelers, scholars, bankers and doctors, but also diplomats, folklorists, court tutors, men of letters, social activists and even court jesters. And each of them left a unique mark on Russian history.
Human beings do not have the luxury of choosing their time and place of birth. «Jews in livery» lived and worked in times of governmental and social anti-Semitism, so that the majority of them were faced with the necessity to convert, as had happened with the Spanish and Portuguese Marranos. There were periods when they faced ostracism for even the suspicion of secretly professing the Mosaic faith, when without conversion they would not only not have been allowed to dress in livery, but even to live in Russia. Acculturation and assimilation faced all of them, but its degree and degree of sincerity differed greatly, manifesting a great variety of cultural and historical types. Before us arise figures at times paradoxical in their extremes: on the one hand, for example, one of the founders of the St. Petersburg Jewish community, the fighter for Jewish rights Nota Notkin, who supported the assimilation of Jews to Russian language and culture; on the other, the Jew only by birth Almaz Ivanov, boyar clerk (dumnyi d'iak) of the Foreign Office, who was a fierce zealot of Russian Orthodoxy. However, without reference to his relationship to the Jews our view of figures like Ivanov would be incomplete and historically unreliable; the same goes for Pavel Shein, who selflessly dedicated his life to the study of Russian and Belorussian folksongs. To ignore such figures would mean to underestimate the significant Jewish impact on Russian history and culture. Indeed, as Berdnikov shows, already under Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich, apart from Almaz Ivanov, there were numerous converted Jews in state service: the Russian ambassador in Kakhetiia V. S. Zhidovin; the departmental clerk V. Yudin; head of the Moscow strel'sty I. V. Zhidovin; court physician D. Gaden; and others (and here we are speaking only of those in state service). These figures are so distant from us in time that to delve into their minds and understand the logic of their actions is necessarily speculative. History is silent, for example, on what Almaz Ivanov felt when he received «Khmer the Wicked» in the Kremlin-that is, the infamous Bogdan Khmel'nitskii at whose hands tens of thousands of innocent Jews perished. Who would doubt that at that moment he had a thought for his own Jewish origins?
This book is filled with striking stories about converted Jews who used their privileged position to intervene with the Russian crowned authorities in favor of their fellow countrymen. Thus the Kremlin physician Daniil Gaden obtained permission for Jewish merchants to trade in Moscow, procured commissions for them from court, and received them in his home. The Russian resident in Vienna Avraam Veselovskii convinced Peter the Great, far from well-inclined to Jews, of the high professional qualifications of Jewish specialists; and his brother Isaac Veselovskii, who was the teacher of Grand Duke Peter Fedorovich, did not shy away from trying to convince the imperial judeophobe Elizabeth Petrovna to allow Jews to settle in Russia unimpeded. Similarly precious is the admission of the General-lieutenant of army command Mikhail Grulev, made on the cusp of the nineteenth-twentieth centuries: «The most important thing, that I always held before myself in the light of conscience, was to fight as best I could, passively or actively, against unjust accusations and attacks on Jews. Following both the 'voice of my blood' and the command of my heart, in these cases I also saw my sacred and rational service to Russia, my land of birth, in consonance with duty to conscience and to my vow.»
And how many generations of Russians have listened to the piercing «voice of blood» expressed by Semen Nadson (whose grandfather was Jewish), in particular, to his poem «I grew up, alien to you, outcast people.» This poem had heightened emotional power for Nadson's contemporaries, since the tragic death of the poet himself, defamed by the Jew-hater Burenin and the anti-Semitic Black Hundreds' press, lent his words about «a pack of ravenous hounds» sharpness and topicality. The exceptional popularity of this poet in the late nineteenth century suggests the important role of this work in the battle with anti-Semitism in Russian society of the time.
It is also important that Berdnikov succeeds in remaining faithful to historical truth and contemporary realia, independent of which period is being analyzed. This is all the more important since in several works by Israeli authors attempts are unjustifiably made to present all of our outstanding ancestors as committed advocates of Judaism. Thus one well-known writer describes the following fantastic scene: Allegedly Jews at the court of Peter I, including the tax-farmer Boruch Leibov, who arrived at the Tsar's quarters directly from Smolensk, were gathering together for a Passover seder, and convinced the Russian emperor to don a yarmolka, which he did without hesitation. «Not only is this episode doubtful,» responds Berdnikov, «but so is the very existence of an alleged Jewish party at the beginning of the XVIIIth century, supposedly supported by other co-religionists and firmly united by corporate and religious interests…
In fact, Peter the Great's attitude toward Jews was complex and contradictory. He was a «impulsive pragmatic,» sincere in all of his actions – both when he criticized Jews and when he defended them. The great reformer elevated no few Jews to the highest state positions in the Empire, and they put the interests of their new homeland first, attempting to reconcile them with their national feelings. They often used their blood ties to advance Russian interests, which they served