The Destruction of Dubova

Chronicle of a Dead City

Rokhl Faygnberg author Albert Madansky translator Cynthia Madansky translator Professor Elissa Bemporad editor Yankl Salant editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:24th Jul '25

Should be back in stock very soon

The Destruction of Dubova cover

A vivid firsthand account of the erasure of the Jewish community in the Ukrainian shtetl of Dubova during the pogroms of 1919.

Written by Yiddish writer Rokhl Faygnberg, The Destruction of the Dubova Shtetl is a powerful account of the elimination of the Jewish community of one shtetl during the pogroms of the Russian Civil War, 1918-1921.

Based on her personal interviews with survivors, Faygnberg presents a detailed description of the evisceration of the vibrant Jewish community of Dubova, which, after enduring torture, killings, and destruction—was ultimately wiped off the map of Ukraine. In this unique memorial book, translated into English here for the first time, Faygnberg chronicles the demise of a typical shtetl, which like so many others at the time, was caught up in the genocidal violence of the civil war, a period that is largely forgotten, overshadowed by the Holocaust that took place in these same lands some twenty years later. The biographical details of the Jewish community members of Dubova provide a moving portrait of the familiar and neighborly relations, as well as of the pettiness of everyday life on the eve of destruction, made of conflict, class tension, and intermarriage. Faygnberg’s narrative also captures the extreme violence of the pogroms of the Russian Civil War, by dwelling on the perpetrators’ actions and motivations, and on the intimacy of genocide made of neighbors killing neighbors, and by bringing to life the Jewish community’s desperate attempts to resist and survive the brutality.

By building on the most recent historiography on the Russian Civil War and anti-Jewish violence, Elissa Bemporad expertly contextualizes the destruction of the shtetl of Dubova within the political and military events of 1918-1921 in the volume’s introduction. Bemporad explores both the perpetrators’ motivations and the victims’ responses to the pogroms, as well as examining the original writing produced by Rokhl Faygnberg, whose genre straddles between a historical chronicle based on witness accounts, and a work of literature. Lastly, the introduction discusses the fascinating history of Faygnberg’s text, uncovering the different political and cultural purposes it served at different times and what it can tell us about anti-Jewish violence today.

Haunting and horrifying. Faygnberg meticulously documented the genocidal pogroms of the Russian Civil War at a human level through the story of a single town, Dubova, and the complete destruction of its Jews and their community. A century later, English readers can read her important account for the first time. The editor and translators have helped to recover the traumatic memory of the single worst episode of anti-Jewish violence in modern history before the Holocaust. * Polly Zavadivker, Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies, University of Delaware, USA *

ISBN: 9781350517097

Dimensions: 196mm x 128mm x 18mm

Weight: 210g

184 pages