Starozakrevsky Maidan ("Old Zakrevsky Field (or Square)") , located between
Derazhnia and
Volkovintzi, near Kalnaya in the
Podolia region of
Ukraine was a
Jewish agricultural colony established in 1844. It was the largest and most prosperous agricultural colony near
Derazhnia, at one point in the late 19th century it had a population of over 700. The colony continued until it was turned into a
kolkhoz Stary Maidan by the Soviets in 1928. It was nicknamed "Yiddish Maidan" by its residents, primarily to distinguish it from the nearby village of
Novy Maidan("New Maidan"). Due to periodic pogroms and to impoverished conditions in the first two decades of the 20th century, many residents emigrated to the
United States (and some to
Israel). Those who settled in America formed a burial society, Yiddish Meidan Verein, purchased a plot in Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York, where many of the early immigrants are buried. In 1941, the remaining residents of Starozakrevsky Maidan were moved to the Derazhnia
ghetto and eventually shot to death by the Nazis. Today Stary Meidan is the village mostly popilated by ethnic
Ukrainians.
Bibliography
- Chapin, David A. and Weinstock, Ben, The Road from Letichev: The history and culture of a forgotten Jewish community in Eastern Europe, Volume 1. ISBN 0-595-00666-3 iUniverse, Lincoln, NE, 2000. (Chapter 9 "The Jewish Farmers of Podolia" provides a very detailed history of the colony.)
- Chapin,......
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