Everything about Sholom Schwartzbard totally explained
Sholom Schwartzbard (
August 18,
1886,
Izmail,
Bessarabia, now
Ukraine –
March 3,
1938,
Cape Town,
South Africa) was a Bessarabian-born
Jewish anarchist known primarily for the assassination of the Ukrainian politician
Symon Petliura. He was known in Russia as
Samuil Isaakovich Shvartsburd, or
Shulem Shmil Shvartsburd. He wrote
poetry in
Yiddish under the pen name of
Bal-Chaloimas (
English: The Dreamer).
Early life
Schwarzbard was born in
Izmail, Bessarabia, (then part of the
Russian Empire, now currently in Southern Ukraine) to the Jewish family of Isaak Schwartzbard and Haia Vainberg. After the proclamation by the Russian
tsarist government for all Jews to move out of border areas, his family moved to the town of
Balta, Ukraine where he grew up. In 1900, at an early age he became an apprentice to a watchmaker Israel Dreck.
During his apprenticeship he joined a Jewish Communist group known as "Funk" (Yiddish for "Spark" linked to Lenin's journal "
Iskra". At this time Schwartzbard became a revolutionary
Schwartzbrad participated in the Jewish self defense of
Balta. As a result he spent 3 months in prison for his part in 'provoking' the Balta pogrom. Fearing further arrests, Schwartzbard moved away to
Chernivtsi in
Bukovyna,
Lviv, and then
Vienna in
Austria-Hungary.
In 1909 he took part in the anarchist "expropriation" (armed robbery) of a bank in
Vienna, for which he was arrested and sentenced to time in a hard-labor prison. After serving 4 months of his sentence, he escaped to
Budapest where he took part in an armed robbery of a restaurant. He was arrested and expelled from
Austro-Hungarian Empire.
In
1910, at age 24, he settled in
Paris and found work in a watch factory, repairing clocks and watches.
On August 24, 1914 Schwartzbard and his brother enlisted in the
French Foreign Legion (
1914 -
1917) (363e régiment d’infanterie) and was wounded in the Battle of Carency in the
Battle of the Somme. To acknowledge his courage he was awarded the
Croix de guerre. Schwartzbard was wounded by a grenade blast while on patrol in March 1916. His lungs were riddled, and he wasn't expected to live. His left arm was virtually useless
In August
1917 he was demobilized and in September traveled with his wife to Russia. On the French boat "Melbourne" he was arrested for communist agitation and was handed over to Russian authorities in
Arkhangelsk. He later traveled to
Petrograd where he joined and served in the
Bolshevik Red Guards (
1917 -
1920) joining a special battalion of the CheKa and was sent to Ukraine. Schwartzbard was in charge of a special Jewish
cavalry brigade with 90 men under the command of
Grigory Kotovsky, a Red Army commander. Supplied with Bolshevik cannon and ammunition the group Rochelle which he commanded fought for 2 years from
Tiraspol to
Kharkiv against the forces of Austria, Germany, Petlura and Denikin
In the anarchy that transpired in the period of the
Russian Civil War Schwartzbard was told that fifteen members of his family had perished in
anti-semitic pogroms.
During this time Sholom Schwartzbard's brother was also expelled from France in 1919 for actively distributing communist propaganda and agitation.
In
1920 disillusioned by the willingness of his comrades to prostitute themselves and the revolution for a few rubles Sholom moved back to
Paris where he opened a clock-and-watch repairshop. There he was active in the French and Jewish labor movements, and in 1925 became a French citizen. He later joined an anarchist group and became acquainted with prominent anarchist activists who had emigrated from Russia and Ukraine, including such figures as
Volin,
Alexander Berkman,
Emma Goldman, as well as
Nestor Makhno and his follower
Peter Arshinov. In Paris Schwartzbard also became a member of the "Union of Ukrainian citizens"
The assassination of Petlura
Symon Petlura, who was head of the Directorate of the
Ukrainian National Republic in 1919, had moved to Paris in 1924
and was the head of the government-in-exile of the
Ukrainian People's Republic.
Sholom Schwartzbard, who has lost his family in the 1919 pogroms, held Symon Petlura as responsible for them (see the discussion on
Petlura' role in the pogroms). According to his autobiography, after hearing the news that Petlura has relocated to Paris, Schwartzbard became distraught and started plotting Petlura's assassination. A picture of Petlura with
Józef Piłsudski published in the Encyclopedia Larousse allowed Schwartzbard to recognize him.
On
25 May,
1926, he approached Petlura, who was walking on rue Racine not far from boulevard Saint-Michel, and asked him in Ukrainian, "Are you Mr. Petlura?" Petlura raised his cane and Schwartzbard pulled out a gun, shooting him five times, and after he fell to the pavement twice more. When the police came and asked if he'd done the deed, he reportedly said, "I have killed a great assassin.", although other sources state that he released seven shots into Petlura with the eighth getting stuck in the revolver.
The trial
October 18,
1927. His defense was led by
Henri Torres, a renowned French jurist who had previously defended anarchists such as Buenaventura Durruti and Ernesto Bonomini and who also represented the Soviet consulate in France.
The core of Schwartzbard's defense was to attempt to show that he was avenging the deaths of victims of pogroms, whereas the prosecution (both criminal and civil) tried to show that:
- (i) Petlura wasn't responsible for the pogroms and
- (ii) Schwartzbard was a Soviet agent.
Both sides brought on many witnesses, including several historians. A notable witness for the defense was Haia Greenberg who survived the
Proskurov pogroms and testified about the carnage. Several former Ukrainian officers testified for the prosecution.
After a trial lasting eight days the jury acquitted Schwarztbard.
Ukrainian émigré outlets and the current Ukrainian government portray Schwartzbard as a Soviet agent. According to Ukrainian historian
Michael Palij, a
GPU agent named
Mikhail Volodin came to Paris in August
1925 and met Schwartzbard, who began stalking Petlura. He had previously planned to assassinate Petlura at a gathering of Ukrainian émigrés marking Petlura's birthday but the attempt was foiled by anarchist
Nestor Makhno who was also at the function.
After the trial
After his acquittal in
1928 Sholom Schwartzbard decided to immigrate to Palestine, which was under
British Mandate. However, the British authorities refused him a visa. In 1937 Schwartzbard traveled to
South Africa to raise money for a Yiddish language
Encyclopedia. He died in
Cape Town on
March 3 1938. 29 years later, in accordance with his will, his remains were transported to
Israel and buried in
Moshav Avihayil. Several cities in Israel have streets named after him, including
Jerusalem and
Beersheba.
Schwartzbard was popularly referred to as the
nokem- the avenger- of Ukrainian Jewry.
Writings
Schwartzbard is the author of numerous books in Yiddish published under the pseudonym
Bal Haloymes: "Troymen un virklekhkeyt" (Dreams and Reality, Paris, 1920), "In krig mit zikh aleyn" (At War with Myself, Chicago, 1933), "Inem loyf fun yor" (Over the Year, Chicago, 1934).
Sholom Schwarzbard papers are archived at
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York. They were rescued during
World War II and smuggled from France by the historian Zosa Szajkowski.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sholom Schwartzbard'.
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