industrial and social structure of the Jewish population of Interbellum Poland
TitleThe industrial and social structure of the Jewish population of Interbellum Poland
Author
Call numberS305.8924/001
Object number00191ag
Place of publicationNew York, New York, United States
PublisherYiddish Scientific Institute
Year of publication
1947/48
Dimensionspp243-269
MaterialArticle
NotesArticle from the journal 'YIVO Annual of Jewish Social Science' Vol. XI, p243-269
Description
Discusses the economic aspects of the life of the Polish Jewish community. Prior to World War I, Poland had been divided among three empires. The new state had 63.6% Poles, 21.4% Ukrainians, 10.5% Jews and 3.8% Germans.The disintegration of the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires brought radical changes in the life of the Jewish population of Eastern Europe. This was particularly true in Poland. Before the war the Jewish minority was under the protection of the central Austrian and German governments. The fall of the three empires wiped out these advantages