(The following is an 
      extract of the introduction to the above book translated by Chaim 
      Freedman)"I departed from Petersburg for the purpose of visiting 
      the Jewish colonies in the south. The purpose of my journey was entirely 
      clear to me. I wanted to acquire a visual perception of those places which 
      had only been depicted in my imagination. I had read of them for a long 
      time in books and newspapers and I wanted to see Jewish countryside, 
      Jewish fields, to behold a Jewish economy, Jewish farmers and Jewish 
      peasant children.
      "My plan was to travel to become acquainted firstly with the 
      Yekaterinoslav colonies. From a small book and article, I already knew 
      from memory the names of the colonies. But anything about them, such as 
      where they were adjacent to or whether one could reach them by rail, I 
      didn't know exactly. I looked through the guidebooks by Landsert and Frum 
      to no avail. The Jewish colonies appear to be unacknowledged by geography 
      and the guidebook literature ignores them.
      "I resolved that the best thing was to travel straight to the 
      Government capital Yekaterinoslav. There lived the local representative 
      for the agricultural fund. Firstly the town itself was far from 
      attractive. Secondly to get information about the route to the colonies 
      was very difficult. But the local representative of the agricultural fund 
      was sympathetic, wise and devoted to the idea of colonization. But he had 
      never visited the colonies. Likewise various writers with pretentious 
      titles had never actually seen the colonies."
      (Editors Note: Despite these difficulties the author did manage to 
      find his way to the colonies and describes his experiences at length. 
      These descriptions have yet to be translated).