I was born in a Jewish 
      house, father, mother and seven children. I was the youngest of the six 
      sons and the daughter who was the firstborn. We lived in an old house on 
      an estate called Azarevitch1The estate had a 
      Russian landowner and we worked his land. When we built a larger house, my 
      grandfather and grandmother continued to live in the old house. 
      Grandfather was a religious Jew and attended the synagogue every day which 
      was one kilometer from the house. One day, a severe winter day, on the way 
      home from the synagogue he fell and broke his foot. Due to his inability 
      to work he wanted to move to his son Gotlieb who lived close to the 
      synagogue. Grandmother was afraid to sleep alone in the house at night. 
      She paid me two kopecks per night so that I should stay with her. I was 
      then aged six and grandmother told me each evening about the history of 
      the family which is engraved in my memory.
      
      I  
      The Colonies
      
      The estate was founded in 1800 before which it was 
      desolate. Rothschild, who was friendly with Queen Katerina was aware of 
      the difficult life of the Jews in Polotsk and in Vitebsk and it was 
      forbidden for them to live in the villages unless they were craftsmen. In 
      the same period army service in Russia was by those who were abducted 
      whose service was for twenty five years.
      Rothschild approached the Queen Katerina and suggested 
      to her to grant the Jews an area of land and he would finance the 
      settlement of Jews there2. The idea 
      found favor with the queen, she visited the Ukraine, passed through the 
      steppes and discovered that it was desolate and uncultivated. She 
      suggested to Rothschild to accompany her and visit the area and it was 
      decided to establish Jewish colonies in that area. She promulgated an 
      order to divide the area such that each family would receive a plot of 
      land and that those families who settled there would not be enlisted in 
      the army.
      That is how they established seventeen settlements of 
      one to two hundred families each. The largest colony was called Bakher3. 
      Others were called Latent4, Engels, Myadler, Peness, Di Vilner, Kabilni, 
      Gravskoy, these were on one side.
      On the other side there were, amongst them, Horkes, 
      Nazrivka ( in Yiddish Azeritch where I was born), Priud, Kavalevsk, 
      Haloshkas, Pervi (2) numer, Dritten (3) numer, Numer (4) Ferten numer, 
      Hopalover. In between an area of sixty kilometers there were also Russian 
      villages.
      Every family received forty kilometers of land, a 
      two-family house and next to it for each family, a dunam of land to 
      grow household needs. Two thousand dunams was left in reserve for 
      family expansion.
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      II
      Grandmother
      
      When my grandmother’s family received the land and the 
      place my grandmother was aged five. Her father was a fish trader in 
      Dinaburg 5 and they moved into agriculture. My grandmother grew up and 
      married a boy from the colony Priut who arrived at the same time. Her 
      husband was a tailor. The land was divided in half and they received half 
      of the area which they worked in the summer and in the winter continued to 
      work in sewing for the inhabitants of the village and brought an 
      additional livelihood to the farm.
      They had two sons and two daughters. The firstborn was 
      Yehoshua, he was my father. He had seven children. For his family he built 
      a new house, larger than the previous one. He traded in fish which he 
      brought from Mariupol which was on the sea. When the children grew up and 
      the land was divided amongst them, father leased land from those families 
      who did not work it and paid five rubles per dunam per year. He 
      leased ten dunams and worked them alternately each year in order to 
      let the land rest. In that was the yield was particularly great. 
      
      With the help of the children, the work possibility 
      became greater and he leased more and more land, raised horses to work the 
      land and bought cows for milking. The work was difficult for mother in the 
      house and they had to hire a maidservant and with the help of the eldest 
      daughter they managed with the situation. Father was engaged in trading 
      most of the time. When my sister married she left the house and went to 
      live with her husband who was a shokhet. He also inculcated Torah 
      to the children of the colony and I was also sent to live with her.
      The eldest brother who got married established a 
      workshop for roofing tiles. Since his wife refused to live with her 
      husband’s family and they went to live with her father who was a butcher 
      and a prosperous man.
      My father in partnership with his brother began to trade 
      in cattle which they pastured on the steppe during the summer and sold 
      them for meat in the city, and so they established a workshop for all 
      agricultural work. For several years they were engaged in raising cattle. 
      My second brother helped alongside father and it was decided to open some 
      trade for him.
      My father met a Jew whose name was Benyamin Perlman6 and 
      his father was called Guchik. He was known in all the seventeen colonies. 
      My father took advice from him about which trade to set up for his son. He 
      advised him to come to his colony and open a factory for carriages. Father and his son Mikhel traveled to Perlman’s colony 
      in order to assess the situation. They found there a large area on which 
      it was possible to put in craftsmen to develop the factory. That colony was built at a distance of seven kilometers 
      from the railway and it was easy to manage with transportation. They established the factory in partnership of father, 
      the son and the owner of the plot. The factory developed and grew, they added workers and 
      craftsmen. But the market was very limited in that they supplied all the 
      other colonies but the return was small.
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      III
      
      The Brothers
      Perlman had a pretty daughter and my brother married 
      her. But they had to close the factory in that place and they moved it to 
      our colony. So continued matters until 1914 when the First World War broke 
      out. Two years they were already conscripting and now they conscripted 
      another two brothers and so all the rest of my brothers except me and only 
      I remained with my father. My eldest married brother moved to Horlovka7, a 
      city where there were coal mines and my brother bought one of them and so 
      was not liable to enlist in the army.
      Two brothers who were released from the army for health 
      reasons worked together with the eldest brother in the coal mine and so 
      were released from military duty.
      The youngest brother of the seven brothers, Noakh went 
      to study in Novopoltavka where a technical school was opened.
      The continuing war caused the closure of factories, 
      among them the carriage factory and I with father remained to work the 
      land.
      My brother’s wife, the daughter of Perlman returned to 
      her father.
      In the year seventeen when the war ended the October 
      Revolution broke out and when Lenin returned in 1921 we had to give up 
      areas of our land.
      My brother Nakhum who succeeded during the war to hit 
      two airplanes received after the war three medals and my father was called 
      to Aleksandrovsk which was the capital of the region to be present during 
      the receipt of the medals.
      In the colonies new leaders were chosen [.....] the 
      revolution . My father moved to the brothers who worked the mine because 
      he was considered a wealthy man. I remained with my mother in the place.  The land was taken from us by people from the Soviet, 
      Yankel Kroz and Nakhman Zilver, and they managed the colony.
      In 1918 the two brothers Nakhum and Noakh returned home 
      and we resumed being a family of four men and my sister lived in a nearby 
      colony with her second husband whom she married after the death of her 
      first husband.
      From time to time soviet soldiers appeared and demanded 
      tax from each family who was liable to pay. Yankel Kroz and Nakhman Zilver 
      who during the war were in Siberia returned and received important 
      positions and they decided to confiscate the produce which was ready for 
      planting and distributed it to the needy.
      My father who returned home began to plan how to make a 
      livelihood or to leave the colony. Meanwhile appeared about twenty riders 
      and called the inhabitants to the Soviet office. When I heard this demand 
      I ran quickly to announce to the family to hide. Father and mother had 
      already arrived at the Soviet. One of the riders hit father with his rifle 
      and split his head.
      The same night forty8
      men were killed, among them also Yankel Kroz, the last of those killed. The robber removed Yankel’s boots 
      before Yankel could run away. Among those killed were two German families 
      and thirty eight Jews.
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      IV
      
      Grandfather
      
      My grandfather was an orphan9 and grew up with an uncle 
      on one of the other colonies. And grandmother was with her parents in Nazarovitch, one of the other colonies. When they looked for a shidukh 
      for her they found grandfather to match and he arrived to her in 
      Nazarovitch. He was given a dowry and he began to trade in fish. He was a 
      talented person and succeeded well in business. Also grandmother who was a 
      diligent woman helped him in his business.
      They bore four children, two sons and two daughters. My 
      father was the firstborn of them. When they grew up they separated to 
      different colonies in Ukraina. 
      
      V
      
      Father
      My father was a successful man. He established a 
      business in the fish trade and also received an area of land to cultivate.
      My mother came from a poor family since she was orphaned 
      from her mother. On the other hand my father’s brother who married a rich 
      girl and received a big dowry. He included my father in trade and gave him 
      his money and they began to trade beef cattle.
      After my father was killed we remained in the house 
      three brothers, one who had returned from the war. We worked the land and 
      the farm was very successful. We sold the farm and moved to the city 
      Mariupol on the sea. The sum which we brought with us we wanted to buy a 
      house but the sum was not enough and we decided to travel to Dombass where 
      there also lived one of the brothers and he had a small mine with another 
      brother and their brother-in-law. Since they supplied coal they were 
      released from army duty when the war broke out. We bought four horses and 
      I and another two brothers entered the village Volnovakhr10 which is a 
      railway station village. We were stopped there by riders Machka who 
      brought us to them to take the horses from us with all the money which we 
      had with us. And they also didn’t spare blows because they thought we were 
      spies since by my brother they found a book covered in all sorts of 
      pictures. They beat us because they thought we knew secrets, but we had 
      nothing to tell.
      We were tried and the sentence was death by firing. We 
      reacted severely and yelled. They returned us to the city where other Jews 
      lived . Several of them were released and we asked to tell them of our 
      arrest. They arrived and released us on the grounds that we would work in 
      the mines. In fear that they might return us we walked by foot to the next 
      station and when the goods train arrived so we reached Horlovka. There in Horlovka we remained to live in Donbass until 
      we reached Israel.
      In Horlovka lived three brothers and two of us joined 
      them. They had a small coal mine there which was abandoned because of the 
      Revolution and all of us together tried to rehabilitate it, with the help 
      of some of the local peasants. For some time we worked there. The family 
      of one of the brothers lived in Lugansk where he had an estate but he 
      worked in the mine so he would not be sent to the army. When my brother 
      traveled to visit in Lugansk I joined him. One of the brothers to whom 
      belonged a quarter of the mine, he also returned to Lugansk. In 1919 the 
      situation in Ukraina in Donbass there was famine in this period after the 
      Revolution. They made a living from the income of the mine where my 
      brother opened a workshop for harnesses and I worked in this factory with 
      my brother’s children with who I lived for half a year. Afterwards I 
      returned with my brother to Horlovka in order to work again in the mine. 
      When we passed one of the railway stations I was taken down by White 
      Russian soldiers who took me to a military camp. They took from me my 
      papers. My brother suggested we should run away and so we did and we 
      returned by foot to Lugansk, a distance of forty kilometers. One of my 
      brother’s family’s neighbors was an inspector of the city and of the civil 
      defense. When he heard about the incident he issued us with new papers 
      with a new passport, and I remained again with the family. The communists 
      began to arrive, among them the officers who enlisted for the Red Army.
      I was sent by the neighbor one place so they would not 
      enlist me also. There was a rich Jew and we lived with him to prevent 
      searches. When a search was made they hid me below under the bed linen 
      until the fuss was over.
      My brother with difficulty reached Horlovka, but he 
      wanted to return to the family and it was decided to sell the estate and 
      we all moved to Horlovka and lived in a cellar in the yard of the mine. So 
      I also began to work in the mine until the year 1921. The famine was great 
      but since there was barley for the work horses we ground part of it into 
      flour to bake bread.
      When the Soviet authority was organized we rented an 
      apartment within the city Horlovka at a distance of two kilometers from 
      the mine and we moved to live in the city. The mine was expanded and we 
      all worked in it.
      Near the city there was a much bigger mine with 
      thousands of workers and better coal because it was deeper. The coal from 
      our mine they distributed to the workers in order to save the good coal 
      for the trains. They gave me a horse and cart in order to deliver the coal 
      to the houses of the workers. 
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      VI
      
      Eretz Israel
      This situation continued until 1922. My brother sold the 
      mine and we decided to go to Eretz Yisrael.
      Three of my brothers set out. My mother stayed with two 
      other brothers. Two of the brothers continued on to Eretz Yisrael and I 
      still remained in Rostov which was on the way in order to buy with the 
      money which I had earned some gold and diamonds in order to exchange the 
      cash with something of value. That is how I got to Baku where two brothers 
      awaited me. We remained there together a week. We missed the train because 
      the purpose was to get closer to the target. Meanwhile we remained in 
      Baku. We sold the diamonds and the gold and exchanged them for fabrics in 
      order to make some profit. They sent me with the fabric back to Horlovka 
      where I sold it and the brothers remained in Baku to await transport to 
      continue the journey. I needed to get there in order to travel together 
      with them. But meanwhile I took sick and was unable to return. Meanwhile 
      two of the brothers left Baku to travel to Eretz Yisrael.
      We reached Baku because we heard that once a month a 
      ship embarked and within a month reached the borders of Israel. We missed 
      the ship by a few days and we had to wait for the next ship. My two 
      brothers and I sat and waited and meanwhile we wanted to find work for our 
      sustenance so as not to spend on food the money we needed for the journey.
      My brother Yaakov found work with a seamstress of hats 
      at a workshop of five or six people. My brothers did the distribution, For 
      me there was no work and so my brother suggested that I sell my property 
      such as diamonds which I brought with me and we would by fabric which was 
      cheap in Baku and take it to Horlovka to sell so as to earn our 
      livelihood.
      That was what I did. Mother was very happy at my 
      arrival. The brother who had remained with mother sold the fabric in the 
      market in Horlovka.  And I thought of returning to Baku. Mother opposed my 
      return and I stayed to live with mother. Exactly that night I became ill 
      with a very high temperature and the doctor that it was malaria which 
      continued for months. The money meanwhile was spent and my brothers who 
      remained in Baku in that time traveled to Eretz Yisrael. Their journey 
      took months and with great difficulty they arrived in Eretz Yisrael.
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      I remained in Horlovka 
      I remained in Horlovka with mother and began to look for 
      work. Mother managed the house again and was very happy and I began to 
      trade in leather. Each week I brought from the leather factory a quantity 
      of leather which I sold and made a reasonable profit. The authorities 
      demanded a permit to carry on trading. The taxes were high and I could not 
      cope with them. I sold the shop and traveled to my birthplace, the colony 
      Azarevitch11. When I lived with mother a young woman lived as a neighbor who 
      seemed to be very suitable for me. But as long as I had no fixed 
      livelihood I did not want to make contact. I remained on the colony and 
      received two dunams of land which I started to cultivate. I 
      proposed that the girl should join me but she did not arrive. After I had 
      worked the land for half a year I operated a small farm. Not far from the 
      colony was the town Hulyaipolye which served also as a purchase center for 
      the colony. A cousin who lived in the town and her husband Moshe suggested 
      I organize a cooperative to work leather. Although this was difficult work 
      I was prepared to join. I took my house and cart from the colony with the 
      object of selling them so as to collect a sum with which to become a 
      member of the company. 
      In order to get to Hulyaipolye I passed through a small 
      colony where I had acquaintances. Steady rain fell and I stayed for 
      Shabbat with relatives. On Sunday I reached the town with one horse for 
      which I received with an addition of three hundred rubles. I gave the 
      horse as an addition to the amount that was lacking, and the horse dragged 
      the wheel of the machine which processed the leather.
      The cooperative needed two more people and I suggested 
      my family and my brother-in-law arrived to join the business and went to 
      fetch his family.
      In the yard of the factory lived a family where I ate 
      and lived for seventy five rubles and there remained an amount from my 
      wages each month so that I could invite the girl I had met in order to get 
      married.
      I acquired an apartment. In the same yard there was an 
      apartment which needed repairing. I traveled to the girl’s parents and we 
      went to the regional city called Bmkhmud (sic) and there was a shokhet 
      there who was permitted to perform marriages. One of my relatives who 
      lived there in that city we made there the khupah in the presence 
      of one brother who was able to get there. We returned to the place where 
      we were able to live and work.
      In the time when I lived in Azarevitch there was there a 
      synagogue, school, but everything was neglected. They needed a man who 
      would look after renovations and people suggested to my father to take 
      upon himself the job. Father gave in to the demands of the community for 
      the period of the renovations and afterwards returned to his tasks at 
      home. 
      Close to the High Holy Days they started to sell places 
      to pray in the synagogue. Father claimed that with that amount of money 
      they would not be able to manage and they should sell more places and more 
      expensively. To his assistance came local people. Father bought for 
      himself and his sons four places. The price was naturally according to the 
      prestige of the places and also the price of an Aliyah during the 
      service. A man who donated twenty rouble to open the Ark during Neilah 
      would not agree to double the sum as my father asked. So father took upon 
      himself the task. This affair caused an argument among the family because 
      the man was the father of a son-in-law of ours. A compromise was suggested 
      that each would give twenty five rubles and the honor would be given to 
      the grandfather.
      We returned to Hulyaipolye; my wife brought with her the 
      dowry and we bought furniture and the factory set up the apartment for us. 
      Together with my wife came her cousin who helped us to get organized. At 
      night my wife remembered something which she had left outside. She went 
      out to get it and when she returned she forgot to close the door. When we 
      rose in the morning we found the cupboard and all the other things had 
      been stolen. My wife traveled to her parents and they helped us to buy new 
      things. In the course of time a daughter and son were born. After some 
      time my mother had to come to us as she had no other place.
      The factory needed additional people and they accepted 
      my brother and he reached us with his family. We found for him a rented 
      apartment and my nephew was also accepted. We shared everything that we 
      earned equally since the salary was according to seniority.
      My brother and I bought an apartment in a large and nice 
      house where we lived for seven years. In the same house also lived the 
      American clerk of HIAS and he paid us rent.
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      The Stalin Period
      The Stalin period arrived and the pressure began to be 
      hard. There was a government demand to close the factory to purify the 
      air. They combined us with a larger factory at Plukhi station eighteen 
      kilometers away. Three of us took a room there during the week and for 
      Shabbat we returned home. When I got sick of this arrangement I left the 
      factory. I thought of going to Potropetrovsk (sic) to buy a house there 
      after selling the property on the colony. During this time I saved some 
      money and I bought gold coins. There lived also the brother of my cousin 
      and he joined me and we both traveled to his brother where we received 
      work in the leather industry. Meanwhile the family stayed on the colony 
      until we got settled. The conditions of life in the city were hard and 
      expensive and I returned home.
      My wife claimed that we should move to Horlovka to the 
      family. We did that and rented an apartment by her parents. I got work 
      from my wife’s cousin who was a construction manager. 
      In the course of time a brick factory was opened where 
      my nephew worked as a manage of the factory and he suggested to me to join 
      him at the factory a hundred kilometers away. 
      After a year my cousin was sent to Kharchovk (sic) since 
      he was a member of the Party. I and my family returned to Horlovka and I 
      returned to the previous work. I was sent to clarify the matter of cement 
      which was not sent to our factory from a distance of a hundred and fifty 
      kilometers. The manager of the center related that he had to receive ten 
      trucks and they would distribute the material to the places that were in 
      need. I suggested myself to organize the work since they looked for a man 
      who did not get drunk and who was honest. A meeting was made with the 
      person in charge and I was accepted to this work.
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      [The rest of the memoirs contains detailed personal 
      activities ]