The Rabbi and the revolver

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Suck My Glock

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https://anash.org/why-rabbi-kaminetsky-was-excited-about-a-century-old-revolver/

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When a group of girls from the Swerdlov Program visited the Menorah Center in Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, Shliach Rabbi Shmuel Kaminetsky chose to show them a 114-year-old revolver he had recently acquired, and share the fantastical story behind it.

By Anash.org reporter

The girls walked in, and the rabbi pulled out a gun…

A group of Lubavitch girls, who were touring Ukraine as part of the Swerdlov Program, visited the Menorah Center in Dnepropetrovsk, where they met the country’s Chief Rabbi and Head Shliach Rabbi Shmuel Kaminetsky.

After they were treated to a tour of the building and sat down to speak with Rabbi Kaminetsky, he chose to show them an 114-year-old gun he had recently acquired, together with the fantastical story behind it.

The gun had first been discovered in the early 1990s in the central shul of Dnepropetrovsk, where Harav Levi Yitzchok Schneerson had served as rov, and his son, the Rebbe, had davened as a child and bochur. It had been concealed in the shul by a group of Jewish vigilantes, who had organized to protect the Jewish community from roving mobs and the Red Army and White Army, who were fighting for control of Russia following the Russian revolution of 1917.

But the revolver was more than just an interesting artifact from the city’s Jewish past.

According to residents who had lived in the city during that time period, the Rebbe, as a 17-year-old bochur, had joined the Jewish battalion, and had even served as a commander! Rabbi Kaminetzky shared with the girls that according to testimony he had heard from residents who had been in the brigade, the Rebbe had taken an active role in recruiting young teenagers to join the battalion, and residents called the group “Mendel’s Army.” And whilst the gun could have been used by any member of the battalion, the location where it was found, near the spot where Harav Levi Yitzchok and the Rebbe sat in shul, could perhaps be indicative that it was used by the Rebbe himself.

Following its discovery in the 1990s, the gun had been acquired by a collector. Recently, the collector passed away, and his widow gifted the gun to Rabbi Kaminetsky. The girls’ visit was the first time the gun has been showed to the public, each YTT camper got a chance to handle the gun.

Despite the fact that many would be delighted to acquire a piece of history as unique as this one, Rabbi Kaminetsky has no plans of letting the gun be lost to history. The revolver will be added to the collection of the Jewish Museum in the Menorah Center, and not be offered on auction, or make its way into the hands of another collector.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pogrom

...
The first in 20th-century Russia was the Kishinev pogrom of 1903 in which 49 Jews were killed, hundreds wounded, 700 homes destroyed and 600 businesses pillaged.[44] In the same year, pogroms took place in Gomel (Belarus), Smela, Feodosiya and Melitopol (Ukraine). Extreme savagery was typified by mutilations of the wounded.[45] They were followed by the Zhitomir pogrom (with 29 killed),[46] and the Kiev pogrom of October 1905 resulting in a massacre of approximately 100 Jews.[47] In three years between 1903 and 1906, about 660 pogroms were recorded in Ukraine and Bessarabia; half a dozen more in Belorussia, carried out with the Russian government's complicity, but no anti-Jewish pogroms were recorded in Poland.[45] [highlight=yellow]At about that time, the Jewish Labor Bund began organizing armed self-defense units ready to shoot back, and the pogroms subsided for a number of years.[/highlight][47] According to professor Colin Tatz, between 1881 and 1920 there were 1,326 pogroms in Ukraine (see: Southwestern Krai parts of the Pale) which took the lives of 70,000 to 250,000 civilian Jews, leaving half a million homeless.[48][49] This violence across Eastern Europe prompted a wave of Jewish migration westward that totaled about 2.5 million people.[50]
...
Imagine that. When you shoot back, the attacks stop.
Too bad the kibbutzim in Israel in 2023 forgot that lesson.
 
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