Book details: USTAV TYAN'TSZINSKOY YEVREYSKOY OBSHCHINY : UTVERZHDEN OBSHCHIM SOBRANIYEM CHLENOV OBSHCHINY 30-GO IYULYA 1933 G. V G. TYAN'TSZINE.
$US 875.00
[Tianjin/Tientsin, China] Tyan'tszinskaya Yevreyskaya Obshchina [Tianjin Jewish Community]
USTAV TYAN'TSZINSKOY YEVREYSKOY OBSHCHINY : UTVERZHDEN OBSHCHIM SOBRANIYEM CHLENOV OBSHCHINY 30-GO IYULYA 1933 G. V G. TYAN'TSZINE.
Imprint: Tianjin: No Publisher [The Community], 1933
Edition: First Edition
Binding: Paper Wrappers
1st printing. Original orange printed paper wrappers, 12mo, 12 pages, 17 cm. In Russian. Title translates as, “Statutes of the Tianjin Jewish community: approved by the general meeting of the members of the community on July 30, 1933 in Tianjin.” Copy belonging to Leo Gershevitch, President of the Tientsin Jewish Hebrew Association , The Tientsin Zionist Organization, The Tientsin Jewish Union [The organization in this booklet], the Tientsin Hebrew school, the Culture Club 'Kunst, ’ and other Jewish organizations in Tientsin, with his Yiddish stamp on cover. Up until 1904 only ten Jewish families lived in Tientsin. In 1906 the Jews established the Tientsin Jewish Union which rendered various religious services. Side by side with this union the Tientsin Hebrew Association was active in the city and took care of welfare needs such as soup kitchens, hospitals, homes for the elderly, etc. The 1917 Russian Revolution fueled the rapid growth of the city's Jewish population with many Jewish immigrants from Russia, and “in 1920 the community was formally named The Hebrew Association of Tientsin (THA) [The organization named here in this charter booklet]. In this context the community built a synagogue, engaged a Rabbi and a Shochet, and provided full religious services. Committees for Eretz Israel affairs and hospitals were set up. A singular feature of the community was the establishment of the Benevolent Society in 1920, whose aim was to assist Jews in need and help them settle into their new environment.” Tianjin soon became the third largest Jewish community in China, after Shanghai and Harbin. In 1935, the number of Jewish people in Tianjin reached 3,500. Though most Jews left the city after the 1949 Chinese Revolution. (sinojudaic.org/tianjin), large numbers of Jewish refugees had been streaming to Tianjin before and during World War II, with the city occupied by the Japanese from July 1937 to August 1945. For more on the Tianjin/Tiensin Jewish community, see also https://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/harbin/Growing_Up_in_Tientsin_Chapter_22. pdf. A copy of a similar booklet (which also lists only 1 copy in OCLC) sold at auction in 2023 for $875 (with commission). SUBJECT(S): Jews -- China -- Tientsin -- History. OCLC: 236176584. OCLC lists only one copy anywhere worldwide (National Library of Israel). Very Good+ Condition, an outstanding and exceedingly rare association copy. (Holo2-160-4)
Stock number:42246.