
Medzhybizh Castle today
'Medzhybizh' (, ,
Translit: ''Medzhibozh'',
Polish: Międzybórz, Międzyborz or Międzybóż, , translit. ''Mezhbizh'') is a
town in the
Khmelnytskyi Oblast (
province) of western
Ukraine. It is located in the
Letychivsky Raion (
district), on the main road between
Khmelnitsky and
Vinnitsa. Medzhybizh was formerly a prominent town in
Podolia Province and was the birth place of
Chasidic Jewish movement. Its name comes from "mezhbuzhye" which means "between the Buzhenka (and the Bug) Rivers".
Population 4,614.
History
Earliest History

Medzhybizh Castle in 1850.

Medzhybizh Castle from a 1900 postcard.

19th century mill buildings adjacent to the mill dam and the lake on the Yuzhny Bug
Medzhybizh is first mentioned in the annals of Russian history as an estate of the
Kievan Rus. It was given to Prince Svyatoslav by the prince of Kiev in the year 1146. In 1148, ownership transferred to Rostislav the son of Yuri Dolgaruky Svyatoslav. By 1360, the territory passed into the hands of the Lithuanians. It suffered numerous attacks, most notably by the
Tatars in 1453, 1506, 1516, 1546, 1558, 1566, and 1615. In the 1500s, the territory was controlled by Sieniawska and
Potocki Polish noble families. In 1511 work began to replace the wooden palisades with massive stone fortifications, many of which can still be seen today. A dam was built across the Yuzhny Bug river to provide a defensive lake, and a rhomboid castle with four towers was built. The state-of-the-art fortifications made Medzhybizh one of the strongest military sites in the region and thus led to its prosperity in later centuries.
The first records of Jews in Medzhybizh show up in the early 1500s. In these records, various Jews are granted special privileges by the Polish Kings, including a proclamation in 1566 by King Sigizmund II August that Medzhybizh Jews are forever released from paying taxes. The earliest known burial in the Jewish cemetery dates from 1555. In 1571 a census was recorded, listing 95 Russians, 35 Jews, and 30 Poles.
In the mid-16th century the Zaslavskys, a Polish noble family, turned Medzhybizh into an impregnable fortress. The Zaslavkys used Medzhybizh as their base from which to defend the southern borders from the incursions of the Turks and Crimean Tartars.
[1]
Khmelnitsky Massacres
In 1648
Bogdan Khmelnitsky's cossacks invaded the region. At the time, there were approximately 12,000 residents of Medzhybizh and environs. A Jewish ''historish lid'' (historic song) records that 5,000 Jews were massacred by
Khmelnitsky that year in Medzhybizh.
Jan Casimir and
Khmelnitsky negotiated a treaty in 1649 to end the hostilities, but
pogroms continued in 1651 and 1653. By 1661, only a handful of Jews remained in Medzhybizh. The year 1664 marked the last of the cossack
pogroms. By 1678, only 275 Jews were counted in the region's census.
Turkish Rule and later Polish Period
Weakened by the cossack uprising, Podolia was invaded and occupied by Turkey in 1672. Medzhybizh became part of the Turkish Ejalet of Kamieniecki. In 1682, Medzhybizh was recaptured by the Poles under
Jan Sobieski.
After Medzhybizh was repatriated from the Turks, it went through what many consider its golden age during the 17th and 18th century. Under the Sieniawski family and later the Czartoryski family, the town prospered. Medzhybizh apparently successfully defended itself from several
Haidamak attacks. By the mid 1700s, Medzhybizh was the seat of power in
Podolia Province. It had a population of 2,500 Jews, which was more than half of the town's population.
Russian Rule
Medzhybizh fell into Russian hands during the
second partition of Poland in 1792. The Czartoryski family continued to own the town until
Prince Adam Czartoryski was forced into exile in 1831. During Russian rule, the seat of power for
Podolia moved from Medzhybizh to
Kamieniec Podolski. The economy of Medzhybizh deteriorated as the nearby town of
Letichev flourished and the railroad bypassed the town to the south.
In the late 1880s through
World War I, Medzhybizh was the center of military activity, housing an important garrison within its castle grounds.
Soviet Rule
After the 1917
Bolshevik Revolution, the territory was occupied by German and Hungarian troops until the end of
World War I. Medzhybizh was the scene of numerous
pogroms during the
Ukrainian Civil War of 1919-1922. The town changed hands many times as different militia units from either the Bolsheviks, Ukrainian Nationalists, Poles, or Whites gained temporary control. What little wealth was left was stripped in these pogroms turning the entire area into ruins.
Under Soviet rule starting 1922, the region's economy improved. Electricity, schools, roads and other infrastructure were built. Several
kolkhozi (collective farms) were established near Medzhybizh.
In the early 1930s, pressure from the government to collectivize and the needs of private peasants resulted in severe food shortages that resulted in
famines throughout Ukraine.
World War II

Monument to the approximately 3,000 Medzhybizh Jews who were executed in three nearby ravines in 1942
Medzhybizh fell to
Nazi forces during
Operation Barbarossa on July 8, 1941 with relatively light resistance. It remained in
Nazi hands until it was liberated by Soviet troops on March 24, 1944.
Medzhybizh was astride an important east-west supply road that the
Nazis wanted to expand into an
autobahn-like highway. This road led directly between the city of
Proskurov and routes westward into
Germany and the city of
Vinnitsa with routes to the eastern front. Vinnitsa was the site of
Hitler's headquarters bunker in Soviet territory where he personally directed the war between 1942 and 1943.
A Jewish
ghetto was established in Medzhybizh and in
Letichev to assist
Organisation Todt in providing human labor for the road building project. Because of this special road project, Medzhybizh retained its Jews longer than most of the surrounding communities, where
Einsatzgruppen units executed entire populations of Jews shortly after
Nazi occupation. However, when the road project was completed in the summer of 1942, the
Einsatzgruppen units were called in. Three separate mass shootings of Jews occurred between August 21, 1942 and October 31, 1942 that eliminated all Jews in the
ghetto. Soviet authorities reported that 2,558 Jews were murdered in ravines to the west of town.
Jewish History
Medzhybizh was the center of Jewish culture in its region in
Ukraine. Many key rabbinic leaders lived here during the 17th through 20th centuries. The earliest important rabbi to make Medzhybizh home was
Rabbi Joel Sirkes (1561-1640), a key figure in Judaism at that time. He lived in Medzhybizh from 1604-12.
Perhaps the most important Jewish rabbi was
Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer Baal Shem Tov "Besht" (1698-1760). He lived in Medzhybizh from about 1742 until his death in 1760. His grave can be seen today in the Medzhybizh old Jewish cemetery. The Baal Shem Tov is considered one of the key Jewish personalities of the 18th century who has shaped Judaism into what it is today. His work led to the founding the
chasidic movement, established by his disciples, some of whom also lived in Medzhybizh, but most of whom travelled, sometimes from great distances, to visit and learn from him. In Medzhybizh, the Baal Shem Tov was also known as a "doktor" and healer to both Jews and non-Jews. He was known to have been given a special tax-free dispensation by the
Czartoryski lords and his house shows up on several town censuses.
There were two fundamentally different rabbinic leaders in the town, those who were Chasidic and those who were not. In general, both groups got along, but the Chasidic leaders believed themselves to have a special connection with God and their followers were cult-like in their devotion to their "rebbe". The non-Chasidic leaders tended to follow a scholarly path and were more responsible for the Jewish institutions, such as observance of
kashrut, the social structure of the town, liaison with the town's nobles, and control of the
Jewish court.
Chasidic leaders included Rabbi
Boruch of Medzhybizh (1757-1811), the
Baal Shem Tov's grandson. Rabbi Boruch was notable for his principle of ''malkhus'' (royalty) and conducted his court accordingly. He was also known for his "melancholy" and he had a fiery temper. Many of his grandfather's disciples and the great Hasidic leaders of the time, regularly visited Rabbi Boruch, including the
Magid of Chernobyl, the
Magid of Mezritch, Rabbi
Shneur Zalman of Liadi (founder of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement), and others.
In an attempt to remedy Rabbi Boruch's melancholy, his followers brought in
Hershel of Ostropol as a court jester of sorts. Hershel was one of the first documented Jewish comedians and his exploits are legendary within both the Jewish and non-Jewish communities. Hershel is also buried in the old Jewish cemetery in Medzhybizh, though his grave is unmarked. One legend has it that in a fit of rage Rabbi Boruch himself was responsible for Hershel's death.
[2][3]
Rabbi
Nachman of Bratslav (1772-1810), the
Baal Shem Tov's great-grandson, was born in Medzhybizh but left at an early age. He became the founder of the
Bratslaver Chasidim.
Another Chasidic leader, Rabbi
Avraham Yehoshua Heshel of
Apt (1748-1825) "The Apter Rov", made Medzhybizh his home from 1813 until his death in 1825. The Apter Rov is also buried in the old Jewish cemetery in Medzhybizh, very close to the
Baal Shem Tov's grave. The
Heshel family became one the foremost Chasidic rabbinic dynasties and various descendants remained in Medzhybizh well into the 20th century. This family took wives several times from the Friedman rabbinic family of the
Sadigura Rebbe. The famous American rabbi and civil rights proponent,
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (1907-1972) is a notable descendant.
The non-Chasidic rabbinic leadership of Medzhybizh was controlled by the
Rapoport-Bick dynasty, the most important of all the non-Chasidic rabbinic dynasties of Medzhybizh. Rabbi
Dov Berish Rapoport (d. 1823) was the first to make Medzhybizh his home. He was the grandson of Rabbi
Khaim haCohen Rapoport of Lvov (d. 1771), a notable sage during the mid 18th century. Dov Berish Rapoport's grave can be seen today at the old Jewish cemetery in Medzhybizh. Other rabbis of this dynasty include Rabbi
Isaac Bick (1864-1934) who immigrated to America in 1925 and founded a synagogue in
Rhode Island. Rabbi Chaim Yekhiel Mikhel Bick (1887-1964) was the last known rabbi to reside in Medzhybizh. He left Medzhybizh for New York in 1925. It is not known whether Medzhybizh had another rabbi when it served as a Jewish ghetto in
World War II.
The
Rapoport Dynasty traces its roots back to Rabbi
Jacob Emden (1697-1776) who was involved in the
Frankist debates and his father
Rabbi Tsvi Hirsh Ashkenazi, known as the ''Chacham Tsvi'' (1660-1718). The
Rapoports themselves are a long distinguished rabbinic family that traces its roots back to
Central Europe and Northern
Italy in the 15th century. The first Rapoport rabbi to make his home in Medzhybizh was Rabbi Dov Berish Rapoport (d. 1823). He was the grandson of Rabbi Khaim haCohen Rapoport of
Lvov (d. 1771), who was also involved in the
Frankist debates. Rabbi Dov Berish became the head of the Jewish court (''Ab
Beit Din'') and leader of the entire Jewish community of Medzhybizh. However, in a dispute with Rabbi Moshe Khaim Ephraim, the
Baal Shem Tov's grandson around the year 1800, the non-Chasidic and the Chasidic communities separated into two leadership groups. The Rapoport/ Bick family continued to control the town's Jewish court. The Chasidic community at the time chose Rabbi Issachar Dov-Ber Landa to represent them in official matters. Interestingly, both Rabbis Rapoport and Landa are buried side-by-side in the Medzhybizh Jewish Cemetery, just a few steps away from the Baal Shem Tov's grave.
Jewish Institutions in Medzhybizh

18th Century gravestones at the old Jewish cemetery in Medzhybizh

Gravestone of the Baal Shem Tov in Medzhybizh
Medzhybizh was the home to at least two synagogue buildings and probably numerous small minyanim. One synagogue still stands today but is used for other purposes. It is a stone fortress-like building thought to be
Rabbi Sirkes' synagogue. The other synagogue, the
Baal Shem Tov's old wooden synagogue, was torn down during World War II to use as firewood for the Jewish ghetto.
Medzhybizh also contains two Jewish cemeteries. The old Jewish cemetery contains the grave of the
Baal Shem Tov and other famous and notable Jews. It has turned into something of a tourist attaction, a magnet for Chasidic Jews from all over the world. The new Jewish cemetery has graves from the early 1800s through to the 1980s. A Nazi mass killing site outside of town holds the graves of almost 3,000 Jews in 3 different trenches.
Sites to See
Today, Medzhybizh is dominated by a castle and fortifications built during the Polish period. Many of these fortifications are deteriorating, however inside the castle is a museum which describes some of the history of the area. The castle itself consists of four towers and overlooks the main road and the dam.
Just outside the castle, the dam and the lake are still in working order. Adjacent to the dam are two old mill buildings that are no longer used but used to be a valuable concession (arenda) during Tsarist and Polish times.
North of town is the old Jewish cemetery, which has turned into a tourist attraction primarily for
Chasidic Jews making a pilgrimage to see the
Baal Shem Tov's grave. Legend has it that this cemetery remained protected and well-preserved during
World War II because the local Ukrainian population remembered the Baal Shem Tov's healing powers during his lifetime and they were afraid of his powerful magic even beyond the grave. The old Jewish cemetery contains a modern building over the graves of the important Jewish dignitaries. Other gravestones in this cemetery are worth visiting as the artwork on many stones shows a level of cultural achievement matching the rise of importance of the town. The oldest burial in this cemetery dates from 1555.
Toward the central western portion of town is the new Jewish cemetery, which is only in fair condition. Here Jews are buried from the early 1800s through modern times.
Outside of town to the west, and adjacent to the Yuzhny Bug river, is the
Nazi mass killing site where approximately 3,000 Jews were buried. A monument marks the site. The three ravines that holds the graves are covered in concrete.
Famous People
★ Rabbi
Joel Sirkes (1561-1640), a prominent rabbi of his generation
★ Rabbi Israel ben Eliezar
Baal Shem Tov (1698-1760), founder of
Chasidism
★ Rabbi
Boruch of Medzhybizh (1757-1811), son of Udl the daughter of the
Baal Shem Tov
★ Rabbi
Nachman of Breslav (1772-1810), Great Grandson of the Baal Shem Tov and founder of the
Bratslaver Chasidim
★
Hershel of Ostropol (early 1800s), Jewish comedy figure
★ Rabbi
Avraham Yehoshua Heshel of
Apt (1748-1825), the "Apter Rov" and founder of the
Apt/Mezhbizh/Zinkover Chasidic rabbinic dynasty
★
Micha Josef Berdyczewski (Micha Bin Goryon) (1865–1921), Hebrew author
★
Joseph Barondess (1867-1928), after living with his wife in Medzhibozh, immigrated to the US in 1888 and became an important labor leader and politician
★ Leonid Afanasyevich Berdichevski (1908-1944), son of
Micha Josef Berdyczewski, rose to the rank of Lt. Colonel in the Soviet army during
World War II. Was awarded "Hero of the Soviet Union" because of a heroic stand where he was mortally wounded in a tank battle near Yelgava.
★ Milton Shprintzen (1912-2007), born in Medzhybizh, escaped pogroms to emigrate first to Montreal and then to New York in the 1920s. Beginning work as a laborer in textile companies, he worked his way to partnership in a textile firm in New York City and after retiring from that business, he started a new career in finance working until he was past 90.
[1]
External links
★
Medzhybizh information
★ Анатолий Хаеш.
Несостоявшееся выселение евреев из Меджибожа (1843-1852 гг.) (Anatoly Haesh: ''The Exile of Jews from Medzhibizh that Never Happened'')
Bibliography
Chapin, David A. and Weinstock, Ben, ''The Road from Letichev: The history and culture of a forgotten Jewish community in Eastern Europe, Volume 1''. ISBN 0-595-00666-3 iUniverse, Lincoln, NE, 2000.
Chapin, David A. and Weinstock, Ben, ''The Road from Letichev: The history and culture of a forgotten Jewish community in Eastern Europe, Volume 2''. ISBN 0-595-00667-1 iUniverse, Lincoln, NE, 2000.
Rabinowicz, Tzvi M. ''The Encyclopedia of Hasidism'': ISBN 1-56821-123-6 Jason Aronson, Inc., 1996.
Rosman, Moshe, ''Founder of Hasidism'': ISBN 0-520-20191-4 Univ. of Calif. Press, 1996.
Rosman, Moshe, "Miedzyboz and Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov", ''Zion'', Vol. 52, No. 2, 1987, p. 177-89. Reprinted within ''Essential Papers on Hasidism'' ed, G.D. Hundert ISBN 0-814-73470-7, New York, 1991.
Rosman, Moshe, ''The Lords' Jews: Magnate-Jewish Relations in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the Eighteenth Century'', ISBN 0-916-45847-4 Cambridge, MA, 1990.
Notes
1. Medzhybizh
2. Wiesel, Elie, 1978, ''Four Hasidic masters and their struggle against melancholy:'' Univ. of Notre Dame Press, p. 54-56
3. Learsi. R., 1961, ''Filled with Laughter: A Fiesta of Jewish Folk Humor:'' Thomas Yoseloff, p. 183-184.
See also
★
Meziboří (
Schönbach), near
Most, is a different city in the
Czech Republic.
★
Międzybórz (Sycowski) (''
Neumittelwalde'') is the eponymous city in
Silesia, now
Poland.
★
Międzybórz (disambiguation page).
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