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Jewish repatriates from the USSR – lecture by F. Lyons


Organizers:

Tadeusz Taube Chair of Jewish Studies UWr

Date:

6 April 2023, 18:00

Place:

Tadeusz Taube Chair of Jewish Studies UWr, ul. Świętej Jadwigi 3/4, aula im. prof. Jerzego Woronczaka (room 115)

The Tadeusz Taube Chair of Jewish Studies at the University of Wrocław invites you to a meeting with Frankee Lyons from the University of Illinois on 6.04 (Thursday) at 6 p.m. She will present a lecture in English entitled “We Will Live, Then We Will See …: Jews and the Second Repatriation from Soviet Union, 1956-1960”, which is part of her PhD project “Jewish Belonging and the ‘Polish Road to Socialism,’ 1953-60”.

Lecture announcement

In 1956, Polish and Soviet authorities again negotiated terms for a formalized repatriation process – the so-called “Second Repatriation” – leading to the transfer of tens of thousands of people from the Soviet Union to Poland, including thousands of Jews. This talk will examine the situation of Jewish repatriates as they either transited through “repatriation points” in Poland or attempted to settle longer-term into their new localities.

The influx of Jewish repatriates, particularly during the peak repatriation years of 1956-8, raised new questions about the nature and future of Polish Jewry in the post-Stalinist period. Jewish repatriates faced unique challenges in securing employment and housing. In addressing these issues, the issue of Jewish repatriation became a rallying cry for the Jewish community. The pre-existing Polish Jewish community built and reinvigorated public Jewish space, including community infrastructure. Return and repatriation, and the various challenges these processes raised, were foundational elements that brought Jews together in post-Stalinist Poland.

Bio

Frankee Lyons is a PhD candidate in Modern Eastern European History at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC). She is completing a dissertation entitled Jewish Belonging and the ‘Polish Road to Socialism,’ 1953-60, which examines Jewish experiences during post-Stalinist political liberalization and new migration policies generated in this period. She has taught courses on Polish and Jewish history for UIC and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, and she recently served as an historical consultant for the Programs on Ethics, Religion, and the Holocaust at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Her research has been funded by Fulbright, Title VIII, and JDC Archives grants.

The project “Integrated Program for the Development of the University of Wrocław 2018-2022” co-financed by the European Union from the European Social Fund

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