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Broken Heart / Broken Wholeness
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15 March 2017

— Ayse Dietrich, Middle East Technical University, International Journal of Russian Studies Issue no. 6, Jan 2017
“Kotlerman’s book not only vividly recounts Der Nister’s experiences in Birobidzhan but also provides the first English translations of the powerful, moving essays he composed while travelling on the eshelon from Vinnytsia, as well as a substantial excerpt from the hitherto unexamined six thick volumes of Russian transcripts of the subsequent trumped-up ‘Birobidzhan Affair,’ in which Der Nister, Emiot, Kerler, and others were accused of being Jewish conspirators. … [Kotlerman] clearly demonstrates that Der Nister went from being a reclusive, secretive symbolist who kept as far from politics as he could to being a fearless champion of Soviet Jewish nationalism, while taking on an increasingly public role as a kind of secular tzaddik, who blesses, consoles, and advises all who come to him for counsel.” —Allan Nadler, Drew University, Jewish Review of Books (Summer 2019)
— Allan Nadler
“Broken Heart/Broken Wholeness is an exemplary historical case study that combines meticulous archival research with insightful analysis of an event that had fateful consequences for the Soviet Birobidzhan project. It is also a valuable contribution to Jewish cultural history in the Soviet Union, as it shows how the Soviet Jewish elite sought to play an active role in shaping the reconstruction of Jewish life in the wake of the Second World War. Last but not least, this book tells a dramatic personal story of a Yiddish writer who emerged as a spiritual leader of his people, and who paid for his actions with his life.”
—Mikhail Krutikov, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Studies in Contemporary Jewry
Note on the Translation and Transliteration
Acronyms and Abbreviation
Preface
Part One: DER NISTER’S JOURNEY FROM MOSCOW TO BIROBIDZHAN
A Wedding on a Migrant Train
Der Nister’s Images and Impressions
“With the Second Echelon”
“With the New Settlers to Birobidzhan”
A Man Dieth in a Tent
Russian-Jewish “Hybridization”
Comfort Ye My People
Real Action
Part Two: INVESTIGATION CASE NO. 68
Der Nister Affair
Accused in the Case
Detention Order: BUZI MILLER, June 6, 1949, Birobidzhan
Interrogation Records
Defendant HESHL RABINKOV, July 23, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant BUZI MILLER, August 5, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant BUZI MILLER, August 29, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant BUZI MILLER, September 17, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant ITSIK FEFER, June 30, 1949, Moscow
Defendant BUZI MILLER, October 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant BUZI MILLER and Defendant HESHL RABINKOV, October 28, 1949, Khabarovsk (Confrontation)
Defendant LUBA VASSERMAN, July 12, 1949, Khabarovsk
Arrestee GRIGORI FRID, April 4, 1938, Minsk (Testimony)
Defendant LUBA VASSERMAN, August 17, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant SHIMEN SINIAVSKI-SINDELEVICH, October 25, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant FAIVISH ARONES, November 21, 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant FAIVISH ARONES, November [22–29?], 1949, Khabarovsk
Defendant FAIVISH ARONES and Witness ALEKSANDR DRISIN, November 29, 1949, Khabarovsk (Confrontation)
Resubmission of the Indictment: Defendant BUZI MILLER, December 15, 1949, Khabarovsk
Bill of Indictment: BUZI MILLER, HESHL RABINKOV, ISROEL EMIOT, BER SLUTSKI, LUBA VASSERMAN, SHIMEN SINIAVSKI-SINDELEVICH, and FAIVISH ARONES, April 6, 1950, Khabarovsk (Excerpts)
The Sentence: BUZI MILLER, May 31, 1950, Moscow (Excerpt)
Resolution to Reduce the Prison Term and Release BUZI MILLER from Custody, December 27, 1955, Moscow (Excerpt)
Appendix: Der Nister’s “Birobidzhan Manifesto” (Yiddish)
Bibliography
Index of Names and Places