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The Kahans from Baku
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17 May 2022

The Kahans from Baku is the saga of a Russian Jewish family. Their story provides an insight into the history of Jews in the Imperial Russian economy, especially in the oil industry. The entrepreneur and family patriarch, Chaim Kahan, was a pious and enlightened man and a Zionist. His children followed in his footsteps in business as well as in politics, philanthropy, and love of books. The book takes us through their forced migration in times of war, revolution, and the twentieth century’s totalitarian regimes, telling the story of fortune and misfortune of one cohesive family over four generations through Russia, Germany, Denmark, and France, and finally on to Palestine and the United States of America.
“Verena Dohrn’s book presents a complex transnational story of Jewish oil merchants in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, contributing to the growing scope of research on Jewish family businesses in East and Central Europe. … This book will be an interesting read for a broad audience, providing an intimate insight into the private life of oil magnates in turbulent historical times. It may also introduce a new perspective on Jewish business elites to academic readers. The Kahan story transcends the stereotypical divisions between East and West, showing the example of the well-managed business family corporation, which managed to integrate into a few imperial and national contexts of different countries and adapt to the new situations while preserving their complex cultural integrity.”
— Vladyslava Moskalets, Business History
—Gregory L. Freeze, Raymond Ginger Professor of History, Brandeis University
“This fascinating family history takes the reader across countries and continents during the turbulent period of European wars and revolutions, from a small Belarusian shtetl to Baku, Moscow, Petrograd, Berlin, and then on to Tel Aviv and New York. The Kahans were successful entrepreneurs, generous philanthropists and cultural activists who left their mark on modern Jewish life and culture. Thoroughly researched and engagingly written by Verena Dohrn, a prominent German historian of Russian Jewry, this study is not only an important contribution to Jewish history and transnational diaspora studies, but also a captivating reading in its own right."
—Mikhail Krutikov, University of Michigan
Verena Dohrn was Professor of Modern Jewish History in Eastern Europe at Göttingen University. She is the author of Jüdische Eliten im Russischen Reich. Aufklärung und Integration im 19. Jahrhundert, and editor of Simon Dubnow‘s Buch des Lebens. Erinnerungen und Gedanken. Materialien zur Geschichte meiner Zeit 1860-1933.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface — Jonah Gavrieli
In Memoriam Eli Rosenberg — Noa Rosenberg
Translator’s Foreword — Uri Themal
1. Jacob Kahan: Imprisoned. Berlin
2. Chaim Kahan. From Orlya to Brest-Litovsk
3. Life under War Conditions. Berlin
4. On the Move. Vilna, Warsaw, Kharkov, Saratov...
5. Citizenship and the World of Education—Berlin, Bonn, Frankfurt, Marburg, Antwerp
6. To Baku
7. Zina and the Oilfields. Baku
8. Aron and the Black Gold. Baku
9. Summer Resorts during the War. Bad Harzburg, Bad Neuenahr, Bad Polzin
10. Economic Management in Times of War and Revolution. Petrograd
11. Across the Front Line—Berlin, Warsaw, Baku, Moscow, Vilna, Kharkov, Kiev
12. Expulsion from Russia. Baku, Kharkov, Yekaterinoslav, Moscow
13. Fresh Start in the West: Caucasian Oil Company. Copenhagen, Berlin, London, Hamburg, Wilhelmshaven
14. Family in Exile. Berlin
15. Nitag. Berlin
16. Devotion to Books. Petrograd, Vilna, Berlin
17. 36 Schlüterstrasse. Expulsion from Paradise. Berlin
18. The Mavericks between the Wars—European Corporate Networks: Berlin, Hamburg, Copenhagen, London, Riga, Paris, Amsterdam
19. The Third Expulsion. Paris, Lisbon
20. Eretz Israel. Tel Aviv
21. Sanctuaries. The Family Is Alive. New York, Tel Aviv, Ma’agan Michael
Illustrations
Notes