1772 — 1991

The movement they could
not break — no matter
how hard they tried

Chabad in Russia: two centuries of persecution that became two centuries of resilience

219 years of persecution — in numbers
2
arrests of the Alter Rebbe in the Peter & Paul Fortress
53
days in the Alexeyevsky Ravelin in 1798
70 000
Jewish boys taken as cantonists over 29 years
5 million
Jews confined to the Pale of Settlement
1 100+
synagogues closed in the USSR by 1939
death
sentence
verdict against the Frierdiker Rebbe in 1927
14
years in the Gulag served by Chassid Mendel Futerfas
0
legal yeshivot in the USSR by 1930
Timeline of Persecution · 1772–1991
Tsarist Russia
Soviet USSR
Twilight
1772
1991
1772Chabad
Founded
1812Napoleon.
Aided Russia
1843Tzemach Tzedek
Arrested
1903Kishinev
Pogrom
1927Death
Sentence
1941Holocaust
in Ukraine
1991End of
Persecution
1798Alter Rebbe
in Prison
1827Cantonism.
70,000 Children
1881First Wave
of Pogroms
1917Revolution.
Yevsektsiya
1937Great
Terror
1951Gulag.
Futerfas
The Pale of Settlement · 1791–1917 · A Prison Without Walls
Map of the Pale of Settlement, Russian Empire
Around 5 million Jews were required to live only within this zone. Leaving without permission was a criminal offence.

Lubavitch history did not live in silence. It unfolded across the Pale of Settlement, through tsarist restrictions, the poverty of the shtetl, revolution, civil war, and pogroms in which tens of thousands of Jews were murdered on the lands of Ukraine. Against this backdrop, Lubavitch became not merely a geographic place but a spiritual fortress — a point where Jewish memory, faith, and dignity continued to live despite the violence of history.

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