In 1860, Simon Dubnow was born
Shimon Meyerovich Dubnow (Шимон Меерович Дубнов) to a large poor family in the
Belarusian town of
Mstsislaw (
Mogilev Region). A native
Yiddish speaker, he received a traditional Jewish education in a
heder and a
yeshiva, where
Hebrew was regularly spoken. Later Dubnow entered into a
kazyonnoye yevreyskoe uchilishche (state Jewish school) where he learned
Russian. In the midst of his education, the
May Laws eliminated these Jewish institutions, and Dubnow was unable to graduate; Dubnow persevered, independently pursuing his interests in
history,
philosophy, and
linguistics. He was particularly fascinated by
Heinrich Graetz and the
Wissenschaft des Judentums movement. In 1880 Dubnow used forged documents to move to
St Petersburg, officially off-limits to Jews. Jews were generally restricted to small towns in the
Pale of Settlement, unless they had been discharged from the military, were employed as doctors or dentists, or could prove they were '
cantonists', university graduates or merchants belonging to the 1st guild. Here he married Ida Friedlin. Soon after moving to St. Petersburg Dubnow's publications appeared in the press, including the leading Russian–Jewish magazine
Voskhod. In 1890, the Jewish population was expelled from the capital city, and Dubnow too was forced to leave. He settled in
Odesa and continued to publish studies of Jewish life and history, coming to be regarded as an authority in these areas. Throughout his active participation in the contemporary social and political life of the
Russian Empire, Dubnow called for modernizing Jewish education, organizing Jewish self-defense against
pogroms, and demanding equal rights for Russian Jews, including the right to vote. Living in
Vilna,
Lithuania, during the early months of
1905 Russian Revolution, he became active in organizing a Jewish political response to opportunities arising from the new civil rights which were being promised. In this effort he worked with a variety of Jewish opinion, e.g., those favouring
diaspora autonomy,
Zionism,
socialism, and
assimilation. In 1906 he was allowed back into St Petersburg, where he founded and directed the Jewish Literature and Historical-Ethnographic Society and edited the
Jewish Encyclopedia. In the same year, he founded the
Folkspartei (Jewish People's Party) with Israel Efrojkin, which successfully worked for the election of
MPs and municipal councilors in interwar
Lithuania and
Poland. After 1917 Dubnow became a professor of Jewish history at
Petrograd University. He welcomed the first
February Revolution of 1917 in Russia, regarding it, according to scholar
Robert van Voren, as having "brought the long-anticipated
liberation of the Jewish people", although he "felt uneasy about the increasing profile of
Lenin". Dubnow did not consider such
Bolsheviks as
Trotsky (Bronstein) to be Jewish, stating: "They appear under Russian pseudonyms because they are ashamed of their Jewish origins (Trotsky,
Zinoviev, others). But it would be better to say that their Jewish names are pseudonyms; they are not rooted in our people." In 1922 Dubnow emigrated to
Kaunas,
Lithuania, and later to
Berlin. His
magnum opus was the ten-volume
World History of the Jewish people, first published in
German translation in 1925–1929. Of its significance, historian
Koppel Pinson writes: With this work Dubnow took over the mantle of Jewish national historian from
Graetz. Dubnow's
Weltgeschichte may in truth be called the first secular and purely scholarly synthesis of the entire course of
Jewish history, free from dogmatic and theological trappings, balanced in its evaluation of the various epochs and regional groupings of Jewish historical development, fully cognizant of social and economic currents and influences ... During 1927 Dubnow initiated a search in Poland for
pinkeysim (record books kept by
Kehillot and other local Jewish groups) on behalf of the
Yidisher Visnshaftlekher Institut (YIVO, Jewish Scientific Institute), while he was Chairman of its Historical Section. This spadework for the historian netted several hundred writings; one
pinkes dated to 1601, that of the Kehillah of
Opatów. In August 1933, after
Hitler came to power, Dubnow moved to
Riga,
Latvia. He chose Latvia in part for its government's support for Jewish self-reliance and the vigorous Jewish community in the small country. There existed a Jewish theater, various Jewish newspapers, and a network of Yiddish-language schools. and participating in YIVO, the Institute for Jewish Research. Then in July 1941
Nazi troops occupied Riga. Dubnow was evicted, losing his entire library. With thousands of Jews, he was transferred to the
Riga ghetto. According to the few remaining survivors, Dubnow repeated to ghetto inhabitants:
Yidn, shraybt un farshraybt (, write and record"). He was among thousands of Jews to be rounded up there for the
Rumbula massacre. Too sick to travel to the forest, he was murdered in the city on 8 December 1941. Several friends then buried Simon Dubnow in the old cemetery of the Riga ghetto. ==Political ideals==