Metadata: Kotovsk Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine; Kotovsk
Collection
- Country:
- Ukraine
- Holding institution:
- State Archive of the Odessa Region
- Holding institution (official language):
- Державний архів Одеської області; Государственный архив Одесской области
- Postal address:
- 18, Zhukovskogo str., Оdessa, 65026, Ukraine
- Phone number:
- 380 (48) 722-9365
- Web address:
- http://archive.odessa.gov.ua/en/
- Email:
- archive@odessa.gov.ua
- Reference number:
- F. P-61
- Title:
- Kotovsk Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine; Kotovsk
- Title (official language):
- Котовский городской комитет Компартии Украины, г. Котовск; Котовський міський комітет Компартії України, м. Котовськ
- Creator/accumulator:
- Kotovsk Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine; Kotovsk
- Date(s):
- 1918/1991
- Language:
- Russian
- Yiddish
- Extent:
- (10,862 files)
- Type of material:
- Textual material
- Scope and content:
- Included (op. 1a) are informational bulletins and materials of the Birzula District Committee of the Moldavian organization of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine, which contain data on the ethnic makeup of the party and Komsomol [Communist Union of Youth] organisations, of the population of the Birzula district, teachers and students of anti-illiteracy [likbez] institutions therein, etc.; statistical information on the number of Jewish schools and textbooks provided to them; on the number of religious congregations, including Jewish ones, and of members of the clergy, including rabbis (1925-26); minutes of sessions of the national minorities’ bureau and the Jewish section of the Moldavian Regional Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine which took up, in particular, proposals to organise a branch of the Society for Land Settlement of Jewish Toilers (OZET), and to raise the issue (with the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine, the Committee on Land Settlement of Jewish Toilers (KOMZET), and the USSR Central Executive Committee) of including the Moldavian Autonomous SSR in further operational plans regarding Jewish resettlement (1925); minutes of sessions of the national minorities’ bureau of the Birzula District Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine on the need to conduct work in the Yiddish language, and to recruit Jewish teachers to work with the Crafts Union (Kustsoiuz); on the distribution of Jewish periodicals (including the newspapers Der shtern, Der poyer, Yunge gvardye, and Zay greyt) in the territory of the Moldavian Autonomous SSR (1929); etc.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- The Kotovsk Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine originally functioned as a district committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine; it was organised as a municipal committee in 1965, when Kotovsk (which was called Birzula until May 1935, was the capital of the Moldavian Autonomous SSR from 1928-29, gained the status of a city in June 1938, and became part of the Odessa region in August 1940) became a city of regional jurisdiction. As part of the Odessa region, both the Odessa and Kotovsk Municipal Committees were subordinate to the Odessa Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine. They were liquidated pursuant to the edicts of the presidium of the Supreme Council of Ukraine (26 August 1991) “On temporarily suspending activities of the Communist Party of Ukraine” and (30 August 1991) “On barring the activities of the Communist Party of Ukraine.”
- Access points: locations:
- Ukraine
- Subject terms:
- Agriculture
- Communism
- Communism--Communist parties and organisations
- Education
- Education--Schools and universities
- Education--Teachers and professors
- Jewish languages
- Jewish languages--Yiddish
- Professions
- Professions--Crafts
- Rabbis
- Resettlement of Jews
- Statistics
- Synagogues
- Yiddish periodicals
- System of arrangement:
- The fonds includes sixty-six inventories systematised according to the structural-chronological principle.
- Finding aids:
- Inventories are available.
- Yerusha Network member:
- Jewish Theological Seminary