Affichage des articles dont le libellé est WWII. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est WWII. Afficher tous les articles

Jews From Island of Rhodes in the Aegean Sea

Nadene Goldfoot                                                                           
Rhodes, an island off of Turkey, but was a Greek-owned island
a place within the Mediterranean Sea; very close to Israel
where Jews lived undisturbed for about 1,500 years
what a find for geneticists to test DNA

There is an island in the Aegean Sea called Rhodes. It is the largest of Greece’s Dodecanese islands.   According to tradition, Jews came here to live in the 2nd century BCE.  They probably were able to live there as an isolated people until the 12th Century when Sephardi Jews were still escaping from the Spanish Inquisition and joined them, then numbering 500 Jews on the island.  By then, the Middle East had been taken over by the Ottoman Empire and Islam, which developed  with the advent of Mohammad's death in 632.  At that time, the Christian world was coming down on the heads of Jews even earlier than 1492 when the Spanish decree was that all Jews had to either convert or leave the country.                              

The Jews on Rhodes found themselves being governed by the rule of the Knights of St. John, a Christian ruling party, from 1309 to 1522.  It was headquartered in the Kingdom of JerusalemRhodes and Malta,
"After the fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1291 (Jerusalem itself had fallen in 1187), the Knights were confined to the County of Tripoli and, when Acre was captured in 1291, the order sought refuge in the Kingdom of Cyprus. Finding themselves becoming enmeshed in Cypriot politics, their Master, Guillaume de Villaret, created a plan of acquiring their own temporal domain, selecting Rhodes to be their new home, part of the Byzantine empire. His successor, Fulkes de Villaret, executed the plan, and on 15 August 1309, after over two years of campaigning, the island of Rhodes surrendered to the knights. "                             
Knights of St. John-Malta KnightsThe Order of the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem
By the end of this period, they were suffering for having suspected sympathy with the Turks.  In 1577, the Kahal Shalom Synagogue was built, now the oldest synagogue in Greece.

The Turks did take over and rule, which brought many Sephardi settlers and changed the composition of the community which was formerly under the Christian Greeks.
                                                                             
The Colossus of Rhodes is one of official Seven Ancient Wonders of the World
 and was located on the Greek island of Rhodes. The statue depicted the Greek
 God of the Sun, Helios, and was built to commemorate Rhodes’ victory over Cyprus.It is 98 feet tall, just a little shorter than the Statue of Liberty-111 feet tall.  .
Even on this remote island, in 1840 there was the accusation of a Jew committing a ritual murder, something that happened to Jews in the Middle Ages.   It was averted  through the intervention of Sir Moses Montefiore.

WWI came along and the Italians occupied the island from 1912 in an attempt to make Rhodes a center for the diffusion of an Italianized Jewish culture among the Jews of the Middle East, and in the Fascist period, a rabbinical seminary was even established.

Then in 1938 on the brink of WWII, the Italian anti-Semitic legislation led to a considerable exodus from the island mostly  going to Rhodesia and the Belgian Congo.  Benito Mussolini, the Italian dictator, had passed a series of anti-Semitic decrees that affected the Jews of Rhodes because the islands were then Italian.  Those that stayed sadly were deported to their death by the Germans in WWII and few lived out of a population of about 4,000.  They were all murdered on July 23, 1944 by the Nazis.
                                                                         
Rhodes at night
Of the people last on the island, they spoke Ladino, a mixture of Hebrew and Spanish.  The city of Rhodes had a Jewish quarter-or "La Juderia".  Now it's called the Square of the Jewish Martyrs or the Sea Horse Square as there is a fountain there on "La Calle Ancha Road (The Wide Street)".  There is a monument dedicated to the memory of the 1,604 Jews from Rhodes and the nearby smaller island of Kos.
                                                                                 
 This young Turkish consul to Rhodes, Muslim Selahattin Ülkümen. 
Rhodes had a Jewish community of about 2,000  before the War 
and Ülkümen saved many of them by issuing Turkish visas and passports even though it was against direct orders from Turkey. Two researchers, Gilbert and Nyombayire,  went back to Rhodes and interviewed
 Ülkümen’s son as well as two Jewish refugees who were saved
 because of the Diplomat’s efforts.
 During the war, in protest of Ülkümen’s assistance to the Jews of Rhodes, the Germans bombed the Turkish consulate killing his wife..

"As a part of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, Amanda Gurin of Atlanta went to “The Rescuers,” directed by Emmy-award winner Michael King. The documentary follows  the above researcher, a young Rwandan anti-genocide activist, Stephanie Nyombayire and a world-renowned Holocaust historian, Sir Martin Gilbert, as they scout Europe for descendents of the Righteous Diplomats. The trek took 35 days and took Nyombayire and Gilbert to 15 countries.  Ulkumen 
was one of them.  
This is the blessing in this story.  Some 40-50 Jews from Rhodes had Turkish citizenship and because of that were able to escape the Nazis through the intervention of the Turkish consul of the time, Selahattin Ulkumen, above.  At one time, almost half of the businesses, little shops, had belonged to the Jews of Rhodes.  Today only 5 buildings are owned by Jews who make up a handful of the Jews left in the island city, mostly now quite elderly, and just a few younger ones who have intermarried.  Only an elderly brother and sister are related to any of the original Jewish residents and they are living in the new city.

In 1956, Greek Jews were urged to move to Rhodes, so 20 Jewish families took up the offer and were able to be a part of a small but tightly knit and vibrant Jewish community.  By 1970, an exodus began and many young Jews left Rhodes for better educational and employment opportunities.  However, people do return who have family roots from the island.

Aaron A. had been living in Zimbabwe and was able to visit his ancestral home a year ago.  He now lives in Florida.  Vic visited Rhodes recently.  His father had lived there in 1938 and Vic had celebrated Yom Kippur with him then.  It was the last time Vic was able to see his father.  He recalled being with him, the close-knit community, the rich family life they had that was centered around the charming Jewish Quarter with its cobbled alleyways that led to the huge waterfront; the world for him that was.
                                                                       
Today, " Rhodes is known for its beach resorts, ancient ruins and structural remnants of its crusades-era occupation by the Knights of St. John. Rhodes City features the medieval Street of the Knights and the castle-like Palace of the Grand Masters, once a Turkish prison and now a museum. The city’s bars, clubs and cafes bustle during high season. It's quite the tourist attraction for nearby people.  People come here to celebrate the High Holidays who have family roots from the island.  Every Friday night in the summer they do have a minyan and hold services.  They come to hold weddings, bar and bat mitzvas with at least 100 attending and they come from Paris, Cape Town, England and Australia.  They even have built a museum on the island.  "Weather73°F (23°C), Wind W at 13 mph (21 km/h), 53% Humidity.  NIce!  

Resource:  The Jerusalem Report, August 24, 2015, p. 30-35.
The New Standard Jewish encyclopedia: Rhodes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_Hospitaller
http://www.menemshafilms.com/reviews/rescuers-review-global-jewish-voice



Jews of Dominican Republic

     Nadene Goldfoot                                                              
A beach in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic in the Caribbean
The Alcázar of Colón, located in Santo Domingo, is the oldest Viceregal residence in all of the Americas.
Is anyone adverse to taking a vacation on a Caribbean island these days?  How about the Dominican Republic?
                                                                               
Some Jews from Western India who were Sephardim were the first to venture here to live in the city of Santo Domingo.  Santo Domingo, is the oldest continuously inhabited city and the first seat of the Spanish colonial rule in the New World. The Jews  were probably escaping the Spanish Inquisition around 1492.  It was much later that Ashkenazin arrived on this beautiful island from Europe in the latter 19th century.

" In the 19th century Jews from Curaçao settled in Hispaniola, although they did not form a strong community. Most of them hid their Jewish identities Marranos, now called (Anusim),  or were unaffiliated with Jewish tradition by that time. Among their descendants were Dominican President Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal and his issue Pedro Henríquez Ureña,  Max Henríquez Ureña, and Camila Henríquez Ureña. "Hazim and Majluta” which are Sefardi names, are representative of the large number of such Jews who settled the island throughout the 1800s."
                                                                     
The Dominican Republic is a Caribbean nation that shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti to the west. Though known for its pristine beaches, all-inclusive resorts and golfing, it has a varied terrain comprising rainforest, savannah and highlands, including Pico Duarte, the Caribbean’s tallest mountain. It has Spanish colonial history going back 500 years, and passionate merengue is its official music and dance.

Christopher Columbus landed on the island on December 5, 1492, which the Taíno people had inhabited since the 7th century.

WWII brought on the Evian Conference. "In March 1938, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt convened a 32-nation conference at Evian-les-BainsFrance, to discuss the resettlement of German and Austrian Jewish refugees to other lands. At that time, the Nazi regime was still agreeing to let Jews emigrate if they transferred their assets to the German government. As a result of it, a colony of over 1,000 European Jewish refugees was established here in Sosua, but most emigrated after WWII, and a few remain. "The Dominican Republic  helped settle Jews in Sosúa, on the northern coast.   About 700 European Jews of Ashkenazi Jewish descent reached the settlement where each family received 33 hectares (82 acres) of land, 10 cows (plus 2 additional cows per children), a mule and a horse, and a US$10,000 loan (about 161,000 at 2016 prices) at 1% interest.   Other refugees settled in the capital, Santo Domingo   One of the descendants  turns out to be my 4th cousin, found through DNA tests through 23&Me that we both took.  We've also sent our results to GedMatch.com so will have another view of our DNA there as well.  

The Dominican Republic in 1938 proclaimed their willingness to admit 50,000 to 100,000 Jewish refugees, but the project made little progress.  It was 1939 that my uncle in Germany boarded the last ship and arrived in the USA, something that was very difficult to carry out. 

Dictator Rafael Trujillo had taken over the Dominican Republic by military force in 1930 and lost power in 1952 after his assassination.  He feared takeover by Haiti – the French, black, and poor country that shares the island.  He was the only one  willing to take in the Jews, probably to cover up his reputation, having massacred 25,000 Haitians in 1937.  He also had in mind to "whiten" the people on the island, expecting the European men to marry Dominican women and have light-skinned children.They were expected to become agricultural workers rather than "commission agents," though.  

"The Joint Distribution Committee created a special organization, the Dominican Republic Settlement Association (DORSA) and funded it to purchase 26,000 acres in the Dominican town of Sosua, which had previously been developed as a banana plantation but then abandoned by the United Fruit Company." They gave a guarantee to the Jews.  "The Republic ... hereby guarantees to the settlers and their descendants full opportunity to continue their lives and occupations free from molestation, discrimination or persecution, with full freedom of religion ... civil, legal and economic rights, as well as other rights inherent to human beings."

None of this worked out.  At the time, people on the island were living in dirt floor huts.  Most refugees wanted to go to the USA if at all possible.  They had no idea of what was in store for them.  Only 50 people were able to make it to the island.  "Submarine warfare in the Atlantic and the need to use Allied ships for troops and supplies made it incredibly hard to relocate refugees.

In October 1941, the Nazis cut off Jewish emigration from the territories they occupied in Europe. Sosua’s Jewish population peaked at about 500. By this point, DORSA had invested about $1 million in the project.

 " In 1943 the number of known Jews in the Dominican Republic peaked at 1,000.  The Sosúa’s Jewish community experienced a deep decline in the 1980s due to emigration during the touristic boom of Sosúa when most Jews sold their land to developers at exorbitant prices. The oldest Jewish grave is dated to 1826. Finally,  about 25 Jewish families remained in Sosua. Their dairy business supplies most of the butter and cheese consumed in the Dominican Republic. Next to the town’s synagogue is a museum. The final caption on its exhibit reads: "Sosua, a community born of pain and nurtured in love must, in the final analysis, represent the ultimate triumph of life."
                                                                                        
Jewish family of Dominican Republic

In 1990, the Jewish population was 150 people in Santo Domingo, Sosua and a few others lived elsewhere on the island.  The Parroquia Iseraelita is the central Jewish body.  They probably speak Ladino and Spanish.  You know the population was larger at one time because they have 2 synagogues on the island, one in Santo Domingo and one in Sosua. Chabad has established an outreach center in Santo Domingo.  The Chabad outreach center focuses on assisting the local Jewish population reconnect with their Jewish roots and (because Chabad is of the Chassidic Jewish tradition) it is a source for traditional Judaism in the Dominican Republic. In Sosua, there is a small Jewish Museum next to the synagogue. On the High Holidays, the Sosua community hires a cantor from abroad who comes to lead services. Most of the people are Roman Catholics, but the population does have "Islam: 0.02%,  and Judaism: 0.01%. The population of Santo Domingo in the last census was  2,908,607.  There are 10 large cities there.  The current population of known Jews in the Dominican Republic is close to 3,000."
                                                                       
Nadene Goldfoot, I found a  4th cousin on Dominican Republic.
 My cousin wrote that her entire family (Maternal and Paternal) came from the northern part of the Dominican Republic, which has the most concentration of European heritage, including Spaniards, Germans, Italians, and there was even the  small town that served as a Jewish haven (Sosua, Puerto Plata).   She has a mixed heritage which might mean that her ancestors could include some Sephardim from 1492, but she thinks our connection is the European one through her father.  My surname started in Germany, and my grandfather lived in Telsiai, Lithuania before traveling to England and then Ireland to reach the USA just before 1900.
People who did settle here other than Jews were "English and French buccaneers who settled in northwestern Hispaniola coast and, after years of struggles with the French, Spain ceded the western coast of the island to France with the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick, whilst the Central Plateau remained under Spanish domain.  France created a wealthy colony of Saint-Domingue there, while the Spanish colony suffered an economic decline.
The colony of Santo Domingo saw a spectacular population increase during the 17th century, as it rose from some 6,000 in 1637 to about 91,272 in 1750. Of this number approximately 38,272 were white landowners, 38,000 were free mixed people of color, and some 15,000 were slaves. This contrasted sharply with the population of the French colony of Saint-Domingue (present day Haiti) – which had a population that was 90% enslaved and overall seven times as numerous as the Spanish colony of Santo Domingo
Today the population is 73% of racially mixed origin, 16% White, and 11% Black.  Ethnic immigrant groups in the country include West Asians—mostly LebaneseSyrians, and Palestinians.  "The amount of known Jews (or those with genetic proof of Jewish ancestry and/or practiced Jewish customs/religion throughout generations) are close to 3,000; the exact number of Dominicans with Jewish lineages aren't known, however, because of intermarriage between the Jews and Dominicans over a period of more than five centuries. "
"Some spouses have formalized their Judaism through conversions and participate in Jewish communal life while other Sephardic Jews converted to Catholicism, still maintaining their Sephardic culture. Some Dominican Jews have also made aliyah to Israel.

More recently, the publication of the paperback book "Once Jews" has made easily available information on many early Jewish Sephardim settlers in the Dominican Republic."

Resource:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ST2YXypv634  VIDEO
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_Republic
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_the_Dominican_Republic
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/sosua.html
http://patentlyjewish.com/why-arent-there-100000-jews-in-the-dominican-republic/

Difficulties with Venezuela and Latin America Taking in Jewish Refugees in 20s and 30s.

Nadene Goldfoot                                                                              
Goldfoot, Robinson and Oster Fathers and children, c1945. 
The man on the right holding a little girl is my uncle, Werner Oster, who left Boppard, Germany
for the USA on May 4th, 1939 on the ship, Washington.They landed in New York on May 13th.
He was only 23, but was one of the last Jews to get out of Germany in 1939.
He had been a great soccer player in Germany.

He came to the USA, which was hard to do.  He had to have a sponsor (my great Uncle Max Turn,
who had to take all economic responsibility for him.)  Werner was single then.  A butcher and sausage maker, Max got him a job with my father, a fledgling in the business and 31 years old at the time. 
The picture shows that he married my father's sister and these children are my cousins.  I'm sitting on the 
grass of our back yard and am the oldest.  My father is behind me holding my brother. 

Nazism was not only threatening all Jews on this planet,  it was already starting to take lives in the 30s in Germany.  Some Jews, seeing the writing on the wall, sought out countries that would take them in.  Werner made it to the USA, but his parents and 16 year old red-headed sister died in the Holocaust.

It had been difficult to get into the USA if you were Jewish.  There was a bill in 1921 and another in 1924 to cut the numbers of Jews entering.  " The 1921 measure capped the number of immigrants allowed in at roughly 350,000 per year. It also established quotas from  individual countries, derived from their percentage of the U.S. population. This was a rigged system, as those percentages included how many Americans were descended from that group’s original settlers. Some nations therefore received unusually large quotas, despite minimal immigration in the few years before the bill’s enactment. If ten people had arrived in 1750 from Great Britain, the number of that original cluster’s descendants would be huge by the 20th century. The base year, moreover, was set back a decade to 1910 to exclude from the figures all those who had recently arrived from war-torn Europe after the sea lanes were safe again in 1918. It was not immigrants in general who were blocked, but certain nationalities and religions (JEWS).   Fiorello LaGuardia branded the 1924 act “the creation of a narrow mind that was nurtured by a hating heart.”  We Jews remain as 2% of the USA population.  

So, South America seemed like a good place to go, but they found that most of the countries there required a person to show their baptismal certificate to make sure that they were Christians.  They were not anxious to take in Jews.  Many of the South American countries had already been populated by Germans, and many of those followed the Nazi persuasion.  Naturally, after the war, the Nazis became the refugees and they populated the South American countries easily.
                                                               
Jacobsthal family with aunt and uncle in Amsterdam
 ready to immigrate to Chile February 1938
"These attitudes were reflected in increasingly tight immigration laws introduced throughout Latin America in the late 1930s (Mexico in 1937; Argentina in 1938; Cuba, Chile, Costa Rica, Colombia, Paraguay, and Uruguay in 1939). The results of these laws were striking. Argentina, which had admitted 79,000 Jewish immigrants between 1918 and 1933, officially admitted 24,000 between 1933 and 1943. Another 20,000 Jews entered Argentina illegally, crossing the border from neighboring countries. Brazil admitted 96,000 Jewish immigrants between 1918 and 1933, but only 12,000 between 1933 and 1941."

After Kristallnacht in November 1938, many Jews within Germany decided that it was time to leave. Though many German Jews had emigrated in the preceding years, the Jews who remained had a more difficult time leaving the country because emigration policies had been toughened. By 1939, not only were visas needed to be able to enter another country but money was also needed to leave Germany. Since many countries, especially the United States, had immigration quotas, visas were near impossible to acquire within the short time spans in which they were needed. For many, the visas were acquired after it was too late.
                           

Saturday, May 13, 1939 these Jews had sailed.
Hopeful to land in Cuba,  from Germany on St. Louis escaping
Nazi persecution
                                                 
St. Louis in Havana, Cuba's port

In this climate, Cuban authorities denied entry to most passengers on the ship the St. Louis, when it docked in Havana in May 1939. "With a diminishing supply of food and pressures from Hapag to return to Germany, Captain Schroeder ordered the ship to change heading to return to Europe."  They sailed to their deaths.  Before they had left Cuba, about 2 people had jumped into the ocean committing suicide, knowing what would happen to them.  In November 1941, the German government virtually cut off the flow of Jewish refugees into Latin America when it banned all Jewish emigration from territories under its control.
                                                                   
Coro, Venezuela 
                                                        Venezuela
"The History of the Jews in Venezuela dates to the middle of the 17th century, when records suggest that groups of marranos (Spanish and Portuguese descendants of baptized Jews suspected of secret adherence to Judaism) lived in TucacasCaracas and Maracaibo."  Marranos would have originally been Sephardim Jews.  

Jews came to a country that "is predominantly Roman Catholic and speak Spanish. The majority of Venezuelans are the result of a mixture of EuropeansAfricans and Amerindians. 51.6% of the population are Mestizos of mixed European, African and Amerindian ancestry and 43.6% of Venezuelans consider themselves White of European ancestry and/or Middle Eastern. Another 3.6% is Black African, while 2% is of full Amerindian ancestry and around 1.2% other races "

Venezuela was one South American country that received Jews back in 1850.  They were West Indian Sephardim.  Like with all places with a Christian population, there were anti-Semitic outbreaks of resentment in this country which is situated on the northern part of the continent on the Caribbean Sea.  Such anti-Semitic outbreaks occurred in Coro in 1855 and again in 1902.  "Coro is the capital of Falcón State and the oldest city in the west of Venezuela. It was founded on July 26, 1527 by Juan de Ampíes as Santa Ana de Coro.  As Neu-Augsburg, it was the first German colony in the Americas under the Welsers.  The temperature in Coro for the whole year continues to range in the high 90s and low 100s.  "The Jewish Cemetery of Coro is the oldest Jewish cemetery in continuous use in the Americas Its origin can be located in the 19th century, when Sephardic Jews from the Dutch colony of Curaçao began to migrate to the Venezuelan city of Santa Ana de Coro in 1824."

In the 20th century, eastern Europeans and German Jews (Ashkenazim Jews)  entered the country until barred after World War II  " In 1907, the Israelite Beneficial Society, which became the Israelite Association of Venezuela in 1919, was created as an organization to bring the Jews who were scattered throughout the country together.  Jewish prayer and holiday services took place in small houses in Caracas and towns like Los Teques and La Guaira. By 1917, the number of Jewish citizens rose to 475, and to 882 in 1926." 

.Jews could enter after World War I from 1918 to 1933.   However,  from 1933 to 1945, only 84,000 Jewish refugees were able to come into South America and this was less than half of the number that had come in 15 years before 1933.  Some even managed to enter through illegal channels.
                                                                         
Tiferet Israel Synagogue, Caracas, attacked in 2009
The reason they found such difficulties in entering was of anti-Semitism.  Then, the population feared the economic competition of too many people looking for jobs.  Those that were allowed to come in had to find work in agriculture, but after a while most found there way to cities where they could use some of the business skills.  The populations were made up of a lot of Germans, and they went along with the Nazi's lack of morality.
                                                                       
However, many Jews remained and in Venezuela, they played a leading role in developing the country's trade and in modernizing the capital, Caracas.

By 1990, the Jewish population was about  20,000, and most lived in the capital then.  some 90% of the Jewish youth attended Jewish schools.  "Currently, some 9,000 Jews live in Venezuela, down from about 25,000 in the 1990s. " 

Recently, anti Semitic graffito appeared near a Caracas Metro station: "Be patriotic, kill a Jew." Elsewhere in the city, another reads: "Jewish pigs, another 6 million." this is going on in Venezuela most likely because " Venezuelan President,  Nicolás Maduro,  organized a rally labeled the "March Against Israeli Genocide." There, the Venezuelan president called upon "the Jews that live in our lands" to "stop the massacre, and the murder of those innocent boys and girls."  

He was referring to the Palestinians, which shows he doesn't understand that it's been the Palestinians from Gaza who have been shelling Israel with rockets, mortars and missiles.  These past few weeks the Palestinians in Jerusalem have been stabbing Jews and ramming crowds with their cars.  Just yesterday they stabbed an Uruguayan Jewish  tourist and police.  The Jews in Venezuela are powerless to stop any killings going on in Israel, and this President should knew that.  What he's doing is just instigating more attacks on Jews, both in Israel and in Venezuela.  

Resource: https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007824
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia: Venezuela
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Venezuela
http://jewishcurrents.org/americas-first-illegal-immigrants-39913
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/stlouis.html
http://www.timesofisrael.com/uruguayan-jew-stabbed-to-death-in-suspected-anti-semitic-attack/

Jews of Belarus (White Russia)

Nadene Goldfoot                                                          
         
Back from the 9th to 12th century, there was a state called Rus" that existed in Eastern Europe where Slavs lived.  It was the cradle of Kievian Rus'.  It was in existence where today's Belarus, Ukraine, Russia and Eastern Poland now exist.
                                                                         
It was also referred to as White Russia or Belorussia, a Republic.  Jews went there originally from Poland and were living in Grodno by the 12th century; at Brest-Litovsk by the 14th century and in Pinsk from 1506 onward.
                                                                           
                                                                             
In Eastern White Russia, Jews were found to be living there in the 16th century, but the communities were not recognized at that time due to opposition from the local burghers.  Massacres took place at Polotsk in 1563; at Homel in 1649, at Mohilev and other places in 1655.  The Jewish population suffered severely at the end of the 17th century from the Polish-Cossack and Swedish wars.

"Some believe that the earliest Belarusan immigrants in America settled in the Colony of Virginia in the early 1600s. The reason is that Captain John Smith, who became the first Governor of Virginia in 1608, had visited Belarus in 1603. In his True Travels, Captain Smith recalls that he came to "Rezechica, upon the River Niper in the confines of Lithuania," and then he narrates how he traveled through southern Belarus, as Zora Kipel related in her article ( Zapisy, Volume 16, 1978). Thus, it is possible that Smith brought Belarusans with him to Virginia, together with Polish or Ukrainian manufacturing specialists. The question is, were they Jewish Belarusians?  I doubt it.  We had a boat of Sephardic Jews try to enter New York in the 1600s and were turned away except for the fact that they were connected with the Dutch Trading company.  However, Virginia was settled by business people more than religious people, so it is possible they allowed Jews to enter.  

                                                                     
Poland was partitioned in the latter 18th century which brought the Jews of White Russia under Russian rule and led to the abolition of their organized communal plans.  By 1804, the Moscow government went along with the opinions of Derzhavin.  Gavrila Romanovich Derzhavin was one of the most highly esteemed Russian poets before Alexander Pushkin, as well as a statesman.
 After he had visited White Russia, he suggested that   the Jews must be indoctrinated with crafts and given a general education and then be resettled in Southern Ukraine.
                                                                         
By 1897 the Pale of Settlement was the only area in the Russian Empire where Jews were allowed to live.
This map shows where Jews were living by 1933, the start of WWII, at least in Germany.  "
 In 1897 there were 724,548 Jews in Belarus, i.e. 13.6% of the total population.  Some 800,000 Jews—90% of the Jewish population—were killed in Belarus during the Holocaust."
White Russia had become an important center of Jewish scholarship.  The Hasidism had developed there with Chabad, a Hasidic movement  and Haskalah or the Enlightenment Movement which started in 1832.. It was a movement for spreading modern European culture among Jews from about 1750 to 1880.  Chabad's attraction was intelletual and its main support came from White Russia with the founder being Shneour Zalman of Lyady who was against the Mitnaggedim led by the Vilna Gaon of Lithuania.   The community suffered a great deal during WWI when White Russia had become a war area and many Jews had been expelled to the interior. Update:  On March 20, 1917, Jews were allowed to move out of the Pale and into Russia.  This was the end of WWI.
                                                                             
In 1921, White Russia was partitioned between Russia and Poland. "Since 1922 it had formed part of the Soviet Union."  

By 1939, at the beginning of WWII, the entire area fell under Russian rule and many of the educated Jews and wealthier classes were exiled.  The area was under German occupation from 1941-1944.  Those Jews who did not escape into Russia were almost entirely exterminated by the Germans in cooperation with Belorussians and Lithuanians.  Those that escaped fought with the partisans.

The official 1989 Jewish population was 111,789.  " A few Belarusans, mainly the children of Jewish Belarusan marriages, came to the United States between the late 1930s and the end of 1941.
                                                                     
Haim-Moshe Shapira (Hebrewחיים משה שפירא‎, 26 March 1902 – 16 July 1970)Born to Zalman Shapira and Rosa Krupnik in the Russian Empire in Grodno in what is today Belarus
One famous person was Mosheh Hayyim Shapira, born 1902 in White Russia and died in 1970 in Israel. He was the founder of the Mizrahi youth movement started in 1919.  In 1925 he made aliyah to Palestine.  By 1935 he was elected to the Jewish Agency Executive and represented the National Religious Party which was formerly called Ha-Poel Ha-Mizrahi.   .  He became a member of the Knesset from 1949, 1 year after the birth of Israel on May 14, 1948.

"In 1936 he was elected as a member of the Zionist Directorate and a Director of the Aliyah department of the Jewish Agency, a role he filled until 1948. In 1938 he was sent on a special mission to try to save Jews in Austria following the takeover by Nazi Germany."   (My uncle from Germany was one of the last to get out in 1939 after being held in Dachau.) His family could only manage to save him while his mother, father and young 16 year old sister stayed behind because of the difficulties in getting out.)  

In the following Israel coalition governments, he served as Minister of Immigration, Health from 1948-1949, The Interior from 1949 to 1952, and since 1959, Religious Affairs and Social Welfare from 1952 to 1958, and Minister of Health from 1961 to 1970.

"78,859 Belarusian immigrants made aliyah to Israel (in the years 1989-2013).  

Resource:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Russia
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haim-Moshe_Shapira
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kievan_Rus%27
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Belarus
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/pale.html
http://www.everyculture.com/multi/A-Br/Belarusan-Americans.html