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Bohdan Khmelnytsky

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Bohdan Zinovoy Mykhaylovych Khmemelnytsky (Ukranian name); Bohdan Zenobi Chmielnicki (Polish); Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Russian). (c. 1595 - August 6, 1657)

Born in Chigirin, Ukraine Chmielnicki was a Zaporizhzhya (Zaporozhian) Cossack hetman, noted for his revolt against Poland which began in 1648.

Unlike many other pupils of the Jesuits, Chmielnicki did not embrace Roman Catholicism, but early in life became a champion of the Greek Orthodox faith, to which most of the Cossacks and the Little-Russian peasants belonged. While still in the subordinate position of a "sotski" (an officer over a hundred) of the Cossacks, subject to the Polish magnate Koniecpolski, he was deprived by Chaplinski, the bailiff of Chigirin, of his estate of Subotovo. Chaplinski availed himself of Chmielnicki's absence to make a raid on the place, during which the young son of the owner received injuries from which he ultimately died, and Chmielnicki's (second) wife was carried off. In this raid Chaplinski was aided by the leaseholder of Chigirin, Zachariah Zabilenki, who happened to be Jewish. At another time it is related that a Jewish citizen reported to the Polish government a secret treaty concluded by Chmielnicki with the Tatars. These personal indignities and injuries apparently embittered Chmielnicki against the Poles and the Jews.

Although his personal resentment influenced his decision to rid the Ukraine of Jews, it seems that it was his ambition to become the ruler of Ukraine which was the main motive that led him to instigate the uprising of the Little-Russian people against the Poles and the Jews. For years the people of Little Russia had been oppressed by the Polish. Unwilling to attend to the details of administration himself, Chmielnicki made the Jewish citizens a go-between in his transactions with the peasants of Little Russia. He sold and leased certain privileges to Jews for a lump sum, and, while enjoying himself at the court, left it to Jewish leaseholders and collectors to become the embodiment of hatred to the oppressed and long-suffering peasant. The accumulated store of animosity was utilized by Chmielnicki in inciting attacks against the Jews. He told the people that the Poles had sold them as slaves "into the hands of the accursed Jews." With this as their battle-cry, the Cossacks let loose their wildest passions; they massacred over a hundred thousand Jews with such cruelties as the world had seldom witnessed (1648-1649).

These events also were the start of a series of campaigns that temporarily freed Ukraine from Polish domination. Successes at at Zolte Wody, Korsun and Pilawce led to Chmielnicki being paid-off by the Polish king and gained numerous privileges for the Cossacks at the Treaty of Zborov. However when hostilities resumed Chmielnicki's forces suffered a massive defeat in 1651 at the Battle of Beresteczko and were forced at Bila Tserkva to accept a loser's treaty. A year later the cossacks had their revenge at the Battle of Batoh, after which Chmielnicki had all the high-ranking captives murdered . The Ukraine was still perilously weak and in 1654, Chmielnicki persuaded the Cossacks to ally with the Russian czars at the Treaty of Pereyaslavl, a treaty that had poor results for the Ukraine after Chmielnicki's death (the Polish-Muscovite Treaty of Andrusov in 1667).

See also: Anti-Semitism