These Jews lived with the help of remitances from abroad
Soviets try to solve Jewish poverty by allowing them to be farmers
Insufficient land in Belarus to add Jewish farmers.
Therefore, it was necessary to “evict” all Jews who wanted to be farmers
Early Jewish collective farms created naturally between 1918-1920. Founded by groups of workers, craftsmen, petty merchants, dealers and shopkeepers to save themselves from famine
In 1921, new Jewish collective farms stopped
Between 1924-1925, 80 Jewish collective farms created in BSSR
Aid for Jewish farming came from
American-Jewish United Agricultural Corporation (Agrojoint)
Society for Spreading Farming and Handicraft amoung Jews
Jewish Colonial Society
Resettlement of one Jewish family cost between 1800-2200 rubles
Jews were over 20% of the Belarus Communist Party, but never more than 10% of the population.
Commerce
Jews living in cities and towns interacted with the villare and rural economies
trade in the forest industries
leather industries
Peddling village produce (flax, hemp and bristles) in the city
agriculture
After Revolution, high unemployment
Blacksmiths were better off
Tanners, dressmakers, tailors, shoemakers and others were jobless