By end of 1700s: speaking own dialect, dressed differently (did not ware the long-skirted garment) and cut hair differently (no sidelocks)
Mentality (which set them apart from Ukranian and Polish Jewss): rationalisim in behaviur, thirst for learning, businesslike approach to work, purposefulness, restraint in expressing their feelings; asceticism in food/life
Litvak families: man consults with wife on imprtant matters, particularly those relating to trade; role of women in Litvak families.
thirst for knowledge: secular sciences
One branch called Mitnagdim (those who oppose/object; name given to opponents by Hasidim.
Habad: combined hasidism with rabbinical scholarship and rationalism
Antagonism existed between Litvaks and Polish/Ukrainian Jews.
differences: behavior and external appearance, language, culinary preferences, temperament
Litvak traditions in Rechitsa exist even though Rechitsa close to Ukraine. Practically no migration to Rechitsa from the south; Jews migrated from Belorussian mestechkos and towns frequently.
Litvaks evolved into “Russian Jewry” by the 1860s