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Not Even Past

Episode 106: The Blood Libel

In Kiev, in 1911, a Jewish factory manager named Mendel Beilis was indicted for murdering a young boy. Many believed that Beilis had carried out the murder as part of a ritual known as the “blood libel,” in which Jews used the blood of gentile children for baking Passover matzo. Where the idea of the “blood ritual” come from and why did people all over the world believe it? And what happened to Mendel Beilis?

Historian Robert Weinberg, who teaches Russian history at Swarthmore College is here to answer these questions.

Related posts:

Episode 74: The Changsha Rice Riots of 1910 Episode 81: The Trans-Pacific Silver Trade and Early-Modern Globalization Default ThumbnailEpisode 90: Stokely Carmichael: A Life Default ThumbnailEpisode 110: The Legacy of WWI in the Balkans and Middle East

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