Tag #144929 - Interview #78010 (Lev Galper)

Selected text
My father's elder brother, Beniamin, took a great interest in revolutionary ideas. At that time the Bolshevik [5] party was prohibited, and my uncle became a member of an underground revolutionary circle where they studied works by Marx and Engels [6]. In 1915 my uncle joined the Bolshevik party. In the circle he met his future wife Manya. She was a Jewish girl who had come to Volchansk from a shtetl and worked as a dressmaker. They joined the party together and got married soon after that.

Naturally, they didn't have a Jewish wedding; communist ideas were incompatible with religion. The party division they belonged to sent them to Dnepropetrovsk [a city with a population of more than a million in the east of Ukraine, 420 km from Kiev]. Beniamin and Manya settled there, and both of them worked as dressmakers. They stayed in Dnepropetrovsk and never returned to Volchansk.
They had two children. They named their daughter Rosa after revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg [7], and their son was named Felix after Dzerzhinsky [8].
Period
Location

Ukraine

Interview
Lev Galper