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Why are there no Jews in the "Jewish Autonomous Prefecture"?

Lotzky, Kamenev and Bukharin. At that time, there were also a considerable number of Jews at the top of Soviet Russia. Under their impetus, the Crimean plan was about to be implemented. However, Stalin from Georgia advocated being cautious about the Crimean plan. Stalin's fears are justified from now on. At that time, the Crimean peninsula had a large population and many ethnic groups, and Russians and Ukrainian Tatars had bad feelings. The peninsula is very small, and the migration of millions of Jews here will inevitably aggravate ethnic and religious conflicts. Not only Stalin had reservations, but even the Soviet Socialist Autonomous Republic of Crimea resolutely resisted this plan. At the end of the 1920s, Trotsky, who initiated the plan, was pushed out of the Soviet Union and expelled from the Soviet Union, and the Crimean Plan ended. Stalin, who gained the supreme power of the Soviet Union, did not set up an autonomous region in Crimea in the end, but placed it in the Far East, far away from Wan Li in Eastern Europe.

In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the situation in Northeast Asia was turbulent. 1929 The "Middle East Road Incident" broke out and China and the Soviet Union broke off diplomatic relations. After the September 18th Incident, Japan invaded three northeastern provinces of China, and tens of thousands of European Jews came to Harbin under the influence of German anti-Semitism. The Soviet Union is also tit for tat. 1934, Utah Autonomous Prefecture was established in northern Heilongjiang. After the establishment of the Jewish Autonomous Prefecture, the Soviet Union was bent on building it into "Soviet Israel" and gave it many preferential policies. Birobidzhan, the capital of the Jewish Autonomous Prefecture, almost rose from the ground and prospered rapidly. This is the only minority autonomous prefecture in the Soviet Union, which gives many preferential treatment to local Jewish residents. Close to trans-siberian railway, it is rich in forest and mineral resources, attracting a large number of Jewish immigrants from home and abroad to settle here. The twenties and thirties were the golden age of Jews, and they were very enthusiastic about joining the army and participating in politics. Jews also occupy a certain proportion in the Soviet Red Army.