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THE ALL LITHUANIA DATABASE AND LITVAKSIG

LitvakSIG
ALD and LitvakSIG 2004

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THE ALL LITHUANIA DATABASE AND LITVAKSIG: 2004

 Ms. Judy Baston

Litvak SIG

JRBaston@aol.com

Creating the All Lithuania Database

Lithuanian Jewish research has come a long way in a very short time. Before the breakup of the former Soviet Union in 1991, very few of us had real documentation of the lives of our ancestors in Lithuania. Prior to 1991, the Lithuanian Archives were not readily accessible to most people. This changed after 1991, and we learned that one of the ways we have left to document the lives of our people are through the books and papers that are housed in the Archives in Vilnius and Kaunas, and, if they can be identified, in similar archives throughout the former Soviet Union. 

To ensure that our past and our history do not disappear, LitvakSIG began pooling information and resources in late 1997 and in 1998, LitvakSIG began raising money by uyezd (district) to acquire and translate records to create an All-Lithuania Database that would be searchable and accessible to Litvak researchers. We started with the 1858 revision list, which was available for most parts of what was considered Lithuania at that time, and we have since grown to include nearly half a million records of many different types.

Searching the All Lithuania Database  

The All Lithuania Database (ALD) may be searched by going to the following page: http://www.jewishgen.org/Litvak/searchald.htm   There is a link to the ALD from the LitvakSIG home page at  http://www.jewishgen.org/litvak  and also from the JewishGen databases page under Lithuania.  You may search for a surname or a town, using the precise spelling (current Lithuanian spelling in the case of a town) or using the Daitch-Mokotoff Soundex system to allow for variations in the spelling of a surname or a town. You may also make a Global Text Search, which allows you to search for word combinations as well as to search for words that may only appear in the “Comments” field of a record translation. 

Where Did My Family Live?  Towns of Residence and Towns of Registration 

If you know the town where your family lived, and a search of the ALD shows records for your family name in a nearby town, you may think that isn’t your family because it’s from a different town. Or if you search the ALD by town and don’t find your family, you may think there are no records for your family in the database. This is because there were Lithuanian Jewish records that showed the town where a family lived, and those that showed the town where a family was officially registered. So it is important to know which is which. Understanding this will help you make the most of your searches of the ALD, and if you want to do further research with the Lithuanian Archives, it will help you understand for which records and which towns you need to request a search. 

All Jews (with the exception of certain guilds and classes) were required to register officially so they could be counted for the revizki skazki (revision list) and other census-type lists. In most cases, even though a family moved to another town, their town of registration remained the one in which they had initially registered. So listings for Revision Lists and Family Lists in the ALD will include the town of registration, which may or may not be the one in which your family actually lived. 

Candle and box tax records were usually collected from those who lived in a specific town (although smaller towns could have been grouped together for collection even for this purpose.) So if you see a town noted in the ALD results for candle or box tax records, it is likely that is the town in which your family actually lived at the time. On the other hand, property tax records, postal savings bank records and some others may not be a good indication of where people lived, but simply of where they owned property or had savings accounts. 

Vital records – birth, marriage, death and even divorce records – were recorded in the town in which the actual event took place. In most cases, this was the town of residence. Often a vital record will give the town of registration if the town is different from the town of residence. 

It is important not to draw conclusions about a family’s town on the basis of one single source of information – the more data you are able to obtain from various types of lists, the clearer and more accurate the answer will be. 

Revision / Family / Census Lists 

 This major part of the database contains revision, family, census lists, district merchants, craftsmen’s guilds, farmers, and town residents’ lists for most of the districts in the old Vilna and Kovno guberniyas. It also contains lists for most towns in modern day Disna, Kaunas, Lida, Oshmiany, Panevezys, Raseiniai, Siauliai, Telsiai, Trakai, Ukmerge, and Vilnius districts. The information that revision lists supply sometimes includes the family’s address, the surnames, first names and patronymics of family members as well as their gender and age, their relationship to the head of household, marital status, occupation or status, religion, literacy and the places of birth, official registration and place of residence. The lists may also include the location from which the family arrived, conscription status, removal from the list of converts from Judaism, or transfer to another Jewish community or another social or economic class. Because being on a revision list could lead to paying taxes and possible conscription of sons, some families tried to avoid being listed and are therefore missing from certain revision lists. 

Tax and Voters Lists  

 A large collection of Jewish community candle and box taxes, business taxes, savings book information, as well as property and real estate taxes will be found combined in this database. There were a great many different kinds of taxes that the Jews of Lithuania might have been expected to pay.  They included the box tax, collected by a “tax merchant” who had successfully bid for the right to collect them and were used to pay for communal services and for the Rabbi’s salary; Candle tax, on Sabbath candles, which was usually collected by the Rabbi’s wife and used for the needs of Jewish education; Real Estate and Property Taxes, which yield information about specific properties. A comprehensive article, “Box-tax paperwork records as a source of information about the life of Jewish communities and their personal structures, is at http://www.jewishgen.org/litvak/HTML/OnlineJournals/BoxTaxPaperwork.htm  The Voter Lists records come from lists of electors of rabbis, municipal electors, and those listed as eligible to vote for the Russian Parliament (Duma voter lists).  

Vital records 

 This growing part of the ALD comes from the indexing of Lithuanian Jewish vital records that were microfilmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (Mormons). The indexing is of these vital records is currently taking place on a town-by-town basis using CD ROMs that were provided to LitvakSIG. A detailed list of the towns and records available to be indexed is available at: http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/FHLC/VilnaMicrofilmsIndex.htm 

Other Types of Records in the All-Lithuania Database (ALD) 

What Records Have Survived for my Town? 

Some resources to help you discover what records have survived for your town include Miriam Weiner’s Routes to Routes Foundation Database  http://www.rtrfoundation.org   “Jewish Vital Records, Revision Lists and Other Jewish Holdings in the Lithuanian Archives” compiled by Harold Rhode and Sallyann Sack (Avotaynu, 1996), and LitvakSIG’s Catalog of the Jewish Holdings at the Kaunas Regional Archive at http://www.jewishgen.org/litvak/HTML/kaunasix.htm 

How to Get the Records of Your Town Translated  

The growth of the All-Lithuania Database reflects the support of Litvak researchers who have contributed towards the acquisition and translation of records. For revision list, tax and voter lists and other such records, researchers contribute to their Uyezd (District) Research Group. For vital records, researchers contribute to their town’s Vital Records Project. Qualifying contributors to the District Research Groups or Town Vital Records Projects are eligible to obtain preview copies of their district’s or town’s record translations in Excel format, providing the opportunity to search and sort the records well before the records are submitted to the All Lithuania Database for general searching. To find out what District your town is in, check LitvakSIG’s shtetl/uyezd/gubernia table at http://www.jewishgen.org/litvak/HTML/sug.htm. 

LitvakSIG is an independent organization that is hosted by JewishGen. Each organization has its own separate administrative and financial structure. Contributions to LitvakSIG http://www.jewishgen.org/litvak/HTML/donor.htm by check or credit card are tax-deductible as provided by law.  Mail contributions to LITVAKSIG, Inc., Department 77-9253, Chicago, IL 60678-9253. Contribution forms may be faxed to 661/299-9198. Please include district research group and e-mail address with your contribution. LitvakSIG dues of $36 per year are completely separate from contributions to District Research Groups or Town Vital Records Projects.

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