{{Short description|Kidnappers of recruits for the Russian army}} {{more citations needed|date=April 2023}}

'''Khappers''' were Russian Jews<ref name="tab">{{cite web|title=Jews Fled Russia to Escape Poverty, Oppression, and Czarist Edicts—and their Own Self-Interested Communal Leaders|author=Robert Rockaway|date=October 23, 2017|url=https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/why-jews-fled-russia-great-mirgration|work=Tablet Mag|accessdate=April 20, 2023}}</ref> employed by the Kahals to fulfill the recruit quotas imposed on the Jewish communities from 1827 to 1857 in the Russian Empire. Tsar Nicholas I created these recruit quotas because he viewed military service as a way to russify Jews, whom he held in low regard, by teaching them the Russian language and converting them to Russian Orthodox Christianity.<ref name="tab"/>

Khappers were employed to kidnap Jewish boys (sometimes as young as eight) to fill a quota of Jews required to enter the cantonist schools, in preparation for service in the Russian Army, in the situations where such quotas were not filled legally, due to attempts by the families to hide their children.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Cantonists: Jewish Children as Soldiers in Tsar Nicholas's Army|author=Adina Ofek|journal=Modern Judaism|volume=13|issue=3|date=October 1993|pages=277–308|publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.1093/mj/13.3.277 |jstor=1396327}}</ref> The term is a 19th-century colloquialism that comes from the Yiddish word for ''grabber'', in itself a borrowing from Ukrainian "хапати" (khapaty, to grab).

==See also== * Cantonist

==References== {{reflist}}

{{Russia-hist-stub}} {{Judaism-stub}} Category:Jews and Judaism in the Russian Empire Category:Kidnapping in Russia Category:Obsolete occupations Category:19th century in the Russian Empire Category:Antisemitism in the Russian Empire Category:Incidents of violence against boys Category:Child abduction in Russia