No. 68, 15 May 2011 /11 Iyar 5771
Betsy Gidwitz
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Demographically, post-Soviet Jewry has seen an overall decline resulting from assimilation, intermarriage, low fertility, high mortality, and emigration of younger age cohorts. Some demographers believe that less than 500,000 Jews remain in the post-Soviet states. An intermarriage rate that some view as exceeding 80 percent creates complex situations for those Jewish groups that prefer to confine their programs to halachically Jewish individuals.
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Jewish identity among Jews in Russia and Ukraine is most likely to be expressed as a sense of Jewish heritage, in particular, a common cultural or intellectual heritage, rather than a sense of common spirituality or sharply focused religious practice. Post-Soviet Jews also tend to believe that Jews should be familiar with modern Israel, but not necessarily feel obligated to live in Israel.
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Antisemitism is strongly rooted in both Russia and Ukraine, and popular anti-Jewish bigotry continues in both countries despite the cessation of official state antisemitism. Although Jews at present are not the main target of nationalist wrath, some readily identifiable Jewish individuals have been harassed and synagogues and other Jewish premises have been daubed with antisemitic graffiti or otherwise damaged. Fear of antisemitism remains a powerful catalyst in suppressing active Jewish identification.
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Post-Soviet Jews entered the post-Soviet era ill-prepared to determine their needs and to create and manage an infrastructure to address these needs. Hence, although indigenous Jews are assuming greater control over Jewish organizational life, many Jewish community organizations remain dominated by foreigners at higher levels.
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Through sending hundreds of emissaries to Jewish population centers large and small, the Chabad movement has become the public face of Judaism in much of Russia and Ukraine. Nonetheless, the Hasidic interpretation of Jewish belief and practice has failed to win broad acceptance among educated post-Soviet Jews. For many, no existing Jewish institution or program is appealing; the majority of working-age post-Soviet Jews remain untouched by Jewish life.
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Jewish education remains a critical issue in a society starved of it for three generations. Inadequate financial support plagues all formal Jewish education from day schools through graduate studies in academic Judaica. Building on a long tradition of children's summer camps during the Soviet era, Jewish summer camps appear to be among the most favored Jewish education instruments, but require further development.
As the former Soviet republics enter their
third decade of independence, observers of Jewish life in these
countries find much that has changed from the tumultuous early 1990s and
much that has remained the same. The Jewish population has declined
dramatically, state-sponsored antisemitism is almost imperceptible, the
influence of imported Hasidic rabbis appears to be waning, wealthy Jews
in Moscow are beginning to support Russian Jewish community development
at home and abroad, and some erosion of basic human rights is evident in
both Russia and Ukraine. At the same time, little evidence of Jewish
spiritual life is visible and the needs of Jewish elderly remain
substantial.
This report, based on extensive
interviewing and observation in Russia and Ukraine - the two post-Soviet
states in which the overwhelming majority of post-Soviet Jews reside -
addresses these and other issues critical to an understanding of
contemporary post-Soviet Jewish life.
Russia and Ukraine are adjacent countries
with different economic profiles, but increasingly similar social
characteristics. Although Russia retains superpower pretensions, it is
diminished in size and stature from the former Soviet Union. Its
strength lies in its natural resources, particularly oil and natural
gas, that permit it to subsidize its weak and underdeveloped domestic
economy as well as retain significant influence in the economies of
neighboring post-Soviet states. It is working assiduously to extend
pipelines - and influence - into Eastern, Central, and Western Europe
and into Asia as well.
Its domestic infrastructure in health and
medical care, education, jurisprudence, housing, and transportation
remain weak. These sectors, along with the development of small and
medium-size business, remain hobbled by paralyzing bureaucracy and
massive corruption. Russian media is subject to political intimidation,
and escalating Russian nationalism has led to an increasing number of
hate crimes directed mainly at blacks and at the large number of
migrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus who now labor in menial jobs
in large Russian cities.
In Ukraine, a domestic economy dependent on
the export of iron, steel, aluminum, and industrial chemicals has
suffered significantly during the current global economic crisis.
Further, Ukraine is hostage to neighboring Russia for most of its energy
resources, a situation often exploited by Russia, many of whose leaders
and citizens find Ukrainian sovereignty and separation from Russian
political control to be "unnatural." Ukraine is divided politically
between a Russia-oriented industrial east and Europe-oriented west;
since elections in 2010, its government has been dominated by those who
are more comfortable with Russian social and political customs than with
European or Western deportment. The political opposition has been
harassed and media have been constrained. In common with Russia, Ukraine
is plagued by corruption throughout its economic, legal, and social
systems. Its domestic infrastructure also shares many of the weaknesses
of its larger neighbor.
Jewish Demography
Calculating Jewish demography in the former
Soviet Union and in the contemporary post-Soviet states is often a
contentious exercise with official state data frequently mistrusted and
all research bedeviled by differences over defining Jewish identity.
Further, certain organizations active in the post-Soviet states are
widely believed to posit inflated Jewish population estimates in
attempts to attract greater financial support for their programs.
Among the most respected analysts of Jewish
demographic trends, Dr. Sergio DellaPergola of Hebrew University and
his post-Soviet team headed by Dr. Mark Tolts use self-identification as the criterion for establishing Jewish ethnicity. Several international Jewish organizations use provisions of the Israel Law of Return,
which stipulates a minimum of one Jewish grandparent as the determining
factor, and other interested parties recognize Jews only according to Jewish law (halacha), which defines Jews according to matrilineal descent.
Most post-Soviet Jews themselves define
Jewish ethnicity according to the Russian/Soviet terminology of
nationality or heritage; they are Jewish by nationality or heritage,
just as others are Russian by nationality or heritage. One cannot be
both Russian and Jewish, although one can be partly Russian or partly
Jewish. Because nationality in Russian/Soviet culture usually is
determined by patrilineal descent, halachic considerations may seem
irrelevant to those reflecting on self-identification. Further, some
individuals with partial or even full Jewish heritage deny any
identification with Judaism or the Jewish people at all.
All observers agree that the Jewish
population of the post-Soviet states has declined dramatically in recent
decades, in greater proportion than the general post-Soviet population.
The broader post-Soviet population has experienced a negative growth
rate since the collapse of the Soviet Union due to high mortality and
low fertility rates caused by unusually high rates of HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, alcohol and narcotics addictions, cardiovascular disease,
suicides, smoking, and traffic and industrial accidents. Poverty,
environmental degradation, and inferior health and medical care also
take their toll. Life expectancy for men and women in Russia is 60 and
73 respectively, the greatest gender gap of all developed countries.
Extracting data from official Russian
statistics, DellaPergola has concluded that the Jewish population in the
post-Soviet states enjoys a significantly longer life span than
non-Jewish Russians, a consequence of a healthier lifestyle and
residence in urban areas with access to more sophisticated health care.
However, continuing emigration - albeit in smaller numbers than in
previous years - and assimilation continue to deplete the Jewish
population. The primary factor in assimilation is intermarriage, which
is believed by many to exceed 80 percent. The death-to-birth ratio among
post-Soviet Jews is 13:1, that is, 13 Jews die for every Jewish child
who is born.
The DellaPergola team at Hebrew University
estimates that the Jewish populations of Russia and Ukraine have
declined severely in recent decades, from perhaps slightly more than one
million in 1989 just before the collapse of the USSR[1] to less than
300,000 (210,000 in Russia and 74,000 in Ukraine) in 2009.[2] Further,
the age profile of the Jewish population resembles less the normal bell
curve than a mushroom, that is, a disproportionately large older cohort
at an umbrella-type top and a much thinner "stem" of active younger
people. The DellaPergola estimates of post-Soviet Jewish demographic
loss are supported abundantly by anecdotal evidence of significantly
declining enrollments in post-Soviet Jewish day schools (although the
low quality of some such schools also must be considered) and other
programs targeting youth and young adults.
Jews are concentrated overwhelmingly in
Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia, and in Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Odesa,
and Kharkiv in Ukraine. It is unlikely that any other post-Soviet city
hosts a Jewish population of even 15,000.
Three further demographic observations
should be noted. First, although a background of Ashkenazi
(Central/North European) origin provides the context for almost all
references to Russian-speaking Jewry, several major cities in Russia and
Ukraine are home to significant groups of Jewish migrants from Georgia,
other areas of the Caucasus Mountain region, and Central Asia. Many
such Jews are of Persian Jewish background and speak native languages
deriving from Persian. It is estimated that 15 to 20 percent of all
Moscow Jews are of Georgian or Bukharan, i.e., Central Asian, origin.
Persian-background Jews often pursue livelihoods as market traders or
other occupations that require little formal education. They socialize
separately from Ashkenazi Jews and occasionally come into conflict with
majority Ashkenazi Jews in such venues as synagogues and day schools.
Several rabbis, including both Chief Rabbis of Moscow, Pinchas
Goldschmidt and Berel Lazar, have provided separate prayer halls in
which Persian Jewish customs are observed; several Moscow Jewish day
schools enroll significant numbers of Persian-background Jewish pupils.
Second, apart from career choices of
Persian-background Jews, strong evidence exists of a post-Soviet change
in the occupational profile of Russian and Ukrainian Ashkenazi Jews.[3]
Whereas Ashkenazi Jews were very prominent in the arts and sciences,
higher education, and other intellectual pursuits during the Soviet and
early post-Soviet periods, observers report a significant shift of
younger Jews into business and law. It is likely that the Jewish
abandonment of intellectual and cultural careers reflects new
opportunities in commerce following the collapse of the Soviet Union as
well as the reduction by Russian authorities of generous Soviet-era
state subsidies for educational, scientific, and cultural institutions.
The decline of Russian state support for higher education, scientific
research, and art and culture is frequently noted in the Russian press.
Third, reports of the return of large numbers of Russian-speaking Israeli olim
(immigrants), as well as Russian-speaking Jewish immigrants to other
countries, to Russia and Ukraine appear to be exaggerated. Although
Russian-speaking Israelis can be found in all major Russian and
Ukrainian cities, many breadwinners are commuting between Russia/Ukraine
and Israel and others have returned to Israel during the current global
economic crisis. A large proportion of Israeli adolescents whose
families return to Russia or Ukraine never fully integrate into
Russian/Ukrainian society and voluntarily return to Israel for army
service, further education, and eventual adult residence.
Antisemitism
Official antisemitism has almost completely
disappeared in Russia and Ukraine since the collapse of the USSR. No
longer does the state orchestrate an antisemitic campaign in public
media, educational institutions, and unpunished anti-Jewish street
attacks. A blatantly antisemitic crusade by a private Ukrainian
university (Interregional Academy of Personnel Management, known by its
Ukrainian acronym, MAUP) between 2002 and 2007 ceased suddenly in
response to local, national, and international outrage and its
instigators were removed from positions of influence; such bigoted
undertakings continued uninterrupted for much longer periods during the
Soviet era, largely unresponsive to protests from any source.
Notwithstanding the cessation of
state-instigated antisemitism, street-level anti-Jewish bigotry
continues to exist throughout Russia and Ukraine, driven mainly by
nationalist groups in each country. Nationalist zeal in Russia usually
is directed against blacks and migrant workers from Central Asia and/or
the Caucasus Mountain region before focusing on Jews. Specific
anti-Jewish assaults appear to be more common in provincial centers
outside Moscow and St. Petersburg. Antisemitic bigotry in Ukraine is
most common in its western regions, long the most nationalist area of
the country. In both Russia and Ukraine, antisemitism finds adherents
among "skinheads," football (soccer) hooligans, and other groups
associated with younger, often less well-educated males. The appearance
of Russian-language nationalist and antisemitic websites is being
monitored, albeit unsystematically, with great apprehension by several
observers. Reflecting technology and cost issues, use of the Internet is
less extensive in Russia and Ukraine than in Western countries;
however, few are optimistic that Russia's rich tradition of antisemitic
literature will elude large-scale migration to the Web.
The most common targets of antisemitic
assault are individuals in identifiable Hasidic attire and institutions
clearly associated with the Jewish population, particularly synagogues
and Jewish cemeteries. Most Jewish institutions regard antisemitic
attack as a serious risk, and many employ security guards; some also
maintain sophisticated electronic security systems. Jewish community
leaders complain that police often appear reticent in pursuing
offenders, even when institutions are able to provide assistance in
identifying them. Whether corruption, i.e., failure of Jewish
institutions to pay bribes to police, is a factor cannot be determined
with certainty, but the police and justice systems in both countries are
notoriously corrupt. Further, apprehended wrongdoers frequently are
charged with relatively minor misdemeanors, such as hooliganism, rather
than with more serious crimes of ethnic bigotry.
Exceptionally wealthy Jews, that is, Jewish
oligarchs, increasingly are targets of antisemitic commentary,
particularly in Internet postings. In both Russia and Ukraine, a
significant number of extraordinarily prosperous Jews are closely
identified with Jewish organizations as donors and officers.
Acknowledging the continuing threat of
antisemitic attack, many buildings housing Jewish organizations (such as
heseds, i.e., Jewish welfare centers) are not identified as such by
public signage. Some Orthodox rabbis attired in traditional clothing
venture outside their synagogues only when accompanied by security
personnel. Many middle-aged and older Jews ask that Jewish organizations
send mail to them in unmarked envelopes without return addresses, and
some Jewish and partly-Jewish public figures deny their Jewish heritage.
Jewish welfare organizations distributing food and other items to Jews
in smaller towns report requests from large numbers of clients that the
Jewish source of these provisions not be identified so that the
recipients not be recognized as "privileged Jews."
Many younger Jews, however, appear much
more relaxed about public acknowledgment of their Jewish identity.
Having few or no memories of the Soviet period, they are less fearful of
official antisemitism and more confident of their ability to overcome
the street antisemitism of contemporary Russia and Ukraine.
Jewish Identity
In 2007, the Institute for Jewish Studies
in the C.I.S, which operates under the auspices of Rabbi Adin
Steinsaltz, completed a study entitled The Paradox of Jews and Judaism in Russia and the Ukraine.
The research project confirmed what most experienced observers of
post-Soviet Jewry had concluded on their own, that is, that Jewish
identity among Jews in Russia and Ukraine is most likely to be expressed
as a sense of Jewish heritage, in particular, a common cultural or
intellectual heritage, rather than a sense of common spirituality or
sharply focused religious practice. Part of the paradox noted in the
title is that 93 percent of post-Soviet Jews queried in the study
believe that Jews should be familiar with Jewish tradition, but 82
percent also believe that one can be a "good Jew" without observing Jewish tradition.
Among the other highly ranked attributes of
"authentic Jewish identity" are familiarity with Jewish history (96
percent), defending the honor of the Jewish people (93 percent),
remembering the Holocaust (92 percent), assisting other Jews (89
percent), not concealing your ethnicity (88 percent), and familiarity
with modern Israeli history (82 percent). The 4 least highly
ranked of 15 listed attributes of "authentic Jewish identity" are
believing in G-d (71 percent), synagogue attendance (57 percent),
marrying a Jew (47 percent), and believing in Zionist principles (46
percent).
Just as post-Soviet Jews believe that it is
important for Jews to possess an intellectual understanding of Jewish
tradition, but not necessarily observe Jewish tradition, they believe
that Jews should be familiar with modern Israel, but not necessarily
feel obligated to live in Israel. Dr. Baruch Gur, who initiated and then
directed Jewish Agency efforts in the Soviet Union during the Gorbachev
years and early post-Soviet era, wrote in Jewish Identity under Tsarist, Soviet and Russian Rule (2008)
that a maximum of 40 percent of Jews remaining in the post-Soviet
states may be considering aliyah; he also believes that 50 percent are
unwilling to emigrate to Israel under almost any circumstances. Dr. Gur
observed, as have many others, that most educated middle-aged and older
Jews are not willing to leave Russia and the other post-Soviet states;
they have made their careers there and are intimidated both by the need
to learn a new language and by the likelihood of losing personal stature
as newcomers in a different country. Younger Jews, concludes Dr. Gur,
view emigration as an economic decision; if economic opportunities
decline in the post-Soviet states, they will consider emigration
options. Israel may not be their preferred destination; Zionism is not a
driving factor. In an attempt to create a Zionist direction, the Jewish
Agency and the Israeli government offer a number of Israel-focused
programs targeting Jewish adolescents and young adults in the
post-Soviet states.
Although indigenous Jews are assuming
greater control over Jewish organizational life in the post-Soviet
states, particularly in Russia, many Jewish community organizations
remain dominated by foreigners at higher levels. The foreign imprint is
so strong that some resentful local Jews refer to the situation as
"international Jewish colonialism." Others see the control exercised by
foreign-born Hasidic rabbis over Jewish spiritual life as replacing the
control exercised by the Communist Party during the Soviet period.
Whatever analogy is offered, post-Soviet Jews entered the post-Soviet
era ill-prepared to determine their needs and to develop and manage an
infrastructure to address these needs.
Foreign Jewish groups quickly moved to fill
the gaping void in religious services, Jewish education, social
services, and community-building. Although much has been accomplished -
particularly in services to Jewish elderly and several forms of Jewish
education - much remains to be done. Nearly all sources concur that only
a small minority - less than 20 percent - of pre-retirement post-Soviet
Jews are active in any Jewish activity.
To be sure, local bureaucracy has not been
kind to nascent organizations; governments in both Russia and Ukraine
churn out a sea of regulations that even natives find difficult to
navigate. In Ukraine, especially, some Jewish nonprofits have changed
their registrations to that of standard commercial operations so as to
escape government policies that are especially burdensome to
philanthropic organizations. Corruption is endemic in both countries,
generating a major psychological toll, as well as financial burden, on
those confronted with it.
Religious Institutions
Chabad is the dominant Jewish religious
force in Russia and Ukraine, posting rabbis in approximately 40 cities
in the former and 30 in the latter. Most rabbis operate synagogues and
many sponsor other institutions - particularly schools and small-scale
welfare operations - as well. Hasidic community rabbis have adopted the
title of "Chief Rabbi" of the cities in which they work, a title almost
always endorsed by local government officials, even if they are the only
rabbi in the area. They have become the public face of Judaism across
these two countries, a circumstance not always welcomed by local Jews.
Chabad rabbis operate independently in each
Jewish population center, but are represented by an umbrella
organization known as the Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS,
which itself is divided into separate similarly-named organizations in
each of the post-Soviet republics. As suggested by their name, Chabad
representations promote themselves as encompassing Jewish organizations
similar to Jewish federations in North America; affiliates refer to
themselves as "the Jewish Community of Moscow," "the Jewish Community of
Dnipropetrovsk," and so on, as if they represent all Jews in
the specific area. Their rabbis sometimes attempt to impede efforts by
other Jewish denominations to organize.
In addition to promoting Chabad
interpretations of Judaism through synagogues and various educational
programs, FJC (commonly known by its Russian-language acronym, FEOR)
usually provides a range of community support services reflecting the
size of the local Jewish population in a given city or town and the
fundraising and management skills of the local Chabad rabbi. These
programs almost always include holiday celebrations, welfare support to
impoverished elderly Jews, Jewish day schools, and summer camps for
Jewish children, but also may include Jewish community centers,
residential programs for at-risk children, and other activities.
Early support of the far-reaching Chabad
enterprise was provided by Lev Leviev, a London-based, Tashkent-born
oligarch with major holdings in the diamond industry and international
real estate, and George Rohr, a U.S.-based investor with significant
commercial interests in Russia. Roman Abramovich, a Russian-born
oligarch currently living in London, has become a noteworthy Chabad
donor in recent years. Although Mr. Leviev has financed multiple
dimensions of the Chabad venture in the post-Soviet states, he is most
closely identified with the Chabad Ohr Avner school network and other
Chabad educational institutions. Individual Chabad rabbis across Russia
and Ukraine also have been successful in soliciting considerable support
from other foreign sponsors and from a number of wealthy local Jews who
are not observant themselves. However, the Chabad institutional network
has suffered significantly in the current financial crisis as Mr.
Leviev himself, heavily leveraged in his real estate ventures, and other
donors have been forced by circumstances to reduce support of their
philanthropic endeavors. Some rabbis have lost proportionately more
income than others as the dependence on foreign sponsors varies among
them.
Perhaps no Chabad rabbi has been more
successful in attracting local followers, raising money, and developing
infrastructure than Rabbi Shmuel Kaminezki of Dnipropetrovsk, an
industrial city of slightly over one million inhabitants in eastern
Ukraine. Known as Ekaterinoslav until 1926, the city is legendary among
followers of Chabad as the childhood home of the late Rebbe Menachem
Mendel Schneerson during the early years of the twentieth century while
his father, Rabbi Levi Yitzchok Schneerson, was Chief Rabbi of the city.
Although the Jewish population may have been as high as 50,000 when the
Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, it probably is 30,000 or less today
after decades of emigration to Israel and assimilation of many of those
who remain.
Rabbi Kaminezki has built a Chabad
community of 70 to 80 families, at least half of whom are local Jews who
have adopted the Chabad lifestyle while the remainder are Israeli
followers of Chabad who manage Chabad institutions or operate various
businesses. The Chabad infrastructure includes a day school, children's
residence, a pedagogical college for local young women, a seminary for
Chabad young women, and one of only two Jewish senior adult assisted
living homes in all of Ukraine and Russia. A mammoth Chabad Jewish
community center, financed entirely by two important Ukrainian Jewish
businessmen, is under construction adjacent to the choral synagogue. The
relatively large local Jewish population and Rabbi Kaminezki's
leadership and charisma have attracted strong representations of the
Israeli government in the form of a consulate and cultural center, the
Jewish Agency for Israel, and the American Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee to the city. A sister-city relationship between the Jews of
Dnipropetrovsk and the Jews of Boston is one of the most extensive and
productive in the post-Soviet states. On the darker side, Rabbi
Kaminezki is sufficiently influential with various parties to have
effectively banned the Progressive/Reform movement from Dnipropetrovsk
and created a monopoly there for Chabad.
Two other large-city Chabad rabbis in
Ukraine, Rabbi Moshe Moskovitz of Kharkiv and Rabbi Avrum Wolf of Odesa,
also are accomplished and admired in their respective cities. In
Russia, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Pewsner is highly respected in St.
Petersburg. Among other successes, Rabbis Moskovitz and Pewsner have
presided over the restoration of large choral synagogues in their
particular cities.
Chabad Rabbi Berel Lazar, Chief Rabbi of
Russia, is in a class of his own, a close ally of the Russian government
and sometimes referred to as "Chief Rabbi of the Kremlin." His
government ties led to the effective displacement of Rabbi Pinchas
Goldschmidt, a native of Switzerland, and Rabbi Adolph Shayevich, a
native of Birobidzhan (the so-called Jewish Autonomous Republic in the
Russian Far East), as Chief Rabbis of Moscow and Russia respectively.
Rabbis Goldschmidt and Shayevich remain in Moscow and retain their
titles in a formal sense; Rabbi Goldschmidt continues to preside over
the Moscow Choral Synagogue and enjoys the respect of many in the city
and elsewhere.
Rabbi Yaakov Dov Bleich, a Brooklyn-born
Karlin-Stolin Hasid, is Chief Rabbi of Kyiv and Ukraine, although family
and fundraising responsibilities limit his presence in the Ukrainian
capital, weaken his institutions, and generally lessen his influence in a
country in which Chabad is the dominant Jewish religious expression.
The only other significant non-Chabad rabbi in Ukraine is Rabbi Shlomo
Baksht, who is one of two Chief Rabbis of Odesa; Rabbi Baksht shares
that title with Chabad Rabbi Avrum Wolf. The two Odesa rabbis, who
barely speak to one another, appear to be locked in an almost mindless
competition, developing and maintaining competitive programs. Although
each is respected, their rivalry is a source of embarrassment to, and
ridicule among, Odesa Jews.
Among the small-city rabbis, several
associated with Chabad stand out. Among the most accomplished in Ukraine
are Rabbi Levi Stambler of Dniprodzerzhinsk and Rabbi Yosif Wolf of
Kherson. In Russia, several rabbis in Siberia have gained prominence,
among them Rabbi Levi Kaminezki of Tomsk. (Rabbi Wolf of Kherson and
Rabbi Wolf of Odesa are brothers, and Rabbi Kaminezki of Tomsk is the
nephew of Rabbi Kaminezki of Dnipropetrovsk.)
The World Union for Progressive Judaism
(Liberal/Reform) has placed Russian/Ukrainian-origin rabbis in Moscow,
St. Petersburg, Kyiv, and the Crimean peninsula. Poorly funded in
comparison with Chabad, their synagogue facilities are unimpressive and
their general infrastructure is weak. They do, however, operate summer
camps, various youth activities, and a training institute in Moscow that
prepares paraprofessionals for community work in the post-Soviet states
and screens potential candidates for rabbinic study outside these
states. The Masorti/Conservative movement is even weaker, having no
rabbis in the post-Soviet states and offering only very limited youth
and young adult programs in Kyiv and several other Ukrainian cities.
Modern Orthodoxy, too, is characterized more by its absence than its
presence. An Orthodox Union (New York) effort in Kharkiv that once
included a day school and university student center has all but
collapsed in recent years as OU leadership withdrew support and a local
leader became embroiled in a financial scandal.
That Hasidic rabbis play such an outsize
role as the public face of Judaism in the post-Soviet states is due not
only to the indisputable talents of some such rabbis, but also to the
absence of other Jewish leaders and to other voids in the post-Soviet
Jewish space. Civil Judaism has been slow to develop in the post-Soviet
states, thus depriving post-Soviet Jewry of prominent lay and
professional Jewish leaders that have emerged in other countries in
various Jewish community organizations, particularly in North American
Jewish federations and Jewish membership groups, such as the American
Jewish Committee. Finally, it is broadly posited among those familiar
with Russian/Ukrainian history and culture that government officials in
those countries perceive distinctively-garbed Hasidic and other Orthodox
rabbis as religious authority figures similar to their own
exceptionally-attired Orthodox Christian (Pravoslav) priests;
familiarity bestows on Hasidic rabbis a certain respect and privilege
that is accorded much more hesitantly, if at all, to other Jewish
religious leaders.
Nevertheless, Jews in Russia and Ukraine
have not been eager to flock to Hasidic rabbis' synagogues. With the
exception of elderly individuals who are attracted to dining rooms and
other social services offered by some synagogues, many Orthodox prayer
halls draw mainly those who work in Jewish communal institutions and a
few local donors, some of whom can be observed in mobile-telephone
conversations or other diversions during the worship service. Even the
resolutely nonobservant, however, may welcome the restoration and
maintenance of grand synagogues, perceiving their very existence as
symbols of acceptance of Jews and the Jewish people. Grand choral
synagogues, in particular, are seen as approximate equivalents of
imposing Russian/Ukrainian Orthodox churches, those often onion-domed
and colorful sanctuaries of the Other, the majority populations that do
not entirely embrace the Jews in their midst.
Formal Jewish Education
Jewish educational institutions in the
post-Soviet states include almost all types of such institutions known
in other diaspora countries, such as Jewish preschools, Jewish day and
Sunday schools, yeshivot and women's colleges, Jewish summer camps and
community centers, youth and young adult clubs, specialized research
institutions dealing with the Holocaust, and university departments of
Jewish studies. Supporters include international Jewish religious
streams, international and local Jewish organizations, and independent
philanthropists, many of whom are diaspora-based. Until recently, few
indigenous Jews have supported Jewish education programs; however, the
Genesis Philanthropy Group of Moscow now supports certain academic
Judaica programs, Hillel and other youth/young adult programs, and some
Jewish summer camps. This group was founded in 2007 by wealthy Moscow
Jews with a mission to build Jewish identity among Russian-speaking
Jews.
Among the first Jewish educational
institutions to be established as the Soviet Union collapsed were Jewish
day schools. About 100 Jewish day schools exist throughout the
post-Soviet states today, most of them small (under 250 pupils) and most
losing enrollment due to the general Jewish demographic decline and the
failure of many such schools to provide high-quality secular education.
The largest operator of post-Soviet Jewish
day schools is Ohr Avner, a Chabad-affiliated group whose major
supporter, as noted, is Lev Leviev. According to Chabad, Ohr Avner
sponsors 72 Jewish day schools enrolling approximately 12,000 pupils.
The second largest Jewish school system is ORT, which subsidizes (to
varying degrees) approximately 18 schools, all with enhanced computer
technology programs. Some ORT day schools enroll significant numbers of
youngsters with no Jewish ancestry.
Many post-Soviet Jewish day schools are
housed within the buildings of former preschools built and supported by
state-sponsored Soviet trade unions; deprived of state support at the
end of the Soviet period, unions abandoned the facilities, which
subsequently became superfluous in a period of declining population. A
smaller number of conventional public schools also were closed. These
buildings were made available to other institutions, including nascent
Jewish day schools. However, many such structures have proved poorly
designed for contemporary education; some are cheaply constructed and/or
located in relatively remote areas that necessitate lengthy commutes
for pupils and teachers. Preschools designed for small children often
are difficult to convert into institutions suitable for older
youngsters, that is, schools with science laboratories, physical
education facilities, and classrooms and hallways with dimensions
appropriate for growing adolescents. Basically good buildings, such as
the flagship Shorashim ORT school in St. Petersburg, are the exception.
Among the five Jewish day schools in Kyiv, not one is housed in a
structure well suited for middle or high school programs. Soaring
property and construction costs, massive local corruption, and
inexperience in Russian/Ukrainian business transactions have prevented
many rabbis and other day school sponsors from upgrading existing
facilities or obtaining new premises.
In accordance with the customs of many
European countries regarding religiously-affiliated day schools, Jewish
day schools in most post-Soviet states are supported in part by state
subsidies allocated for instruction in core secular subjects, such as
mathematics, science, the dominant local language, and other general
courses. Basic school maintenance and a meals allowance for impoverished
students also may be provided. However, individual Jewish day schools
must pay for all instruction in Jewish subjects and for kosher food.
Unstated, but also necessary are significant bonuses to attract gifted
teachers and other payments to support sophisticated technology programs
demanded by parents, physical plant upgrades, security measures, and
bus transportation between home and school. Approximately 45 of the
post-Soviet Jewish day schools receive operating subsidies from the
Israeli Ministry of Education, and some schools charge modest tuition,
transportation, and/or lunch fees. However, the imposition or increase
of such fees often spurs an exodus of students whose families cannot
afford the cost and are embarrassed to request exemptions.
Typically, Jewish day schools in the
post-Soviet states offer six to eight class periods in Jewish studies
each week. Half of these classes are devoted to instruction in Hebrew
and the other half to a mix of Jewish tradition, history, and culture.
Jewish holidays are observed, and the more ambitious schools have
succeed in attracting funding (often from the Avi Chai Foundation) for
occasional Shabbatonim at local resorts.
In large cities, Jewish day schools are
competing with classical Soviet/post-Soviet specialized schools that
provide double periods of instruction in foreign languages, mathematics,
science, or another subject; nominally free public schools, these
institutions impose additional fees on families to cover special
textbooks and other supplies, teacher bonuses, facility maintenance and
upgrades, security, and other items. Too often, Jewish day schools are
unable to match either the quality of education provided by these elite
public schools or the quality of their buildings; instead, many day
schools attract large numbers of single-parent and underprivileged
families seeking extended-day programs that keep their children in safe,
warm quarters with various welfare benefits, such as hot lunches and
free bus transportation. The Jewish middle class - and many of those
Jews who aspire to middle-class status - prefer other surroundings for
their children, especially as they reach high school age.
The most highly acclaimed Jewish day school
in Russia is School #1311 in Moscow, also known as the Lipman School in
reference to its principal, Grigory Lipman. The Lipman School, one of
the few Jewish day schools in the post-Soviet states whose enrollment is
growing, is nondenominational in orientation, although Mr. Lipman
describes its philosophy as "traditional." Its curriculum includes six
to seven class hours in Jewish studies each week, as well as a strong
secular studies curriculum. Unlike many other Jewish day schools, #1311
has a strong parental support group and is expanding its physical
facilities. No Jewish day school in Ukraine enjoys a reputation equal to
Lipman, which attracts middle-class families.
Notwithstanding the success of the Lipman
School, the future of Jewish day school education in the post-Soviet
states is uncertain at best. Particularly vulnerable are schools under
Hasidic or other Orthodox auspices whose interpretation of Jewish
tradition and practice is unappealing to the largely secular majority of
post-Soviet Jews; additionally, such schools often are unable to
satisfy parental demands for high-quality secular education. Further,
although some Chabad schools are quietly admitting small numbers of
non-halachically Jewish children, the estimated 80 percent intermarriage
rate of post-Soviet Jewry may push these schools over an as-yet
undefined limit of such youngsters. Several schools that follow a policy
similar to that of Agudat Israel decline to admit any halachically
non-Jewish children at all and are enduring unsustainable enrollment
losses as a result.
The number of Sunday school programs in
Russia/Ukraine is difficult to determine because (a) some indigenous
Sunday schools never establish contact with larger institutions and thus
are unknown outside their own locales, and (b) some Sunday programs
described by their organizers as schools are more accurately defined as
recreational programs with modest formal Jewish education content.
Notwithstanding this uncertainty, some observers estimate that
approximately 100 Sunday Jewish educational programs for children exist
throughout the post-Soviet states, enrolling perhaps 3,500 youngsters.
Such programs generally target families with children aged six to
thirteen, and usually focus on superficial celebrations of
Jewish/Israeli holidays, Jewish/Israeli music and dance, Jewish-theme
arts and crafts, local Jewish history, and general activities, such as
English and computer lessons that appeal to families unable to provide
private or specialized school instruction in these subjects. A strong
Israeli element is included in those programs sponsored by Israeli
organizations. The best such programs also offer concurrent Jewish-topic
instruction for parents. Sunday schools are sponsored by local groups,
the Jewish Agency, Israel Culture Centers (attached to Israeli
consulates), and the Reform/Progressive and Masorti/Conservative
movements. In many cases, they provide the only Jewish contact for
Jewish families. Most are open to children who are not halachically
Jewish.
Teachers of Jewish studies are prepared in
several venues. The Jewish Agency and the religious movements provide
some training in seminars, as well as teaching materials, for
instructors in both day and Sunday schools. Several Chabad pedagogical
colleges in the post-Soviet states enroll local young women for early
childhood certificate or degree programs; teachers of Jewish studies in
Orthodox middle and high schools often are recruited from Israel.
Russian- or Ukrainian-born instructors of Hebrew may have learned the
language in Jewish Agency or other ulpan classes; several
colleges and universities in larger cities also offer undergraduate
preparation in Hebrew and in Jewish history. Some Hebrew instructors are
offered stipends by the Jewish Agency for advanced study in Israel.
Printed teaching materials are problematic.
Few Jewish education professionals are satisfied with available
Russian-language textbooks in either the Hebrew language or Jewish
studies. Teacher groups under the auspices of several different Chabad
rabbis have produced Russian-language Jewish studies textbooks, but
these publication ventures are not coordinated by any central body, have
not been developed as a comprehensive age/grade-related series,
sometimes appear primitive in pedagogy, and usually lack appeal to
non-Chabad organizations. Translations of diaspora textbooks often are
insensitive to local cultural conditions.
Institutions of higher education
(post-secondary school level) offering Jewish study programs include
yeshivot, dual-curriculum colleges and quasi-universities in several
cities, secular Jewish-focus colleges in Moscow and St. Petersburg, and
Jewish studies courses in universities. Additionally, both the Jewish
Agency and the Joint Distribution Committee offer seminars, usually on
the graduate level, for educators and social service workers
respectively, and the Reform/Progressive movement operates a three-year machon
(study program) for paraprofessionals. The Jewish Agency and JDC also
support promising teachers and social service workers in Israel-based
graduate-level programs.
A number of Chabad and other Orthodox
rabbis sponsor yeshiva programs in their own communities, usually
providing up to two years of intensive Jewish studies before sending
promising young men to yeshivot in Israel or other countries for
completion of courses leading to smicha (ordination). Those who
do not move on to full ordination may become kashrut supervisors or
teachers of Jewish subjects in Jewish schools. The quality of
Russian/Ukrainian yeshivot varies from institution to institution; some
have acquired reputations less as serious study programs than as refuges
for young men from impoverished families attracted by free room and
board, as well as stipends, provided by rabbinic sponsors.
Rabbi Shmuel Kaminezki of Dnipropetrovsk
opened a post-high school seminary for young women from Chabad families
in 2010. Part of its appeal to Chabad families is its location in an
area rich in Chabad history.
Rabbi Shlomo Baksht of Odesa plus several
Chabad rabbis also sponsor tuition-free colleges that offer
undergraduate degrees in selected fields (such as education, speech
pathology, information technology, accounting, or business) along with a
required parallel curriculum of religious studies. Perhaps best known
of such institutions are the grandly-named Institute of the Twenty-First
Century in Moscow (Chabad, for men) and Beit Chana Jewish Women's
Pedagogical College (Chabad) in Dnipropetrovsk. Two coeducational Jewish
"universities" in Odesa compete with each other - Odesa Jewish
University, sponsored by Rabbi Baksht, and the newer Southern Ukraine
Jewish University, sponsored by Chabad Rabbi Avrum Wolf. Enrollment in
such institutions typically is small (300 or fewer students), limited to
halachically Jewish young people, and free of charge. Qualified faculty
members from conventional universities and colleges generally teach the
professional courses; actual degrees in professional subjects may be
conferred by these same outside universities and colleges. Rabbinic
sponsors of such programs openly acknowledge that among their principal
goals is provision of an environment in which Jewish young men and women
socialize mainly with each other and thus find other young Jews for the
purpose of in-marriage and the raising of Jewish families. Clearly, the
full scholarships offered by rabbis are the main attraction of such
programs; some of them are magnets to young Jews seeking an escape from
dreary smaller cities and towns.
Secular indigenous Jewish-focus colleges
and universities include Maimonides State Classical Academy in Moscow,
which offers degrees in a number of non-Jewish and Jewish subjects,
including Hebrew, and the Petersburg Institute of Jewish Studies (also
known as Petersburg Jewish University), which offers degree
concentrations in Hebrew, Yiddish, and other languages, as well as in
Jewish history. Each of these institutions has placed graduates in
teaching positions at a number of Jewish day schools in their respective
cities. International Solomon University, a proprietary Kyiv-based
institution with a branch in Kharkiv, once conferred degrees in Jewish
studies but has sharply curtailed its offerings in the field in recent
years. It no longer enrolls significant numbers of Jewish students.
The prestigious Moscow State University
hosts the only full-fledged Department of Jewish Studies in a Russian or
Ukrainian university; struggling with inadequate financial resources,
the department is enriched by a program of visiting professors from
Hebrew University and is the first university program of Jewish studies
to have attracted support from the Genesis Philanthropy Group in Moscow.
Interdepartmental centers for Jewish studies are located at the
Moscow-based Russian State University for the Humanities and at the
well-regarded European University of St. Petersburg, a graduate-level
institution. University-caliber research on Jewish subjects also is done
by academics associated with the Russian Academy of Sciences. Sefer,
the Moscow-based Center for University Teaching of Jewish Civilization,
attempts to support university-based Jewish studies through sponsoring
and coordinating various conferences, publications, and forums for young
scholars and research specialists.
Jewish history, particularly Russian and
East European Jewish history, is the principal focus of almost all
academic Jewish studies programs. Exploring the Jewish past is a product
both of newly opened state archives and a level of comfort with the
familiar discipline of history. Jewish culture and Jewish sociology may
be secondary fields. Academic examination of Bible, Talmud and rabbinic
commentaries, Jewish philosophy, and several other areas of Jewish
studies await a generation of scholars more at ease with Judaism and
Jewish tradition. Further, post-Soviet researchers remain constrained by
an inadequate command of relevant languages - such as Hebrew, Yiddish,
and English - and by inadequate preparation in undergraduate-level
Jewish studies.
Several thousand Russian/Ukrainian Jews
annually may be enrolled in distance learning courses offered by the
Open University of Israel. The 15 to 20 available Russian-language
subjects include Jewish history, Jewish and Israeli literature, Bible
and other Jewish texts, and Israeli government. Courses are accredited
toward degrees from the Open University and other Israeli institutions.
Students participate by Internet, sometimes gathering in Internet cafes
for group instruction, and meet periodically with instructors from
Israel who visit for occasional in-person lectures or for examinations.
Russian-language textbooks are provided, although the cost of these
sometimes exceeds the resources of individual students.
Three separate post-Soviet research
institutions study the Holocaust, each understandably focusing on the
Holocaust in the former Soviet Union. These are the Russian Research and
Educational Holocaust Center in Moscow, led by Dr. Ilya Altman, which
receives financial support from both the Russian federal government and
the municipality of Moscow; the Dnipropetrovsk-based Ukrainian Holocaust
Research Center - Tkumah, led by Dr. Igor Schupak, which receives
support from the Philanthropic Fund of the Dnipropetrovsk Jewish
Community (associated with Rabbi Shmuel Kaminezki), the Joint
Distribution Committee, and several European foundations; and the
Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies in Kyiv, directed by Dr. Anatoly
Podolsky, which lacks a stable funding base. All three institutions
maintain collaborative relationships with Yad Vashem in Israel and
Holocaust research groups in other countries.
Avoiding acknowledgment of Jewish suffering
during World War II, Soviet authorities generally prohibited research
into massacres of Jews on Soviet territory; almost all such work began
only in the late 1980s under perestroika as long-closed
archives gradually were made accessible to scholars. In addition to
conducting archival and site research and interviewing survivors, the
three centers publish their findings, operate educational programs for
teachers and youth, and create museum displays. Similar work on a
smaller scale and less professional level is done by community groups in
perhaps a dozen cities and towns near Holocaust massacre sites.
Informal Jewish Education
Informal Jewish education efforts include
Jewish community/culture center programs, summer and winter vacation
camps, family retreats, organizations for students and young adults, and
a burgeoning number of Russian-language Judaica websites. Travel
programs to places of historic Jewish interest within Russia, Belarus,
Ukraine, and Moldova have proved popular and often are led by local
historians trained in formal Jewish education programs.
Indigenous Jewish cultural centers play an
important educational and cultural role in several cities, most notably
St. Petersburg and Odesa. In St. Petersburg, the Jewish community center
on Rubenshtein Street under the direction of Alexander Frenkel houses
an important Russian-language Judaica library, a Jewish music archive,
an art gallery/lecture hall, and several classrooms. It sponsors a
literary club, lectures and concerts on Jewish themes, vocal ensembles,
and children's Jewish cultural activities. A more varied program has
been developed at the Migdal International Jewish Community Center in
Odesa under the leadership of Kira Verkhovskaya; a second center,
Moriah, under the direction of Gennady Katzen, is smaller, but has also
made an important contribution to the restoration of Jewish culture in
Odesa. Although the Frenkel Center now is receiving a subsidy from the
Russian Jewish Congress, all three organizations operate under
significant financial pressure, having been effectively abandoned by the
Joint Distribution Committee in favor of larger, modern JDC community
centers with minimal Jewish content.
The Joint Distribution Committee has been
the driving force behind the development of newer, more comprehensive
Jewish community centers in Jewish population centers throughout Russia
and Ukraine. Typically, these centers include premises for both the
local hesed (JDC welfare center) and various community social and
cultural activities. They range in size from suites of rooms in smaller
towns to mid-size buildings to the well-known large centers in St.
Petersburg (the Yesod Home of Jewish Culture) and Odesa (Beit Grand).
The latter two have acquired substantial notoriety in their home cities
and beyond due to their construction with little significant local
community input, their development with insufficient financial resources
to cover either construction or operating costs, and their deliberate
lack of intensive Jewish programming in favor of upscale cultural
activities intended to attract the developing Jewish middle class. To
generate needed revenue, both centers rent out potentially useful
program space to commercial concerns and impose high participation fees
for those community activities that remain. A number of more modest JDC
Jewish community centers - for example, Krivoi Rog (Ukraine),
Novosibirsk (Siberia), and several district facilities in Moscow - have
proved much less offensive to the Jewish populations in these locales.
Chabad also is in the community/cultural
center field, operating a large facility at Marina Roscha in Moscow and
the smaller Ma'or Center in St. Petersburg, which is attached to, and
used by, a Chabad school as well as the broader Jewish population. In
addition to other small centers in various cities and towns, a massive
Chabad community center is under construction in Dnipropetrovsk,
surrounding that city's major synagogue on two sides. Participation fees
in Chabad centers are modest or nonexistent.
Israel Culture Centers, controlled by Nativ
(the former Lishkat Hakesher), are funded by the Israeli government and
are attached to Israeli consulates in major Russian and Ukrainian
cities. These installations offer Hebrew classes, Israeli/Jewish-focus
clubs and interest groups for different age groups, and, in a new pilot
program, a version of the Israeli Scout movement designed to appeal to
Russian and Ukrainian Jewish teenagers. Israel Culture Center facilities
often include Russian-language Judaica libraries, computer laboratories
with general and Israel-focused programs, and multipurpose rooms that
are made available to local Jewish groups for their own activities. With
increased influence of Russian-heritage individuals in the Israeli
government, the Israel Culture Centers are relatively well financed -
and many of their programs are thriving and expanding while those of
other groups are curtailed in the current economic climate. After an
unfortunate early history in which the ICC parent organization often was
hostile to other Israel-based organizations and to Orthodox rabbis,
Nativ and local Israel Culture Centers now are substantially more
collaborative in local communities.
Jewish summer camps in the post-Soviet
states succeeded a long Soviet tradition of children's camps operated by
the Pioneer Communist youth organization. The Jewish Agency is the
largest single organizer of summer camps, using 18 sites that enrolled
approximately 6,000 children, adolescents, and college students in the
summer of 2010. In addition to its own camps, the Jewish Agency also has
subsidized camps operated by other Jewish organizations, such as
Chabad, the Conservative/Masorti and Reform/Progressive movements, and
indigenous groups. (Adain Lo of St. Petersburg and the Va'ad of Ukraine
probably are the best-known indigenous Jewish summer camp operators.)
Although attendance was free of charge to
campers and camp sessions were as long as four weeks during the 1990s,
financial pressures have forced imposition of camp fees and a reduction
in camp-session duration to as little as one week in recent years. In
many camps, management staff is brought in from Israel and local Jewish
university students are trained and employed as camp counselors.
Few camp organizers own their own sites;
instead, they must negotiate leases every year with owners of former
Pioneer camp properties or with resorts. Typically, accommodations are
in hotel-type or dormitory structures, rather than the small cabins
customary in American children's summer camps. Few camps engage in
classical outdoor camp activities; instead they emphasize informal
Jewish and/or Zionist education and various recreational programs.
For many Jewish youngsters, attendance at a
Jewish summer camp serves as their entry point into Jewish life. The
Jewish Agency and certain other organizations endeavor to engage campers
in year-round Jewish activities, but funds for such programs are not
always available.
Supported by the Genesis Philanthropy Group
and a substantial grant from a North American Jewish federation, the
Jewish Agency organized a two-week Israel-based summer camp for 240
Russian-speaking adolescents from Israel and several cities in the
post-Soviet states in 2010. The campsite was a youth hostel near
Netanya.
The Joint Distribution Committee and the
Conservative/Masorti movement organize family camps that introduce
family units to Jewish practice in informal settings. Whereas JDC
generally holds its family camps at middle-class resorts - and sometimes
finds that families are much more interested in typical resort
activities than in the Jewish content of such programs - Masorti family
camps usually are held in the same campsites used for children's summer
camps.
A variety of programs target Jewish
students and young adults, a demographic cohort favored by the Genesis
Philanthropy Group. The best known of such efforts probably is the
Hillel student association. Launched in the post-Soviet states in 1994
with significant financial support from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman
Family Foundation, Hillel was effectively controlled by the Joint
Distribution Committee in its early post-Soviet operations. In 2007, the
organization separated from JDC, a move reflecting both a desire for
independence and a bid to garner local support. Indigenous individual
and institutional donors (such as the Genesis Philanthropy Group) were
reluctant to invest in a program of Joint, which is perceived as both
bureaucratic and foreign. Hillel currently sponsors groups in 15 cities
in Russia and six in Ukraine, as well as six others in Belarus, Moldova,
and Central Asia. Organized on a city-wide basis, rather than the
campus model common in the United States, Hillel offers a variety of
educational, cultural, social, and community activities. As is the case
with young people elsewhere, volunteerism is increasingly popular in the
post-Soviet states - and many Hillel participants now assist Jewish
elderly or impoverished Jewish children, and/or engage in general
community projects, such as building or upgrading playgrounds in
low-income areas.
Lo Tishkach (Do Not Forget) was established
in 2006 as a joint project of the Conference of European Rabbis and the
Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany. It engages Jewish
young adults in establishing both a comprehensive database of all
European Jewish burial grounds and a compendium of local laws affecting
their protection and preservation. In addition to acquiring information
that facilitates advocacy for the maintenance of these sites, Lo
Tishkach also acquaints young people with pre-Holocaust Jewish life and
culture in surrounding areas. Participants are expected to undertake
practical work in the preservation and protection of these sites. The
Genesis Philanthropy Group has supported the expansion of Lo Tishkach to
a number of different Jewish population centers.
Approximately 10,000 Russian-speaking Jews
between the ages of 18 and 26 have participated in the Taglit project
(known as birthright Israel in the United States), free 10-day tours of
Israel, since the program's inception. The Genesis Philanthropy Group
has made a significant financial commitment to Russian-speaking groups
in Taglit. A smaller number of Russian-speaking young people enroll in
the longer MASA programs, which often serve as a springboard for aliyah.
Economic incentives play a major role in
the expansion of STARS and other stipend-based part-time education
programs sponsored by Chabad and other Orthodox providers. STARS
(Student Torah Alliance for Russian Speakers) aims to educate
halachically Jewish young people between the ages of 18 and 25 in
Orthodox Jewish tradition, philosophy, lifestyle, and history. It was
introduced in the post-Soviet states in 2006 and now enrolls
approximately 3,500 participants who receive stipends to attend weekly
classes. The program is supported by Lev Leviev and by Elie Horin of
Brazil and engages both Chabad and non-Chabad Orthodox instructors. In
its initial years, young people were required to attend two weekly
sessions, each for two and one-half hours, held in synagogue premises so
as to bring young people into synagogues. Stipends were calculated
according to the cost of living in specific cities; Moscow participants
were paid $130 monthly, St. Petersburg and Kyiv attendees were paid
$110, and residents of other major Ukrainian cities (Dnipropetrovsk,
Kharkiv, and Odesa) $90 each. Participants in smaller population centers
were paid incrementally less. However, following the onset of the
global economic crisis in 2008, major sponsors reduced their support of
STARS and the number of sessions and amount of subsidy were decreased by
50 percent in all but a few areas in which local rabbis were able to
raise funds that ensured the continuing operation of the original
program.
In some cities, participating rabbis have
mandated separate STARS classes for young men and young women; in
others, such as the highly regarded St. Petersburg Chabad program,
coeducational instruction is the norm and is considered a key reason for
the popularity of the local STARS endeavor. Most STARS undertakings,
whether based on coeducational or single-gender formal instruction, also
include occasional coeducational Shabbat dinners or other social events
so that halachically Jewish young men and women have opportunities to
meet one another in informal Jewish settings.
In Dnipropetrovsk, the STARS program has
led to the development of additional stipend-based education programs
that target halachically Jewish young people for further teaching.
Participants are paid according to attendance and, in some cases,
examinations.
The STARS program and its offshoots have
been controversial since their inception for several reasons. First,
many observers - including some participating rabbis - consider the
stipends to be little more than bribery. Not surprisingly, a large
number of STARS participants are from impoverished families. The payment
of stipends has generated an expectation among some students of
remuneration for any Jewish activity, an anticipation that may
be detrimental to the development of a self-supporting indigenous Jewish
community. Second, by limiting enrollment to halachically Jewish young
people, STARS is insensitive to the extraordinarily high rate of
intermarriage in the post-Soviet states; it is likely that the majority
of self-identified young Jews are excluded from its ranks. Third, more
liberal Jews feared that Chabad sponsorship would lead to a dogmatic
presentation of Judaism and Jewish practice. In some large cities,
however, it appears that the third fear has not been realized, in part
because many of the instructors are indigenous baalei tshuva (newly Orthodox Jews) who are well aware of local sensitivities.
Limmud, a program of pluralistic Jewish
educational conferences that originated in Britain almost 30 years ago
and has since been replicated in other countries, has operated in the
post-Soviet states since 2007. Typically, a Limmud conference convenes
at a college or resort and offers several days of lectures and meetings
on a variety of Jewish subjects, including Jewish texts, history,
culture, and current events. Presenters are drawn from a wide variety of
backgrounds, and participants are from a broad spectrum of Jewish
belief and practice, from totally secular to observant. The atmosphere
is informal, and meals and various common events bring people together
for socializing. Limmud is broadly perceived as providing an environment
in which post-Soviet Jews are able to study and enjoy Judaism without
the restrictions imposed by Orthodox rabbis who dominate post-Soviet
organized Jewish life. Although Limmud can boast of extraordinary
success in making Judaism more accessible to many post-Soviet Jews, it
remains a largely foreign program with foreign advisers and continuing
dependence on foreign financial support. In common with a number of
other Jewish programs in the post-Soviet states, Limmud will be fully at
home and fully user-friendly to post-Soviet Jews only when its
organization and financing are controlled by those whom it intends to
serve.
Indigenous Jewish young adult activities
also include both Jewish-theme intellectual games roughly comparable to
trivia contests in the West and mobile midnight scavenger hunts. The
latter may involve as many as 20 teams in cars searching for
Jewish-related sites, both permanent and temporary (such as symbols on
billboards). Jewish young adults also organize Jewish-theme dances and
holiday parties.
Commercial coffee houses with a strong
Jewish cultural influence appeal to some urban Jews who are unaffiliated
with any "official" Jewish institution. Owned and operated by Jewish
intellectuals in a few major cities, these cafés may feature readings of
Jewish-theme poetry, Jewish cabaret singers, popular expositions of
Jewish holidays, or other entertainment with a Jewish focus.
Russian-language Judaica websites abound,
many sponsored by Chabad or other religious groups and a few maintained
by individuals. Perhaps the most comprehensive and among the most
user-friendly is the new (2010) Activi site developed by education specialists in Israel and posted by the Joint Distribution Committee. Activi is
a massive anthology (also available in print format) of information on
Jewish tradition, holidays, history, culture, and literature. It also
includes program material for teachers and group leaders, including
various activities and games.
In a category of its own is Project Kesher,
a women's group that pursues a multifaceted agenda focusing on Jewish
women and girls, including intensive Jewish education for its members,
leadership development, women's and family health advocacy, computer
skills (in cooperation with ORT), general community service, and family
financial management. Project Kesher is active in approximately 150
cities in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, and Georgia, and is
supported mainly by contributions from Americans and grants from
foundations and several governments that encourage community development
in the post-Soviet states.
Several Jewish educational service
organizations provide important support to Jewish education efforts in
the post-Soviet states. First, the Jewish Agency teaches Hebrew in ulpan
classes, organizes informal Jewish education programs for different age
groups, operates its own Jewish camps and subsidizes camps of other
Jewish groups, organizes Taglit and other Israel trips, trains teachers
of Hebrew and other Jewish subjects, trains camp counselors and youth
group leaders, provides teaching materials, and arranges a variety of
other educational programs. However, severe budget cuts in recent years -
caused mainly by pre-recession decisions of some North American Jewish
federations to reduce support of overseas programs - have forced severe
budget cuts in all of the Jewish Agency's program areas and have eroded
its influence.
Avi Chai, a private foundation endowed in
1984 by investor Sanford (Zalman) Bernstein, publishes high-quality
Russian-language Judaica for adults and children, sponsors sophisticated
Jewish-interest cultural gatherings, supports academic Jewish studies,
funds support services and enrichment programs at Jewish day schools and
summer camps that increase their attractiveness to Jewish families, and
encourages local Jewish leadership in Jewish communal activity.
Although Avi Chai exercises influence in a number of major post-Soviet
cities, the focus of its operations is Moscow.
The Institute for Jewish Studies in the
C.I.S., operating under the auspices of Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, initiated
activities in Moscow in 1989. Its current activities focus
on professional leadership development for teachers of Jewish subjects
and leaders of Jewish organizations as well as development of Jewish
educational materials, including distance-learning programs and Jewish
educational games. Although based in Moscow, the Institute for Jewish
Studies conducts workshops in a variety of locales. It is pluralistic in
approach and works with numerous local and international Jewish
organizations.
Although not formally a Jewish education
service organization, the Moscow-based Genesis Philanthropy Group has
emerged as potentially one of the most important organizations
supporting Jewish education for Russian-speaking Jews, as alluded to
previously. Funded by five prominent wealthy Russian Jews, GPG was
established in 2007 with a mission focusing on building Jewish identity
among Russian-speaking Jews in the post-Soviet states, Israel, and other
countries in which Russian-speaking Jews reside. From its inception, it
has been operated with the collaboration of experienced Western
professionals in relevant fields. To date, it has made major financial
commitments to the Jewish Agency in support of Jewish schools and Jewish
summer camps in the post-Soviet states, to Hillel in the post-Soviet
states, to academic Jewish studies programs in Russia, and to the Adain
Lo education/welfare group in St. Petersburg.
GPG also pursues professional training of
Russian-speaking staff and comprehensive evaluations of all
undertakings. Well aware of antipathy among post-Soviet Jews toward
Chabad and other Orthodox groups, GPG is focusing on secular and
pluralist Jewish identity-building initiatives.
* * *
Notes
[1] The last official Soviet census, in 1989, showed
570,000 Jews in Russia, 487,000 in Ukraine, and 112,000 in Belarus at
the beginning of 1989. The aggregate Jewish population in the remaining
12 republics was 310,800. Although Soviet census figures were broadly
mistrusted, because it was assumed that respondents were reluctant to
acknowledge Jewish heritage to official census takers, Professor
DellaPergola and his team have found that government data proved
consistent and logical over time from the Soviet era to current
conditions.
[2] The 2009 estimates were provided by Professor
DellaPergola in a Chicago interview on December 7, 2009. The team
associated with him at Hebrew University advises that the 2009 estimate
of 348,000 Jews in all of the post-Soviet states (Russia, Ukraine,
Belarus, Moldova, the Baltic states, and the former Caucasus and Central
Asian republics) be multiplied by three to account for self-identified
Jews and their non-Jewish family members who might accompany them to
Israel under provisions of the Israeli Law of Return.
[3] For statistical evidence regarding changes in the socioeconomic profile of Moscow Jews, see Sergio DellaPergola, Some Demographic and Socio-Economic Trends of the Jews in Russia and the FSU. Unpublished
manuscript, Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, December 2009. The principal project investigator and
writer was Mark Tolts. See also DellaPergola, World Jewish Population, 2010 (2010, No. 2), Current Jewish Population Reports, North American Jewish Data Bank, New York.
* * *
Dr. Betsy Gidwitz is an independent consultant engaged in
issues concerning the post-Soviet states. Currently residing in Chicago,
she is a former member of the faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Dr. Gidwitz travels frequently in the post-Soviet states,
particularly Ukraine and Russia.
Other related articles:
- Anti-Semitism in the Post-Soviet States - Betsy Gidwitz
- Post-Soviet Jewry: Critical Issues - Betsy Gidwitz
- Jewish Life in Independent Ukraine: Fifteen Years After the Soviet Collapse (Part 1) - Betsy Gidwitz
- Jewish Life in Independent Ukraine: Fifteen Years After the Soviet Collapse (Part 2) - Betsy Gidwitz