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Get out now: Soviet refusenik Natan Sharansky’s warning to Russia’s Jews as crackdown fears grow

The ex-dissident, who spent nine years in Soviet prisons, issued the bleak warning amid an escalation of President Vladimir Putin’s repression of the Jewish Agency

August 4, 2022 09:07
Sharansky
3 min read

Russian Jews thinking of fleeing the country should leave now before a new wave of antisemitism begins, former Soviet refusenik Natan Sharansky has told the JC.

The ex-dissident, who spent nine years in Soviet prisons after he was refused permission to leave the USSR, issued the bleak warning amid an escalation of President Vladimir Putin’s crackdown on the Jewish Agency.

One Jewish émigré told the JC they fear “the days of the Iron Curtain might come again”.
Since the beginning of the war, roughly 17,000 immigrants have made aliyah from Russia, an increase of about 420 per cent compared to the same period last year, a spokesperson for the Jewish Agency said. As of 2021, around 600,000 Russians were estimated to be eligible to claim Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return.

Mr Sharansky, a former Israeli minister who also used to chair the Jewish Agency, said that while Jews are currently safe on the streets of Moscow it was only a matter of time before the Russian government sparked an increase in persecution.

He said: “Without doubt, the moment the regime becomes more and more totalitarian, they will be looking for more and more internal and external enemies.

“The moment it changes the Jews will become scapegoats again, then immediately antisemitism on the streets will come back. It hasn’t happened yet, and let’s hope it will not happen.”

Currently, he added, the freedom to emigrate from Russia is “the last freedom which still exists”.