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Opinion

Jewish history tells us that bullies falsify and distort - Putin is just the latest

The far right has far less support in Ukraine than in Russia and much of Western Europe

March 2, 2022 11:15
GettyImages-1238855525 Putin
2 min read

Jews know well that wars don’t only happen on one front. As well as the horrendous loss of life, there is also a war of rhetoric, like when Vladimir Putin justified Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with ludicrous claims that the country needs ‘de-Nazification.’ 

Ukraine’s centrist, Jewish president Volodymyr Zelensky, and the pitiful 2% won by Ukraine’s far right in 2019, fly against Putin’s de-Nazification excuse. Putin cynically invoked the fight against Nazism for legitimacy. His other attempts to rewrite history, remarkably suggesting that Ukraine is fake news invented by ‘Bolshevik Russia’, also embolden the global far right. Promises to safeguard purity in the face of monstrosities like liberal democracy or tolerance sound ominously familiar to many Jews. 

Far from living in a Nazi state, Ukraine’s Jewish community was thriving including with two great progressive communities that I visited a few years ago. Putin's invasion, meanwhile, has prompted thousands of Jews to flee. One of my fellow rabbis, who leads a Progressive Jewish congregation in Odesa, has fled along with her child and more than half a million other citizens. Another colleague has stayed in Kyiv, like other men between the ages of eighteen and sixty have been urged to. Citizen-soldiers resisting with makeshift resources against a gigantic army? It sounds like 1942, not 2022.

My own affinity with the region is personal, collegial and familial. My ancestors came to Britain from Lithuania, another heartland of the imperial Pale of Settlement where Jews were allowed to live. Some of my husband’s family were from Odessa, once a centre of Jewish cultural life and today Ukraine’s third city. Seeing the country besieged tears our hearts.