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Volodymyr Zelensky is the Jewish president Ukraine needed

In a country with a history of antisemitism, it is encouraging that his Judaism has not been an issue

February 28, 2022 11:31
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2 min read

At the Russian embassy in London this weekend, there was an impressive turnout. A man drove a classic Mercedes slowly through the crowd of people just outside Kensington Gardens, blaring the Ukrainian national anthem with a giant flag hanging out his car. Parents held children on their shoulders as they craned to see the graffiti chalked on the embassies walls and the red paint splashed against the mansion. A man carried a sign with a caricature of Putin with a Hitler moustache with the phrase "stop Putler" beneath it. Much has been made of the eerie similarities between 1939 and today; the doomed appeasement conference in Munich, the false claims of freeing ethnic compatriots from their oppressors, the emotionally inconsistent nature of the leaders waging the wars. But there’s a key difference this time around.

A Jew is leading the fight against the invaders.

Volodomyr Zelensky has rightly captured the world’s attention this past week. From people discovering his exploits on the Ukrainian Strictly Come Dancing to his heroic selfie-shot videos proving he’s still fighting for his capital, he’s become the nice Jewish boy the world never knew it needed.

A collective sigh went up among diaspora Jews when he uttered his now famous, “I need ammunition not a ride” line as the bar for Jewish masculinity reached unattainable new highs. And his Jewishness has not proven an obstacle to his patriotism. He is hailed among his people as one of them, their leader - a luxury that didn’t exist for his Ukrainian Jewish forebears.