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Opinion

Women and students led the way in the fight for Soviet Jewry

It’s a story with many different strands, as well as huge contemporary relevance, after the Russian invasion of Ukraine

May 24, 2023 13:43
Chief Rabbi at protest against the plight of Soviet Jewry 1980s IMG 5290
5 min read

Five years ago, I picked up a book dealing mainly with the campaign by American Jews to allow Soviet Jews to emigrate at the height of the Cold War. I found it so absorbing that I wondered whether there was a similar account chronicling the activities of British Jews. Like so many others I had been a foot soldier in the British campaign, participating in demonstrations against Russian ballet companies, writing letters to local newspapers and telephoning trapped Soviet Jewish families waiting to leave. There seemed to be a gap in the literature, so I plunged in.

But as I was finishing my own research, the invasion of the Ukraine ordered by Putin and his minions seemed to catch up with past history and I sensed that the final chapter of the long history of the Jews in Russia was being written, as they were beginning to feel increasingly unwelcome under an authoritarian regime. Three million or more Jews had lived in Ukraine and the contiguous areas of what became Poland during the early 20th century. Between 1918 and 1921, at least 120,000 Jews were murdered in pogroms in this area. A couple of decades later Jews were concentrated in Poland, the western Soviet Union, Lithuania and Latvia. Ukraine had been re-conquered and incorporated into the Soviet Union, after a fierce war. Fears expressed in the New York Times in 1919 that six million Jews were in danger of being exterminated became reality.

To put the situation of the Soviet Jews into context, I focused on the years of Stalin’s ascendancy and Khrushchev’s tenure, when synagogues were closed, the teaching of Jewish culture and religion was extinguished and the commemoration of the Holocaust was forbidden. Soviet Jews felt isolated and forgotten.

At this point, to my surprise, the Israeli government, as early as 1952, set up a secret organisation, the Lishka, for the ingathering of the remnants of the East European masses, whose numbers it hoped would help to consolidate their new state. Hence the Israelis approached Soviet Jews, supplying them with prayer books and literature and encouraging them to renew their Jewish identity and apply to emigrate — but then the Israelis discovered that Western Jews were on the whole blissfully unaware of the situation of Soviet Jewry and apathetic about taking action on their behalf. So this had to be remedied by approaching interested individuals.