JTA
- 02.05.2002
Jewish
Telegraphic Agency
Once
in the Russian shadows,
Hillel Emerges as a Major Attraction
 |
Moscow
and Texas Hillel students celebrate Shabbat together during
Texas-Moscow Hillel Advocacy Program |
By Lev Gorodetsky
MOSCOW, Feb. 4 (JTA) — As recently as 1995, Russian Jewish parents
scolded me for representing a "shady" Jewish group that could
jeopardize their children´s university education, says Zhenya
Mikhalyova, the leader of Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life
in Russia.
Now, says
Mikhalyova, a high school teacher turned Jewish activist, Jewish parents
are bringing their kids to Hillel and asking the group to accept their
children — and, perhaps, find them a husband or wife.
"Something
has changed. There is really a feeling of a community being
formed," she says.
Hillel,
of course, is not the only organization in the former Soviet Union
wooing young Jews. Focusing attention on the young has become a mantra
for Jewish organizations in the region.
Both the
Reform movement and the Jewish Agency for Israel invest considerable
effort in organizing activities for younger Jews.
Programs
run by the Israeli Foreign Ministry´s Liaison Bureau, as well as free
trips to Israel sponsored by Lubavitch and other groups, also attract
thousands of Jewish youngsters, especially from smaller, more provincial
communities.
But there´s
little doubt that Hillel has been one of the more successful groups with
college-aged Jews.
The
Russian branch of Hillel, which started in 1994 in a Moscow apartment
rented by Mikhalyova, currently operates 28 centers throughout the FSU
with roughly 10,000 regular participants, according to Yossie Goldman, a
Jerusalem-based rabbi who helped launched Hillel activity in the former
Soviet Union.
"There
is now a growing demand for Hillel´s kind of activity in the former
Soviet Union. Our further expansion is hindered only by funding
limitations," he says.
The
funding for Hillel in the FSU, which is $1.6 million for 2002, is
provided mainly by the Schusterman family foundation, and partly by the
American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.
Despite
the success of Hillel and other groups, they still only reach some 15
percent to 25 percent of the young Jewish population.
Many of
the Jews who join Christian missionary groups are young Jews seeking
roots who have not been reached by Jewish organizations, says Alexander
Lakshin, who is coordinating the anti-missionary fighting in the region.
"The
‘messianic´ success reflects in part our failure," says Joel
Golovensky, head of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee´s
Moscow office.
But
Hillel still reaches large numbers of young Jews, as evidenced by a
congress last week at which more than 300 Jewish students from across
the former Soviet Union met near Moscow for five days of lectures,
workshops and shmoozing.
A speech
at the opening ceremony was interrupted by cheering several times, as
Hillel students from far- flung locales were introduced.
Jay
Rubin, Hillel´s executive vice president, who flew in for the congress,
told JTA that Latin America and the former Soviet Union are the regions
of greatest growth for Hillel.
One
reason for Hillel´s ascent in the former Soviet Union is the growing
desire among many young Jews for communal solidarity and for building a
Jewish life.
"Until
recently, doing Jewish things meant going to synagogue prayers or to
Jewish Agency for Israel Hebrew classes to prepare for aliyah,"
Vyacheslav Leshtchiner, the director of a Moscow Jewish high school,
told JTA. "Now there is a critical mass of young people with this
or that degree of Jewish education and identification, who understand
they are living here and have to create some communal structures of
their own for their own interests and not only for the elders."
Hillel is
offering clubs and classes, out-of-town seminars on Jewish tradition and
culture, trips to Israel and volunteer trips to small distant
communities to lead Jewish celebrations there — but above all, a
low-key approach.
"We
also have a club for young people run by the Jewish Agency for Israel,
but it is basically for those who are going to emigrate," said Vera
Kofman, a Hillel activist from the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk.
"Events for the young are also organized at the city´s synagogue,
but there are problems" with Jewish children of intermarried
families, "whereas Hillel is really for all."
Katya
Broitman, an observant Jew who is majoring in Jewish studies at a Moscow
university, said she appreciates Hillel´s high-quality classes on
Jewish tradition — as well as its low-pressure environment.
"There
is also a kind of free atmosphere here, which I love," she said.