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L.A.
Times - 03.21.2002
The
Los Angeles Times
A Matzo
Airlift and More
Religion:
Importing the kosher bread is part of one ultra-Orthodox group's efforts
to revive Judaism in the former Soviet Union.
By Robyn
Dixon
MOSCOW -- At age 8, Itzak Kogan was up to his arms in illegal flour,
helping his mother bake matzo, which was banned in the Soviet Union.
Even after it became legal in the 1960s, supplies were short. As a rabbi
in Leningrad in the 1970s, Kogan traveled to the Soviet republic of
Georgia to bake 1,100 pounds of the flat, unleavened bread, because
Russian flour was unsuitable for making kosher matzo.
To get the large cargo home without risking difficulties with police,
family members split it up and flew it to Leningrad, now St.
Petersburg.Bread Abounds Today
But in Moscow today, the bread abounds. Billboards urge Russians to buy
genuine Israeli matzo. The campaign is sponsored by the ultra-Orthodox
Chabad Lubavitch movement, which is importing 1.2 million pounds of it
into the former U.S.S.R. for the coming Passover holiday. The matzo
airlift is just one part of the group's efforts to revive Judaism in the
former Soviet Union, where even practices such as kosher butchering were
once seen as threats to the state.
After becoming a rabbi, Kogan had to learn the complicated rituals of
kosher slaughtering--which was illegal--because there was no kosher meat
available in Leningrad. He killed chickens secretly in his house or at
his country cottage. He and his followers would slaughter cows in rural
fields among high grass, where no one could see them.
But the KGB knew everything. Kogan's KGB minder, Alexander Belayev, was
warned by his superiors to watch Kogan closely because of his strong
"anti-Soviet" activities.
Kogan worked at a military plant, and Belayev informed management there
that Kogan was involved in underground kosher slaughtering. But the
rabbi had softened up his bosses by bringing them cheap chicken whenever
he failed to follow the correct ritual in killing a bird.
His superiors took no action against him. He set up an underground
butcher school to teach men the rituals so that cities all over Russia
could have kosher meat. Kogan, now a leading Chabad rabbi, also
performed circumcisions, weddings and other rituals in secret. Risking
prison, he ran an underground Jewish school.
Chabad Lubavitch is the fastest-growing movement promoting the revival
of Judaism in the former U.S.S.R., marking its progress not only in
pounds of matzo sold but also in the dozens of schools, community
centers and orphanages it has opened. It has 3,200 workers in the former
Soviet Union, plus 70 kindergartens, 64 schools, three orphanages and
community centers or synagogues in 70 cities.
This year, the movement is holding public Seders for 250,000 Russians.
The feast commemorates the exodus of the Jews from Egypt, and it is
celebrated on the first night or the first two nights of eight days of
Passover. The unleavened matzo is eaten to commemorate the Israelites
who fled quickly into the desert with no time for their breads to rise
and were forced to bake the dough into hard crackers in the sun.
Because the matzo is often bought by non-practicing Jewish families, the
box includes an explanation of Passover and instructions on which
blessings to pronounce upon the matzo, what foods should be prepared for
Passover and what each symbolizes.
Reviving an Identity
Russia is fertile ground for the Lubavitch movement. The nation is home
to an estimated 600,000 Jews, most of whom had no spiritual connection
with Judaism during the Soviet years, nor an appreciation of the nuances
of Judaism and the differences among ultra-Orthodox, Orthodox or Reform
strands of the religion.
In Soviet times, most Jews were either non-practicing, atheists or
converts to the Russian Orthodox Church, and the majority remain so.
But being Jewish was an inescapable part of their identity, emblazoned
on their passports under "nationality." Jews faced barriers in
higher education and the workplace.
Lubavitchers insist that their motive in the former Soviet Union is not
to attract Jews to their own ultra-Orthodox movement but to revive
people's Jewish identity. However, they focus on young people and are
eager to enroll children in Lubavitch schools.
The movement takes its name from Lyubavichy, near Smolensk, west of
Moscow, the village where the movement was based from 1813 to 1915,
spreading to other nations. On Sunday, the group will mark 100 years
since the birth of the last Lubavitch rebbe, the charismatic Rabbi
Menachem Schneerson, who died in 1994.
The Chabad push back into Russia since the collapse of communism has
generated controversy and split the nation's Jewish community. The
Lubavitch-dominated Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia sparked
bitterness and anger when it elected Berel Lazar as chief rabbi of the
country in 2000 to compete with Russia's existing chief rabbi, Adolf
Shayevich, from a broader Jewish organization, the Russian Jewish
Congress.
The Kremlin has embraced Lazar as though he represented all Russian
Jews, further exacerbating the tensions.
Lubavitch Rabbi Avraham Berkowitz of Moscow contends that one reason the
movement has been successful in Russia is that Lubavitchers are willing
to give up the comforts of a Western lifestyle for a harsh life in the
provinces of Russia, Ukraine and other former republics.
"A Lubavitcher looks at a privileged life as being not about how
luxurious his car is but about his spiritual life and how much he can
accomplish," he said. "We're not afraid to go into the
trenches. It doesn't bother us that in summer there's no hot water in
the shower."
Kogan's story typifies the values of the movement. He spent 14 years
trying to escape from the Soviet Union, only to return three years after
he succeeded in emigrating.
'Terrifying' to Return
He had been forbidden to emigrate because of his job as an engineer on
systems for nuclear submarines, but his "anti-Soviet
activities" were another factor.
When he was finally allowed to emigrate to Israel in 1986, he lived
there only a year before Schneerson urged him to return. Coming back two
years later was "terrifying," Kogan recalled. Kogan came back
to violence in Russia, where there have been numerous attacks and
bombings targeting Jews.
The 56-year-old rabbi keeps several thick black pipes in his
office--pieces of a homemade bomb found in his synagogue in 1999. At the
time, the rabbi and an assistant moved the bomb out onto the street.
Police were called and the device was detonated under controlled
conditions. An explosion had occurred at the synagogue in 1993. No one
was hurt in either incident.
Soon after Kogan settled in Moscow, he was invited for a meeting with
his old KGB minder, Belayev, the man who had devoted his life to tracing
Kogan's every step.
Belayev was a broken man, living in poverty in a small apartment. He
told Kogan that his superiors always exhorted him to be vigilant against
Kogan. They vowed that Kogan would never be allowed to leave the
country.
When Kogan got his exit visa, Belayev felt that his entire KGB career
had been wasted. He resigned and went back to the job he was originally
trained for, a lathe operator.
"He apologized to me and asked for my forgiveness," Kogan
said. "He told me he quit his work after I left because for him
that symbolized the failure of everything he had worked for."
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