Jewish
Week - 04.18.2002
A
Rally of Their Own
At
a Religious/Political Event, Russian Immigrants Show Support for Israel
in Brighton Beach
By
Adam Dickter
The
day before the massive pro-Israel rally in Washington, some 2,500
Russian-speaking immigrants in a Brooklyn neighborhood put on their own
show of solidarity.
In Brighton Beach, protesters held up signs in Russian and English and
chanted pro-Israel slogans as they listened to rabbis and politicians.
They then marched in the shadow of the overhead Q train tracks from
Brighton Beach Avenue to a candlelighting vigil.
It was the first of two events planned in the heavily immigrant
neighborhood as Russian-speaking Jews, many of whom have relatives in
Israel, begin to activate on their behalf.
“The Russian-speaking community has grown more and more politically
active as it has matured,” said Leonard Glickman, president of the
Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. “They are no longer content to stay on
the sidelines.”
Although
overtly political, Sunday’s rally sponsored by a group under Lubavitch
chasidic auspices also had clear religious overtones. Rabbi Hershel
Okunov, founder of Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe, led the mostly
secular, elderly crowd in chanting the Shema and portions of the Hallel
prayer, recited on holidays and on the first days of each month.
FREE was founded in the 1960s at the behest of the late Lubavitcher
rebbe to spread Jewish observance among Soviet emigres.
At the Hebrew Alliance of Brighton Beach synagogue, where the
candlelighting was held, Rabbi Okunov called on those in attendance to
increase their observance of the commandments to give charity and post
mezuzahs in their homes. Charity collection boxes earmarked for FREE
were distributed.
At the rally, speakers included conservative talk show host Curtis Sliwa
of WABC (770 AM) and elected officials including Rep. Anthony Weiner,
state Sen. Carl Kruger, City Councilman Mike Nelson and Assemblyman
Steve Cymbrowitz, all of whom represent districts that include Brighton
Beach.
Also addressing the crowd was Galina Gurov, an immigrant from Minsk,
Belarus, to Israel who lost her brother, Arkady, 38 and a father of
four, in a Purim terrorist shooting in Jerusalem.
“The turnout is great,” said Eli Reznikov, 30, a computer programmer
born in St. Petersburg and now living in Crown Heights. “We need to
have more demonstrations like this.”
Dina, a Moscow native who declined to give her last name, marched
alongside her son, who was holding a poster calling on Yasir Arafat to
“Be a Man, Blow Yourself [Up]. Don’t Use Children.”
“I lived in Israel. I know what a terrorist attack is,” said Dina,
who witnessed the aftermath of a Jerusalem shooting spree in 1984. “I
know what it is to feel absolute despair. I am so happy to see us
united. When we stand together, nobody can hurt us.”
Israel has placed no limitations on Jewish immigration from the former
Soviet Union, so many immigrants who came here during the 1980s have
relatives in the Jewish state.
Avram Gershkovich, 25, also from Moscow and a student at the Shaarei
Emunah yeshiva in Bensonhurst, said he often calls relatives in Haifa to
check on their safety after each bombing.
“I feel tremendous concern about my relatives,” he said.
The second event is an April 28 rally at 11:30 a.m. and sponsored by
HIAS, the daily newspaper New Russian Voices and the Brooklyn Community
Civic Organization. In addition to supporting Israel, protesters will
call on the United States to ease immigrant restrictions imposed after
Sept. 11, enabling more emigres to leave former Soviet lands.