JTA -
05.08.2002
The
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
With
Situation in Israel Tense, Many Russians are Staying Put
By
Lev Gorodetsky
MOSCOW,
May 7 (JTA) – After fleeing the tense Caucasus Mountains region, Ilya
and Taira Shubayev planned to immigrate to Israel.
But the
couple, both in their 40s, are planning to stay here for now because of
the violence in Israel. They worry that their son, 16, and daughter, 14,
would be endangered by serving in the Israeli army.
The
Shubayev family is not alone. Immigration to Israel from the former
Soviet Union is down 50 percent this year.
Approximately
5,200 new immigrants arrived in Israel from the former Soviet Union in
the first four months of this year, a drop of nearly 50 percent from the
same period in 2001 — and the 2001 figures were down 40 percent to 50
percent from previous years.
The
improving economic situation in Russia and Ukraine, where the majority
of Jews in the former Soviet Union live, plays a role. Most emigration
from Ukraine and Russia today is coming from small towns, where the
economic recovery has not been as strong.
Alexander
Faytelson, 38, a Jewish businessman from Ukraine, canceled his planned
aliyah after a month-long visit to Israel earlier this year. He decided
to settle in Moscow instead.
"I
simply wouldn´t find a good job in Israel, in today´s situation, and
for that matter, in Germany. In Moscow my chances are greater," he
said.
Faytelson´s
elder brother moved to Boston a few years ago, and his parents left Lviv,
in western Ukraine, for Germany last March.
But
Vladimir Shapiro, a sociologist with the Russian Academy of Sciences,
told JTA that the main factor behind the decline in aliyah is the tense
situation in Israel.
"In
addition to simple fear, there is a new widespread psychological
phenomenon that stops a lot of people — the absence of a light at the
end of the tunnel, of the futility of the peace process," Shapiro
said.
A 1998
survey that his group conducted showed that 45 percent of Russian and
Ukrainian Jews said Israel was a more secure place for them than Russia
or Ukraine, while only 5 percent to 7 percent thought the reverse.
"Today,
the most probable result would be exactly the opposite," Shapiro
said.
Other
experts cite additional factors. Roman Spektor, vice-president of the Va´ad
Federation umbrella group of Russian Jews, told JTA that one factor
behind lower emigration to Israel is the "depletion of the aliyah
reservoir" from the former Soviet Union.
"The
improving situation in Russia and growing political stability also
shouldn´t be discarded, whereas the anti-Semitic outbursts" that
occur occasionally in the former Soviet Union "have only a marginal
influence, in my opinion" Spektor said.
Almost
one million Jews from the former Soviet Union moved to Israel between
1989 and 2001. An estimated 10 percent of them have returned — and the
return flow has intensified recently.
While
emigration to Israel is decreasing, the number of Jews moving from the
former Soviet Union to Germany increases each year.
The
former Soviet Union still provides the main source of new immigrants to
Israel, giving 60 percent to 65 percent of the total aliyah figures.
Of the
737 new immigrants who arrived in Israel last week, 480 were from the
former Soviet Union, according to the Jewish Agency.
Alexey
Vayman, a 25-year-old office worker from a town near Moscow, made aliyah
in late April, despite the ongoing violence and the poor chances of
finding a good job.
"I
am more scared by the terrorism in Russia itself, where terrorists are
in power," Vayman said, referring to the Chechen war and to 1999
apartment bombings in Moscow allegedly organized by the Russian security
service.
But, he
added, his coworkers, Jews and non-Jews alike, were surprised by his
decision to emigrate to Israel in the current situation.
For many,
Russia seems like the better option right now.
"I
was stunned to find out that the Israeli on an El Al flight to Moscow
was a guy in his 30s returning to no other place than Kazan, which never
seemed to me a decent place to live," said Marc Obukhovsky, a
55-year-old Moscow-based sales manager.
Obukhovsky
himself left for Israel in 1991, but later returned. He now shuttles
between Moscow and Jerusalem, where part of his family lives.