JTA
- 05.28.2002
Jewish
Telegraphic Agency
Symbolism is Heavy as Bush
Visits St. Petersburg Synagogue
By
Lev Gorodetsky
|

JTA
photo |
ST.
PETERSBURG, May 27 – President Bush closed his eyes, listening
intently as Rabbi Itzhak Kogan recited the ancient priestly blessing.
Then Bush
shook Kogan’s hand and said, “God bless you.”
The
symbolism was heavy at Sunday’s event at St. Petersburg’s Choral
Synagogue, a place once monitored closely by the KGB.
Not only
was it believed to be the first time a U.S. president visited a Russian
synagogue, but Bush even traded blessings with a former refusenik and
Lubavitch activist who was allowed to emigrate to Israel, in part
because of U.S. pressure.
Rabbi
Berel Lazar, one of Russia’s two chief rabbis, called this visit
“the closing of a circle.”
“The
present freedom of the Russian Jews is due to the efforts of U.S. Jewry
and the United States as a whole,” Lazar told JTA. “Moreover, acting
on behalf of the Jews, America helped the Russians to understand that
it’s possible to change Russia and make it a free country.”
For the
past several decades, the situation of Jews in Russia has been something
of a litmus test for Russian-American relations.
In 1974,
the United States passed the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, which linked
U.S.-Soviet trade relations to the loosening of restrictions on Jewish
emigration from the Soviet Union.
As a
result, during the last decade or so of the Cold War, Russian Jews
became an ethnicity friendly to the United States in a country that was
an American enemy.
U.S.
officials used to stress their support for Soviet Jewry by inviting
hundreds of underground Jewish activists to a Passover seder at Spasso
House, the Moscow residence of the American ambassador to the Soviet
Union.
It was
considered a must for visiting U.S. officials and legislators to meet
with Jewish underground activists, provoking the wrath of the KGB. Some
of the activists paid for such meetings with years in prison or exile.
For many
others, however, contacts with high-ranking U.S. officials meant
protection — and sometimes an emigration visa.
In fact,
ordinary Soviet Jews often felt like they were under America’s
protective wing. Some of this ethnic perspective still lingers.
A Public
Opinion Foundation survey from last week found that nearly 58 percent of
Russians view the United States as an unfriendly nation, while 25
percent regard it as a friend.
The
numbers weren’t broken down according to ethnicity, but it’s clear
to observers that Russian Jews are still overwhelmingly pro-American.
It
therefore was expected that Bush would do something to demonstrate this
“special relationship” with the Russian Jewish community.
The
question was how — and the way it was done on Sunday spoke volumes
about the maturation of the Russian Jewish community.
Lazar
suggested that Bush visit the St. Petersburg synagogue. The offer was
accepted — on condition that all factions of the Russian Jewish
community be represented.
“Even
if the event had only a symbolic significance, it’s very good to the
Jewish community as a whole” to see support from the American
administration, Rabbi Grigory Kotlyar, a leader of Reform Jews in
Russia, told JTA.
During
their talks with Bush, Russian Jewish leaders discussed the issue of
anti-Semitism in Russia, as well as the situation in the Middle East.
“It is
very good that the meeting took place and that the Jewish representation
was pluralistic,” Yevgeny Satanovsky, president of the umbrella
Russian Jewish Congress, told JTA.
Satanovsky
also stressed that the president demonstrated a sincere personal
interest not only in the well-being of the Russian Jewish community and
in Russian democracy, but in pushing for democratization in the Middle
East.
That Bush
could meet with Russian Jewish representatives of all stripes in the
synagogue — and with human rights leaders, including Jewish leaders,
earlier at Spasso House — is a good sign, agreed Mark Levin, the
executive director of the NCSJ: Advocates on Behalf of Jews in Russia,
Ukraine, the Baltic States & Eurasia.
“It
demonstrates the maturation of the community, that roots are taking
hold,” Levin said from Washington.