By Lev Gorodetsky
MOSCOW, July 18 (JTA) — Since the fall of communism here in 1991, a
difficult question has lingered: Is there a future for Jewish life in
the former Soviet Union?
Judging from the renaissance of Jewish education here, some people
answer this question with a definitive yes.
"The future of the community hangs on what is happening in the
Jewish schools and higher education institutions and they are thriving.
I see here creativity and dynamism," says Jerry Hochbaum, executive
vice president of the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture. "Here
in Russia, the schools are building the society."
Hochbaum, whose group has invested heavily in Jewish life here, spoke
to JTA at a meeting of the group's Executive Committee in Moscow earlier
this month.
While some might disagree — arguing that the roughly 1.5 to 2
million Jews remaining in the former Soviet Union would be better off
living in Israel or elsewhere — Hochbaum's group gathered ample
evidence to support his claim as they met with the region's Jewish
leaders, scholars and teachers.
Foundation leaders watched a graduation ceremony for students
receiving degrees in Jewish studies from Project Judaica, a joint
venture of the Conservative movement's Jewish Theological Seminary in
New York and the Moscow-based Russian State University for the
Humanities.
The scene, which marked the 10th anniversary and fourth graduating
class of Project Judaica showed the existence of a thriving Jewish
academic institution, one that would have been impossible only a few
years ago. The project is partially funded by the Memorial Foundation.
When David Fishman came to Moscow in August 1991 to negotiate the
plan for Project Judaica, it was the time of the coup against
then-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Representatives of the Russian
State University for the Humanities were concerned they might soon be
arrested.
"Nobody could have imagined those days that we would have a
developed Jewish university institution here," said Fishman, the
project's founder.
Since the founding of Project Judaica — the dean of Moscow's
university-level Jewish institutions — nearly 50 students have
graduated from the program, including many non-Jews.
Ironically, many of them now live in the United States, including at
least half of the project's first graduating class, says Lev Krichevsky,
a member of that class who now lives in Philadelphia.
Many of the graduates outside the former Soviet Union still maintain
ties to Jewish life in their homeland. Krichevsky, who previously served
as JTA Moscow's correspondent, still travels back and forth for the
Anti- Defamation League's Moscow office.
Project Judaica has provided a "great service" by training
a "whole generation of people who have received Jewish
knowledge," he says.
Hana Shchepetova, a Project Judaica graduate who just received a
Memorial Foundation grant to pursue rabbincal studies at JTS, hopes
eventually to return to Russia to teach Jewish studies and help build
the Conservative movement in Moscow.
In addition to Project Judaica, several universities now offer
university-level Jewish studies programs.
The annual Russian university students' conference in Judaic studies,
sponsored by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, recently
took place here.
"When you see 150 papers presented and the estimated number of
presentations for the next year is 300, it makes you optimistic,"
says Mikhail Krutikov, a Russian-born professor of Yiddish at Oxford
University.
(JTA Staff Writer Peter Ephross contributed to this report.)