JTA -
09.09.2001
Jewish
Telegraphic Agency
In Russia, Sharon Finds Sympathy - Both from Jews and President Putin
By Lev
Gorodetsky
MOSCOW - When Israel's then-prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, visited
Moscow in 1994, he was widely booed by a group of Russian Jews who
considered him a traitor for signing peace accords with the
Palestinians.
The
protesters even tried to hurl rotten tomatoes at Rabin.
But when
current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon entered the hall of the brand-new
Lubavitch-run JCC in Moscow last week, security guards did not have to
worry about rotten tomatoes. As Sharon moved through the 1,000-strong
crowd to the strains of "Haveinu Shalom Aleichem" sung by a
children's choir, he found widespread sympathy.
"He
is the right man; he knows what should be done," said Valery Yarov,
a resident of a small town in the Ural Mountain region.
Grandfather
of a 14-year-old who was the youngest victim of the Tel Aviv disco
bombing in June, Yarov was one of dozens of Jewish activists from across
the former Soviet Union who came to Moscow to meet with Sharon during
his three-day visit to Russia last week.
If
anything, many Russian Jews would prefer Sharon to take a more hard-line
stance toward the Palestinian uprising.
"I
told him, ‘What are you waiting for, strike the Palestinians, strike
them right now as strongly as possible.' He looked at me, and I saw that
he understands what should be done, but also knows that he can't do
that," said Mikhail Kunin, a professor of chemistry at a Moscow
university, who managed to shake hands with Sharon and exchange a few
words with the Israeli prime minister after the meeting.
Despite
the violence in Israel, Sharon emphasized that Russian Jews should move
to the Jewish state.
"I
have come to tell you, make aliyah yourselves, or send your children to
study in Israel, we need you," Sharon said.
Apparently
realizing that Jews aren't scrambling for exit visas as they did in the
past, however, Sharon added, "I know that your life here is good
and free, thanks to President Putin, but don't get accustomed to
that."
Sharon
did not lose any opportunity to praise Putin for his relative friendship
toward Israel and his relations with the Russian Jewish community.
"I
am very satisfied with the visit," Sharon told JTA. "We have
been received with great friendliness."
Aside
from the signing of some minor economic agreements, the main result of
the visit seemed to be the strengthening of Sharon's personal connection
with Putin. Sharon also held rather unproductive talks with Foreign
Minister Igor Ivanov.
Indeed,
during Sharon's visit, Russia announced it would soon send a team to
Iran to assemble at least one more nuclear reactor there. Israel and the
United States believe the nuclear technology Russia shares with Tehran
may help Iran produce nuclear weapons.
Russian
analysts claimed Israel wants Russia to increase its involvement in the
Middle East as a co-sponsor of the peace process. If true, the Israelis
would seem to be betting on two things.
The first
is the resemblance between the terror threat Russia faces from Chechen
Muslims and the one Israel faces from Palestinians, a point Sharon likes
to stress.
The
second is the presence of hundreds of thousands of Israeli citizens from
the former Soviet Union, many of whom hold dual Russian and Israeli
citizenship. Putin repeatedly has said he believes Russia needs to
defend these citizens from Islamic terrorism.
At the
same time, even if Putin may feel sympathy for Israel, many in the
Russian foreign and defense ministries maintain their traditional
pro-Arab stance.
According
to a Moscow-based Jewish political analyst, Dmitry Pinsker, a
significant part of the Russian political establishment still clings to
Soviet anti-Zionist attitudes colored by an oft-hidden - and sometimes
not-so-hidden - anti-Semitism.