JTA - 12.04.2001

 

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Russian Federation Boasts Large Network of Activities

By Lev Gorodetsky

MOSCOW, Dec. 4 (JTA) — Only a few years ago, the idea of a Russian Jewish group passing a resolution approving a Kremlin-backed war would have seemed laughable.

Even in the post-Soviet era, most Jewish activists shied away from the halls of power.

But when the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia — and the representatives of the federationīs 150 constituent groups from across the country who gathered here last month for the groupīs second annual conference — narrowly passed a resolution backing Russiaīs war on Chechnya as a war on terrorism, the action seemed natural.

The federationīs alliance with Russian President Vladimir Putin, combined with the energy of the group, has made it the driving force in Russian Jewry.

The federationīs growing network is active in at least 135 cities and towns across the country, running 32 synagogues, 120 Jewish centers, 17 day schools and 41 Sunday schools — and distributing 320 tons of matzah each Passover.

The group, which has a strong Lubavitch representation, prints books on Jewish traditions, edits newspapers and magazines and creates Jewish Web sites.

Next up — plans to open a Jewish university to enhance the professional level of Sunday school teachers..

Tens of thousands of Russians benefit from the federationīs activities.

Vera Eizenshtat, 72, a Moscow pensioner, says she gets food parcels through the Lubavitch-run distribution system. She also gets free tickets to Jewish concerts and performances, which she says helps her to socialize with other elderly Jews.

Vladimir Reznikov, a middle-aged community leader from the town of Novozybkov in western Russia, home to 300 Jews, receives two monthly allocations for his salary: $70 and $50.

The first sum permits him to run a Sunday school for 10 kids, and the second to fund weekly Sabbath celebrations for the community.

The federation also provides $170 to Reznikovīs community for activities and holiday celebrations.

The money may seem laughable to Western ears, but he says this is the only real help the community gets from the Jewish world, besides the Chesed canteen for elderly Jews run by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.

The emissariesī tirelessness is evident across Russiaīs vast land mass. Among their activities:

• distributing food parcels to elderly Jews in the distant Far East island of Sakhalin on the Russo-Japanese border;

• repairing a synagogue in the city of Kostroma in central Russia;

• organizing a seminar for hundreds of Jewish youngsters in Kaliningrad in western Russia.

Federations throughout the former Soviet Union are united under one umbrella group, the Federation of Jewish Communities of the Former Soviet Union.

Now, this groupīs leaders want to consolidate further and gather all the Russian-speaking Jews in the world into one group. The federation adopted a resolution of that nature at the federationīs conference, which brought 350 delegates from around the country.

Valery Engel, the federationīs executive director, and Rabbi Avraham Berkowitz, executive director of the broader umbrella group, are planning to hold in December the first convention of Jewish activists from Russia, the United States and Israel to create an Executive Committee of the World Congress of Russian Jews.

The goals of this group, according to federation leaders, are to initiate cross-cultural programs, to promote investments in Russia and Israel, to support Israel and Russia in their fight against international terrorism, and to support Russia in its integration into the world community.

But even with the dedication of its emissaries, it is unlikely that the federation would have succeeded without the support of the Kremlin.

The romance with the Kremlin administration has long been evident.

Putin spoke at the opening ceremony of the center in September 2000, praising the groupīs activities.

He then visited the center last Chanukah and spent three hours there, drinking Israeli wine and talking to former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The groupīs main funder, Lev Levayev, an Uzbek Jew who made aliyah at the beginning of the 1970s and became a diamond tycoon in Israel, is on friendly terms with the chief Kremlin executive, Alexander Voloshin, and with Putin himself.

Last January, Levayev dined in a Kremlin palace with Putin, Israeli President Moshe Katsav, who visited Moscow, and with one of Russiaīs two chief rabbis, Berel Lazar — who for this dinner managed to have the Kremlin kitchen made kosher with a blowtorch.

For his part, Lazar does not lose any opportunity to praise Putin for making every effort to ensure a vastly improved quality of life for Jews in Russia.

Despite the almost unanimous support for Lazar at the convention, some dissidents were not happy with the alliance with the Kremlin.

"I donīt think this romance will last long. Putin will use it and do an about-face, which will be dangerous to Jews. He stays a KGB guy," said Mark Aron, a delegate to the convention, referring to Putinīs former work for the Soviet spy agency.

Federation officials disagree that the close relationship with the Russian president could backfire.

"What they call ‘the federationīs close relationship with Putinī is actually normal cooperation with a president who sympathizes with the Jews. And I feel personally and from other sources that he is sincere in this sympathy," said Michael Gluz, the federationīs president.

The federationīs rise has come at the expense of its rival, the Russian Jewish Congress, which has suffered from a Kremlin campaign that chased its former president, Vladimir Goussinsky, out of the country.

Goussinsky now lives in the United States.

But in recent weeks, tensions surfaced between the federation and another Jewish group, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.

Officials of both groups say that money lies at the heart of the dispute between federation and the JDC, which operates hundreds of Chesed welfare centers and JCCs across the FSU and is building a system of more secular-oriented Jewish communities.

The tensions surfaced in recent weeks, when the JDC opened a new community center in Moscow — and federation leaders complained that the JDC does not adequately support the federationīs efforts.

The tensions escalated further when Engel demanded at his groupīs conference that any JDC project costing more than $50,000 be coordinated with all major Russian Jewish organizations.

For their part, JDC officials say there is enough room for two centers to operate in Moscow.

But further clashes appear likely between the two groups, each of which operates a budget of between $30 million and $40 million for activities in the region.

"There are currently two strong players in the same field, and they inevitably have to clash," said Mark Grubarg, a federation leader in St. Petersburg.

 

    


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