Moscow
Times - 12.19.2001
The
Moscow Times
Refuseniks
Return to Reminisce and Join Forces
By
Andrei Zolotov Jr.
Decades
after they began to fight for the right to be Jews and leave the Soviet
Union, former refuseniks returned to Moscow from Israel and the United
States to reminisce on the old battles with the KGB and set in motion a
new cause: uniting Russian Jewry worldwide into a new organization.
A two-day
international conference called "Jews of Silence -- Jews of
Triumph. Soviet Jewry: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow" opened
Tuesday, organized by the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia to
commemorate the 25th anniversary of a 1976 symposium on Jewish culture
in the Soviet Union.
The
symposium did not take place: The KGB put the handful of speakers under
house arrest. But it was seen as the beginning of an organized movement
of Soviet Jews that won international support and eventually helped
bring down the Soviet system.
"Our
goal is to pay tribute to those who did so much for the formation of
democratic regimes in the countries of the former Soviet Union,"
FJCR's executive director Valery Engel said at a news conference.
"But it is also a first step to uniting Russian Jewry."
A new
organization, tentatively called the World Congress of Russian Jewry, is
to be set up by May, organizers said.
"One
would hope there is still some common denominator for people who have
come from one country, who fought for some bright ideals 25 years
ago," said Yuli Edelstein, a former refusenik who is now Israeli
deputy absorption minister and a leader of the Yisrael Ba-Aliyah party
of Russian Jews.
In one
room at The conference, refuseniks and their helpers recalled the names
of KGB operatives who followed them, the difficulties of reporting to
Western media about yet another arrest of a Jewish activist and the
courage it took to start Hebrew classes in the 1970s. In another room,
organizers spoke on how the future congress of Russian Jews would lobby
Russian and other governments for support of Israel.
"Our
common issue is to speak out in defense of Israel's security,"
Engel said. "There cannot be double standards in the approach to
terrorism. Whether in Chechnya, Palestinians or Afghanistan -- it is the
same thing."
Organizers
were not certain of the methods the new group would use to formulate and
implement its agenda. But they stressed the importance of cultural
projects such as publishing textbooks on the history of Russian Jewry
for both Russian and non-Russian Jews.
Mikhail
Chlenov, president of the VAAD Jewish umbrella organization, said the
idea to unite Russian Jews worldwide arose in the early 1990s. Vladimir
Gusinsky, a vice president of the World Jewish Congress, is one of
several Jewish figures considering efforts in this field, Chlenov said.