Jewish
Telegraphic Agency - 12.19.2001
Yevgeny Satanovsky, new President of Russian Jewish Congress (photo:
Ron Sachs) |
Embattled
Russian Jewish group
hopes new head can kindle spark By
Lev Gorodetsky
|
MOSCOW (JTA) — The Russian Jewish Congress has a new leader — but
whether he is the right man to invigorate the embattled organization is
unclear.
Yevgeny
Satanovsky, a businessman with a doctorate in Middle East politics, was
elected president of the Russian Jewish Congress earlier this month,
replacing Leonid Nevzlin, who recently was made a member of the upper
house of Russia´s Parliament.
Satanovsky,
42, faces a tough task in trying to re-energize the RJC.
The group
has lost its status as the driving force behind the Russian Jewish
renaissance, according to most Russian watchers. In part it´s because
of a Kremlin-backed campaign that drove the RJC´s founder, Vladimir
Goussinsky, into exile earlier this year; in part it´s due to the fact
that a competing group, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia,
has deeper pockets, more energy and stronger Kremlin ties.
Nevzlin,
Goussinsky´s successor, served for less than a year as RJC president
before resigning. For many Jewish activists, including some RJC
officials, the latest reshuffle came as a disappointing surprise.
"Nevzlin
is quitting at a time of crisis. The RJC is at an impasse in some
respects," said Vladimir Shapiro, a leading Jewish sociologist and
a member of the group´s governing council.
Some RJC
officials say Nevzlin began to turn the organization around financially,
but the annual budget approved earlier this month was $4.7 million, 30
percent lower than 2000.
Critics
say the RJC has lost focus — by contrast, the federation, which is
closely associated with the Lubavitch movement, has the ear of the
Kremlin and a finger on the pulse of Russian Jewry.
Nevzlin
was elected to replace Goussinsky because he was seen as a person who
could improve relations between the RJC and the Kremlin. Ties had
suffered as the Kremlin pursued embezzlement charges against Goussinsky,
a media mogul who had been harshly critical of Russia´s war in
Chechnya.
But
neither Satanovsky´s personality nor his views are considered moderate.
He is energetic, outspoken and even occasionally intemperate — which
might explain the mixed reaction to his appointment among Jewish
activists.
"Satanovsky,
with his personal dislike of some Lubavitch leaders, will bring about, I
am afraid, a total war between the RJC and the federation," said
Mikhail Turovsky, a Jewish studies professor in Moscow.
The two
groups have often locked horns during the past year in an internecine
turf battle.
Satanovsky
says he does not want to exacerbate the conflict between the RJC and the
federation, but that Jewish groups should try to stay away from those in
power — the opposite of the federation´s strategy.
Some
insiders worry that Satanovsky´s views will cause problems.
"His
views on the Middle East problem, for example, are too right-extremist,
which may damage RJC s relations with some public bodies in Russia, in
Israel and with U.S. Jewry," said one RJC official who wished to
remain anonymous.
But the
representative of one U.S.-based group, the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee, welcomed the development.
"It
is an excellent choice. No one is more dedicated to the rebuilding of
Jewish life than Yevgeny Satanovsky," said the head of the JDC´s
Moscow office, Joel Golovensky. "He is truly a Renaissance man. He
excels in business, in academia and in philanthropy,"
Satanovsky
says his goals are threefold — to rebuild the finances of the RJC,
integrate the Russian Jewish community into world Jewry and become
active in Israel.
Even his
detractors would admit he has several factors in his favor.
Long
active in the Jewish community, Satanovsky knows the world of Russian
Jewry from the inside — unlike Goussinsky and Nevzlin, who made huge
fortunes during the regime of former President Boris Yeltsin and only
later decided to become active in the Jewish community.
Satanovsky,
who is married with two teen-aged children, became a Jewish activist in
1983 after reading underground lectures on Jewish history.
"Jewish
activities became part and parcel of my life. Jews and Israel are in
fact the only things that really interest me," he told JTA.
He claims
that the late Lubavitch rebbe, Menachem Schneerson, blessed his business
ideas and gave him a one-dollar bill to invest in steel engineering.
Armed with these two things, he said, he managed to make millions of
dollars.
Much of
his firm´s profits go to Jewish projects, he says. One project was a
Jewish university in Moscow, another an institute for Israel and Middle
East studies.
The
situation in Israel also has become part of Satanovsky´s life. He
believes Israel should take a harder line toward the Palestinians. In
fact, like many Russian Jews, he believes Israel should be prepared to
launch an onslaught similar to the one Russia has carried out against
Muslim separatists in Chechnya.
But
Satanovksy says he will be cautious in expressing such views in his new
position.
After the
election, Satanovsky announced he is quitting business to work full-time
at the RJC.
"One
can disagree with some of his personal attitudes and aptitudes, but one
thing is clear: He is a bright guy," said Tanya Levkova, an
economist and Jewish activist in Moscow. "What is still more
important, he is committed and motivated. And it is not going to be
boring now in the RJC ."