Jewish
Telegraphic Agency - 12.23.2001
As
Former Refuseniks Reminisce,
They Think About a New Movement
By
Lev Gorodetsky
MOSCOW,
Dec. 23 (JTA) Fourteen years ago,
dissident Yosef Begun paid 500 rubles to get rid of his Russian
citizenship so he could emigrate to Israel.
Recently, Begun paid $500 to get his Russian citizenship back so he
could travel easily between Jerusalem and Moscow.
Begun, who spent 16 years in the Soviet Gulag for his underground
Jewish activities, publishes books on Jewish culture and tradition. But
he says he is less of a Zionist than he used to be.
"The Zionist idea" of the in-gathering of the exiles is
"dead now," Begun told JTA. "The aliyah from the former
Soviet Union and other countries is decreasing. We have to pay more
attention to the work in the Diaspora."
Begunīs views about the death of Zionism were not shared by the
dozens of refuseniks who gathered at a Jewish community center in Moscow
last week.
But the focus of the two-day conference in addition to renewing
old friendships and sharing memories of more harrowing days suggests
that the traditional goal of bringing Russian Jews to Israel has been
replaced by a desire to build the 2-million strong "Russian Jewish
Diaspora" around the world.
The conference supported a project to launch a worldwide union of
Jews from the former Soviet Union. The congress hopes to be in place by
May 2002, according to Valery Engel, executive director of the
Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia.
The federation, which has close ties to the Chabad Lubavitch
movement, is behind both the conference and the worldwide group.
The goals of this group, according to federation leaders, are to
initiate cross-cultural programs, promote investments in Russia and
Israel, support Israel and Russia in their fight against international
terrorism and help Russia integrate into the world community.
The activists could play a vital role, one conference participant
said.
"They have been active in the society, they have frequently
played leading roles in their communities and they have a potential to
serve as a basic activist network" in a worldwide organization of
Russian Jewry, said Wolf Moskovich, a Ukrainian-born professor of Slavic
studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem..
Yuli Edelstein, a former prisoner of Zion who is currently Israelīs
deputy minister of absorption, also supports the idea of uniting Russian
Jewry and of former refuseniks being instrumental in this process.
"There is still some common denominator for people who have come
from one country, who fought for some bright ideals 25 years ago,"
said Edelstein, whose Russian immigrant party is led by perhaps the most
famous former refusenik of all, Natan Sharansky.
Some Western Jewish leaders at the conference who had fought on
behalf Soviet Jewry said they didnīt understand the need for the new
union.
"Most of the Russian Jews have become successfully integrated in
the Israeli and U.S. societies," said Jerry Goodman, who in 1971
founded the National Conference for Soviet Jewry, a U.S.-based Jewish
group. "I think that now that they have solved their material
problems, they have become nostalgic for some kind of Mother
Russia."
Some other U.S. and Israeli participants told JTA of their misgivings
that this new group would be sponsored and controlled by the federation,
which they consider too close to the Kremlin.
But former dissident Felix Dektor said the intellectual and cultural
potential of Russian Jews around the world is too great to waste.
Leonid Stonov of the Union of Councils of Jews in the former Soviet
Union, himself a former refusenik, said that this is not the first time
such a worldwide group has been proposed..
"But this time," Stonov said, expressing the view of most
participants, "with the federationīs financial support, it seems
more feasible."