By Daniel Nehmad
MOSCOW, Dec. 24 (JTA) — Violence
in Israel is forcing thousands of Jewish youth from North America to
cancel plans to visit Israel this year.
But teens from the Soviet Union apparently aren't experiencing the
same fear.
More people than ever from the former Soviet Union are preparing to
take the free trips, sponsored by the Birthright Israel program, during
the next six weeks.
"In the 18 months of the program's existence, a total of 1,547
people from the former Soviet Union visited Israel on four"
Birthright trips, said the CEO of Birthright Israel International,
Shimshon Shoshani. But this winter alone, he said, "we are bringing
almost 1,600."
The unprecedented number is largely due to an increase in funding for
the Birthright program in the former Soviet Union.
But widespread interest in the program suggests that, unlike their
Western counterparts, Jews here have largely discounted the personal
threat from Israeli-Palestinian violence.
"We also live in a country that isn't very stable," said
Kirill Fishkin, 20, a student at the Kazan Aviation Institute in the
central Russian city of Kazan. "So it makes no difference whether
we're here or there. ‘Which place is more dangerous?´ That's not a
question."
Fishkin hopes to participate in a second round of trips from the
former Soviet Union planned for June.
Birthright Israel expects to send 6,135 young Jews to Israel this
winter. The free 10-day trips include 3,149 North Americans, 1,596 Jews
from the former Soviet Union and 670 from Latin America.
The program initially had hoped to send more than 10,000 Jews this
winter.
Inna Osinovskaya, a 24-year-old Muscovite leaving on a Birthright
trip in early January with her husband, also admits to a sort of
fatalism.
"Honestly, I'm a little scared, but Moscow is not much
safer," she said. "We have the threat of terrorism here too,
but life goes on.
"Anyway, there's so much going on" in Israel,"
Osinovskaya said. "It's a normal, healthy country. I really think
that, as advertised, this experience will be a great discovery. I'm
expecting a life change."
The indifference about traveling to a region known for explosive
violence is affirmed by people who work closely with Jewish youth in
Russia.
Natasha Bobkova, the secretary of the Jewish Agency for Israel's
youth department in Moscow, said that since October only five people out
of 42 have canceled reservations made through the Jewish Agency, and
"those were because of" university exams, she said.
Meyer Newman, director of Arezim, the youth movement of the
Federation of Jewish Communities of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, reported that only about 40 out of 500 people who had made
reservations through the federation have canceled since October. Newman
said the spots were immediately filled by others.
Participants from the former Soviet Union face local obstacles far
more formidable than those faced by Western participants. Birthright
requires each participant to pay a $150 deposit, which is later
refunded, to ensure participation in the program once reservations have
been made. This is quite a lot in Russia, where the average monthly wage
is $113.
Nonetheless, participation has increased each year. Birthright
reports that 90 citizens of FSU countries made the trip in the winter of
2000 and 714 in the winter of 2001. This winter, 1,050 will go from
Russia, Belarus and the Baltic states, 450 from Ukraine and 42 from
Uzbekistan.
In Russia, the Birthright program is administered through four Jewish
groups: The Jewish Agency; the Federation of Jewish Communities; Hillel:
The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life; and Lishkat Hakesher, an Israeli
government-sponsored cultural organization.
Most of the new funding for this year's trips came as a private
donation from businessman Lev Levayev, who is president of the
federation. This is the first year the federation has sponsored
Birthright.
A native of Uzbekistan who moved to Israel in 1971, Levayev feels a
strong sense of obligation to build Jewish life in the former Soviet
Union.
"Jewish youth today are eager to build their lives as Jews in
the FSU. Unfortunately their parents cannot provide the material support
or spiritual help to build their lives as Jews," Levayev said.
"I see the Birthright trip as a means to fill this gap and
guarantee a future of Jewish life there."
The executive director of the federation, Avraham Berkowitz, said
Levayev's donation will be responsible for sending 1,000 citizens from
the former Soviet Union to Israel this winter and an additional 1,000
next summer.
"We wanted to do something that would totally energize our youth
movement," Berkowitz said. "And we thought this would bring
the biggest bang for our buck."
But Birthright's fate in the region will not depend solely on its
ability to attract more participants.
"We are always working on evaluation," Shoshani said,
emphasizing the need to examine whether and how participants are changed
by the trips.
With this in mind, professors at Moscow State University, in
cooperation with professors at Brandeis University in Boston, are
planning to research how effective Birthright is in making participants
more active in their Jewish communities in the former Soviet Union.
For many in the former Soviet Union, there's another incentive to go
on Birthright, beyond a free trip to an exotic land or the chance to
learn about Jewish history.
Given the mass emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel over the past
decade, many of the Jews on Birthright know someone in Israel they would
like to visit.
"It's hard to find anyone who doesn't already have a friend or
family member in Israel," said Ilya Velder, 21, director of a
Jewish youth center in Kazan.