Jerusalem – No Time Like The Present For Russian Jews, Moscow Chief Rabbi Says

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    The Chief Rabbi of Russia, Rabbi Berel Lazar, of Chabad, at "BEIT AVI CHAI", a cultural center in Jerusalem. Jerusalem, Mar 19, 2018. Photo by Hillel Maeir/TPSJerusalem – In a one-on-one session during a snap visit to Jerusalem, Lazar said that whereas approximately 80 percent of Soviet Jews intermarried, 60-70 percent millennial Jews in Russia say they want to marry Jews. Lazar said Jews today are safer in Russia than anywhere in Europe, and that the resurgence of Judaism in the country since the fall of Communism is nothing less than “astounding.”

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    “Russian Jews today understand better than anyone what Pesach is, because they themselves ‘left Egypt,’” Lazar said, using the Hebrew word for the holiday. “The young generation really understands that their parents had grown up in a type of slavery – they had no freedom of choice, they were forced to think a certain way and to live in fear.

    “I don’t think there is anyone in Russia today who lives in fear. At least, I don’t see it. People have a new life; the young generation today feel they are living in a different country than the one their parents grew up in. They have diff attitudes – towards business, culture, moving somewhere else, the way they bring up children. So in a very real sense they left a kind of jail that their parents lived in.

    “So when it comes to Pesach, they really ‘get it.’ They feel their own liberation,” Lazar said.

    If, to Western eyes, Lazar’s portrayal of Russia today appears to be overly optimistic – some might say his view is influenced by his friendship with Russian President Vladimir Putin – the rabbi cautions against applying Western cultural standards when evaluating situations in non-Western countries.

    For example, take Putin’s controversial electoral victory on Sunday, and particularly Putin’s intimidation and sidelining of opposition candidates during the campaign. Asked whether Russia is slipping back from the promise he inherited when he arrived in Moscow as a young rabbi in 1990 – when terms like glasnost and perestroika (Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s phrases for his dual programs to “open up” and “restructure” the country) heralded a sharp break from Communism – Lazar admitted that the election “looked bad” when viewed from afar.

    But he added that it is a mistake both to lionise the post-Soviet era as the “good old days” and to bemoan the current period.

    “Is Russia slipping back into becoming a ‘fear society’ (former Prisoner of Zion [and 2018 Israel Prize laureate] Natan Sharansky’s phrase to describe a society in which people are afraid to speak freely)? I suppose there are two ways to answer that.

    “If I was a human rights activist, I would say that under (former President Boris) Yeltsin, perhaps even under Gorbachev, things looked like they were much more free than they are today. There were more American – Coke, McDonalds, etc., there was much more freedom of the press. It felt like the more you wrote against Russia, the cooler you were. But it felt that Russia was really going down in a spiral, that Russia was really falling apart.

    “But I’m not a human rights activist, I’m a rabbi. If you ask me about the Jewish community and about Jewish life – the freedom to be proud of your religion, to celebrate your religion, of doing something Jewish in public, like lighting a Chanukah menorah or building a synagogue in a prominent place, I don’t think there’s ever been such a positive time in history for Jews in Russia.”


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    6 years ago

    Priciesly my point. In fact jews in Russia are not forced to bake cakes for gar marriages, can perform mitziza bepeh, shechita etc…

    we suffer from soveit phobia. And Putin is the evil soviet man because he interfered and mingled in our elections. Its sooooo laughable and silly. Did we forget what cruel is? Why won’t you go speak to jews freed fro the iron curtain and ask them what cruel is? I am not endorsing mingling in elections but please take a deep breath. Gimme a break.

    And Ok and my next point is more contentious but hear me out. Yes putin knocks off his enemies that threaten him. And that’s bad. But on the bigger scheme of things I don’t think that constitutes evil and and ruthless to the point of labeling Russia as some former cold war soviet enemy. Its not evil to the point of making another cold war. Overall the citzens of Russia are content.

    ayinglefunadorf
    ayinglefunadorf
    6 years ago

    80% Intermarried 30 years after Chabad took control?????

    GroiserFarshteier
    GroiserFarshteier
    6 years ago

    Indeed Chabad controls Russian jewry.
    And world jewry, in fact.
    It’s all their fault.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    6 years ago

    Russia under putin is a very hospitable place for Jews, as they make money, have freedom and travel to Israel easily, no BDS movement in Russia, Jews in Paris are attacked not in Moscow, Jews in London have their yeshivas shut down, not in Moscow, Jews cant do schechita in Europe, cant do bris milas in Iceland, must tolerate perversion of homosexuality in America, not in Russia. Russia is the future.