I had heard of the work of the Joint Distribution
Committee, the overseas arm of the American Jewish community helping to sustain
Jews and Jewish life in remote recesses of the Former Soviet Union. In
the 1970's and 80's we rallied to allow Soviet Jews to emigrate. Now we are involved in the largest scale
effort to keep them and the spark of Judaism alive in areas we had written
off as being impossible to sustain. In the words of Rabbi Asher Ostrin of
the Joint, "We are working to reclaim Jews for the Jewish
people."
In a day and age when we are constantly thinking
about how to harness technology and use new techniques, the truth is we are
doing what our ancestors before us have done throughout the millennia: creating
the means and mechanism to support each other. Through it all, we remain
a community with a unique understanding of our responsibility to care for each
other, and to provide for the needs of the weakest among us.
I am in Kiev with the Rabbinic Cabinet of the JFNA.
With 32 colleagues we fanned out in 7 vans across the city of Kiev to
visit some of the people the Joint helps to support. I visited an older
woman confined to a bed who receives a supplement to her pension, home visits,
a health care aide 12 hours a week and other support. Another visit to a
young child confined to a wheelchair with cerebral palsy was reflective of the
160,000 Jews in some 2,900 centers across the FSU who receive help as a result
of our donations to Federation.
Another facet of the work being done in Kiev are programs sponsored by
the Jewish Agency and Birthright to work with and provide educational outreach
to the young, as well as to seniors and others, to encourage and foster an appreciation and love for
Israel and Judaism.
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