1.
Poklonnaya Gora is the point
at which German forces were halted on their march to Moscow in 1941-42
by the Red Army. Oversized tank barriers and a monument had marked
the location for some years, but as the fiftieth
anniversary of the Soviet victory in the Great Patriotic War approached
2, a large memorial complex
was created to commemorate the war dead. A museum is at the center
of the site, flanked by a Russian Orthodox church, a mosque, and
a synagogue.
The synagogue was the last of the four major buildings
to be constructed, its late debut due to the emergence of a funding
source only when the Russian Jewish Congress (see below) was established
in 1996. The cost of the structure is reported in publications of
the Russian Jewish Congress (REK) at $8,502,591, although others
estimate its cost at between $10 million and $17 million. Most of
the funding is said to have been provided by Vladimir
Gousinsky, a high-profile media magnate and President of
REK.
Dedication of the synagogue in September attracted
a large number of foreign dignitaries. Of greater interest to many
Russian Jews was the participation of Russian President Boris Yeltsin,
then Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, and the Mayor of Moscow,
Yuri Luzhkov.
A modern structure developed by Moshe Zarhi, a
noted Israeli architect, with interior and exterior design work
by Frank Meissler, the synagogue includes a sanctuary, display cases
on upper floors surround-ing the
synagogue in which various archival materials and artifacts of Russian
Jewish history are display-ed, and a museum on the lower floor.
A large menorah stands outside the building.
The synagogue is intended to be transdenominational
within the Jewish community, its availability assigned to different
streams of Judaism according to a schedule yet to be developed.
In reality, its location far from major residential areas is likely
to preclude Shabbat use by Orthodox Jews and to limit its appeal
to other streams on a regular basis. It may be that its use for
purposes of prayer will be confined to memorial days.
The basement level of the structure is devoted
to a museum that is divided into two display sections of approximately
equal size. One focuses on the Holocaust, concentrating on its development
in Soviet-controlled territory and neighboring areas of Poland.
Displays include copies of Nazi extermination orders, photographs
of Jews in ghettoes and of massacre sites, and various artifacts.
The other section concentrates on Jewish combatants during the Great
Patriotic War, both those in conventional Soviet military forces
and those in irregular partisan units. Photographs and artifacts
are featured. Materials in both sections are professionally displayed
in modern formats using display cases and wall-mounted exhibits.
Together, the two sections surround a six-sided
theater with a drop-down screen on each side. A locally-produced
film, which is shown simultaneously on all six screens, describes
the Holocaust. Some of the film segments have been shown previously
in the West, but others (apparently from archives) are new to the
writer.
The writer was escorted through the synagogue and
museum by Ilya Altman, one
of the very few specialists on the Holocaust in Russia and the other
successor states. Dr. Altman has been a major figure in organization
of the museum.
Some criticism has been expressed by foreigners
about the large sum of money expended in development of such a structure
at a time when both welfare and Jewish renewal needs of the Russian
Jewish population are so acute. Although such needs are indeed immense,
the desire of local Jews for acknowledgment of their twentieth-century
heritage is also great. In the four decades of Soviet power following
the Holocaust and the Great Patriotic War, Soviet authorities assiduously
suppressed knowledge of the former and recognition of Jewish participation
in the latter. Few local Jews in middle and older age groups have
escaped the sting of widely believed charges that the disproportionately
large number of Jewish soldiers honored with the title of “Hero
of the Soviet Union” purchased their medals in the bazaars
of Tashkent. The museum assists Jews in reclaiming their dignity
by attesting to the unique and tragic Jewish history of the war
years.
Further development of the museum is required so
that displays can be expanded and educational programs developed.
Both funders and organizers of the museum have expressed the hope
that plans encouraging visits by non-Jews are implemented.
The writer visited four of the seven Jewish day schools in Moscow.
Interested readers may wish to read accounts of her visits to these
schools in November and December of 1997, as recorded in the trip
report cited earlier.
2. Achey
Tmimin and Beit Rivka
are the boys’ and girls’ schools respectively of the
Chabad movement in Moscow. The two schools operate separate classes
in the same building, enrolling 300 youngsters (compared to 250
last year) in grades one through eleven. About 30 children are enrolled
in a separate kindergarten program. Achey Tmimim and Beit Rivka
are often referred to collectively by the name of the boys’
school or as “the Kuravsky school”, the latter in reference
to its principal Zev Kuravsky.
In response to a question, Mr. Kuravsky said that
the economic crisis has had a serious impact on his school, which
enrolls many youngsters from lower-middle and lower class homes.
Salaries in many areas of the economy have decreased, causing additional
hardships for many pupil families. Some hard-hit banks have refused
to release money held in savings accounts by these families. Food
for the school kitchen is more than twice as expensive as it was
last year.
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