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“We don’t know who is alive” – concern mounts for Jews in Russian-occupied Ukraine

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JTA – Under a haze of early morning cigarette smoke, two Jewish men from Ukrainian cities in areas occupied by Russia were discussing how much they miss their parents. Neither had seen them for months and in the brief exchanges they have had with them, they could say only so much without fear of putting them in danger.

“We can’t talk about the war,” says Moshe, who is from Kherson, a city in southern Ukraine that has been occupied by Russian troops since early in the war. “I don’t want to make things difficult for her. I think people are listening in.”

When Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Jewish families in southern and eastern Ukraine faced a difficult choice: flee and become refugees or stay put and protect their homes. Many broke up, as elderly parents refused to or could not leave their home towns, while their children left with the retreating Ukrainians or took steps to escape the Russian occupation and find themselves back in Ukraine.

“She doesn’t want to leave. It’s not because the Russians are there now that she wants to stay,” Moshe says, clearly nervous about giving away too much information to a stranger. “She wants to stay because it is her home.”

Moshe had come to Vinnytsia, a town in western Ukraine, for work two weeks before the invasion. Beside him was Igor from Berdyansk, a town on the Sea of Azov, who smuggled himself across Ukrainian lines after the Russians occupied the city. His decision to leave came after friends were arrested on suspicion of being pro-Ukrainian partisans.

“They occupied the city on 5 March,” he says. “I was able to break out in April. They completely shut down the city for a week after they entered the city looking for soldiers and partisans. They were sending people to prison – or rather, that was the good way.”

He, too, left his parents behind. “I speak to them when I can,” he said. “There isn’t always signal.”

Russia illegally annexed four occupied Ukrainian regions in late September after staged referendums. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency spoke to Jews from all four regions that still had contact with relatives back home. Nobody who spoke to JTA that still had family in Russian-held areas was willing to give their full name for fear of possible consequences.

In territories that had been occupied by Russia but have been reclaimed by the Ukrainians, government and human-rights watchdogs have found evidence that people suspected of Ukrainian sympathies were tortured and murdered.

It’s not known how many Jews currently live in areas under Russian occupation, although it’s believed that a large number have left since the 24 February invasion. Many evacuated through humanitarian corridors to Ukrainian-held territory, while others have left through Russia and either made the long trip through the Baltic states, Poland, and back to Ukraine, or gone onto Israel. “You need money to do this,” noted one man.

Israel’s ambassador to Ukraine, Michael Brodsky, told JTA that Israel didn’t “directly” have contact with Jewish communities in areas that Russia controls. “We don’t deal with the occupied territories at all,” he said.

When asked what support Israel could provide to Jews in occupied areas of Ukraine, he said, “We do sometimes get requests for humanitarian involvement and we assist on a humanitarian basis, but this isn’t a general policy.”

“We sometimes get requests from Israeli citizens that their relatives are somewhere in the occupied territories,” he said. “We can make an inquiry. We can also speak via our embassy in Moscow with the Russians about it. As long as it’s a humanitarian issue, it’s fine.”

The Ukrainian government also told JTA that it didn’t have direct contact with Jewish communities in occupied areas of Ukraine, explaining that it was dangerous for many to maintain a line of contact with the Ukrainian government. The only rabbi known to remain in Russian-occupied areas, in Kherson, didn’t reply to a request for comment.

That rabbi, Chabad’s Yosef Yitzchak Wolff, recently described a grim situation to Chabad.org, the news service of the orthodox movement. “Nothing has changed in half a year. There’s been no improvement,” he said just before Rosh Hashanah, adding, “We’re still in a war, but we’re making sure everyone is able to have a happy, sweet new year.”

Since Igor left Berdyansk, the messages he has been getting from his parents paint a picture of a Russian occupation that has become more paranoid and oppressive. “If you’re standing around smoking, they come up to you to check your documents and question you. They ask you what you are doing there, and why you are hanging around.”

“It’s banditism. There’s no society,” he says. “They come and ask you for money, and if you don’t co-operate, they take your children and demand a ransom.”

A recent Investigation by Associated Press found that Russia has taken thousands of Ukrainian children to Russia for adoption and propaganda, and had given them Russian passports. Many were taken without their consent and told that their parents had rejected them, according to the AP report.

Among all the Jews that JTA interviewed that had left areas occupied by Russia, there was pessimism that any serious Jewish life could be sustained. “There are maybe about 100 Jews left in Berdyansk,” said Igor. “But they are only old people – all the young ones have left.”

He didn’t believe that being Jewish in areas now occupied by Russia made any difference. “Nationality doesn’t matter to the Russians. For them, these people aren’t people, they are animals.”

While Berdyansk was too small to have a full-time rabbi before the war, further along the Sea of Azov, Mariupol, did. Mariupol has become a symbol of Ukrainian resistance after Ukrainian soldiers held out for almost three months in a battle that destroyed much of the city.

There’s still financial and other support from outside Ukraine that is being provided to Jewish communities in areas under Russian occupation, but few are willing to talk openly about it. It’s a crime under Ukrainian law to send money to areas under occupation, and there’s concern that if the methods used to support Jews in these cities becomes public, fragile networks and people could be put at risk.

“There are a few old people from the community that refused to leave in Mariupol,” said Olga, a teacher who was closely involved with the Jewish community in the city. “They stayed, and they are still getting support from the Jewish community.”

Olga said she had made contact with colleagues who have been pressured into taking up work at schools run by the Russians. “They were under pressure. They need to survive,” she says. “They told me that they burned all the Ukrainian books and teaching materials and replaced them.”

The Russian occupation is palpable in every way for those left behind in the city, Olga said.

“Mariupol is totally destroyed,” she said. “It’s hard to communicate with people who are there. There isn’t always internet [access]. They told me that they opened Russian shops with Russian products, but they can’t afford them. These places aren’t affordable because they don’t have money.”

In Luhansk, where Russian-backed separatists have been fighting the Ukrainians since 2014, the men of an already depleted Jewish community are living underground for fear of conscription.

“I speak to Luhansk every day,” said the exiled rabbi of Luhansk, Shalom Gopin, a Chabad emissary who has been based largely elsewhere since 2015, amid the war that followed Russia’s first, more limited invasion. “It’s a bad situation there, and there is a big problem with the men. The men don’t want to leave their homes because they can be conscripted and taken to the army.”

“The Jews don’t go out. If you don’t go out, they can’t come and get you and take you to the army,” said Gopin, who added that a few Luhansk Jews have been conscripted and that a small number have been killed at the front, fighting against the Ukrainian military.

When war erupted in eastern Ukraine in 2014, the vast majority of Jews in the two regions that were partially occupied — Luhansk and Donetsk — left for elsewhere in Ukraine. That included Gopin, who left first for his native Israel and then for Kyiv. Those who remained, said Gopin, were either elderly or backed the Russians.

“There’s a working community still in Luhansk that prays four times a week,” he said. “But this isn’t a community. It’s old people, sick people, bad people. It’s not a living community. It’s a very bad community. There’s no future.”

In areas of Luhansk that were Ukrainian-controlled before February 2022, the few Jews that lived there have been largely cut off, even though Gopin said he had managed to facilitate the evacuation of some Jews from occupied areas.

“They don’t have water, they don’t have gas, they don’t have internet. There are Russian flags all over the place,” said one woman from Lyschchansk, another city where a major battle was fought between Russian and Ukrainian forces, about her parents who remained there.

“There’s no life and there’s no prospect of life there,” she said. “They stayed because they wouldn’t give up their home and they said their life was there, and they wanted to stay put. They won’t leave. It’s useless trying to convince them.”

She said her parents have been trying to formalise documentation for their apartment, which survived the battle, as many of those who have been rendered homeless have been moved by occupation authorities into houses abandoned by those who fled the city.

“They are making wood with fire, and they cook there. They promised that they would get gas, but that’s their life now,” she said.

In Severodonetsk, a city that was occupied after a brutal urban battle between early May and late June, there had been eight Jewish families.

“I spoke to a good friend in Severodonetsk in mid-May,” said Gopin. “Since then, there has been no contact. We don’t know who is alive or what’s going on.”

Published with permission from jta.org

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