Soviet Jews in America

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Soviet Jews in America or American Soviet Jews are Jews from former Soviet Republics that have emigrated to the United States. The group consists of people that are Jewish by religion, ethnicity, culture, or nationality, that have been influenced by their collective experiences in the Soviet Union. In the 60s, there were around 2.3 million Jews in the USSR, as ethnicity was recorded in the census. [1] Jews from the Soviet Union consisted mostly of the Ashkenazi sect, and emigrated in waves starting in the 1960s, with over 200,000 leaving in the 1970s. [2] As of 2005, over 500,000 Jews had left Soviet Republics for the United States. [3] American Soviet Jews are often covered by the blanket term, "Russian-speaking Jews" (the term establishes a language-based group identity), and are a self-selecting group, due to the barriers that people leaving the USSR had to face. Often-times, Soviet immigrants struggle with the abundance of choices that they can make in America, but after learning the language, have been shown to be as well-adjusted as other immigrant groups.

Contents

Activism

Various grassroots activist groups emerged in America in the 60s to lobby for Soviet Jewish migration to the United States. The idea was to apply enough pressure to pry open the iron curtain, and have the resources to settle and assimilate Soviet Jews in the United States. [4]

One campaign included making direct contact with Soviet Jews, by mail, was started in Cleveland. Attempts to contact refuseniks were thwarted by the Soviet state. However, the addresses of eight Soviet synagogues were published, and in a campaign publicized by American Jewish newspapers, over 50,000 cards were sent to synagogues in the USSR. [5]

Union of Councils for Soviet Jews and Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry (SSSJ)

The Cleveland Council on Soviet Anti-Semitism, founded in 1963, was the first North American grassroots organization to advocate for Soviet Jews.<author=Gal Beckerman| title=When They Come for Us We'll Be Gone, The Epic Struggle to Save Soviet Jewry, date=2010|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|p59> In 1964 the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry was founded at Columbia University. By 1970 six independent Soviet Jewry advocacy organizations joined to found the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews.<author=Gal Beckerman| title=When They Come for Us We'll Be Gone, The Epic Struggle to Save Soviet Jewry, date=2010|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|p219> Through their utilization of protests, information dissemination, and lobbying, these groups pressured the Kremlin to allow for the release of refuseniks, and Jews seeking to escape the USSR. [6] Biblical phrases such as "Let my people go," dominated the activism, with American Jewish community playing a large role in disseminating and spreading information about the stories of Russian Jews. [7]

Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)

In 1989, the HIAS assisted 36,114 Jewish refugees from the Soviet Union. A majority of these were from the Ukrainian, Russian, Byelorussian, and Uzbek republics. These consisted of more than 11,000 family units, with over 60% having "Professionals, Engineers/Scientists, Technicians, or White Collar" as their former occupation. [8]

Cultural and Linguistic Adjustment

Soviet Jews tended to be more agnostic than their American counterparts, but upon arrival to the United States, were accosted by a wide variety of Jewish institutions. While Jewishness in the Soviet Union was a national and ethnic identity, in America it became a cultural and religious one. [3] Many joined Reform and Conservative congregations, as a means of belonging to a community that barely existed in their previous country. Children and teens could now be enrolled in Yeshivas and Jewish summer and day camps, and have bar and bat mitzvahs, reinforcing Jewish identity. [9]

The range of options in American society—the variety of consumer goods, labor market mobility, and pluralism that exists within American Jewish communities at first contributes to a sense of being "uprooted". [10] Learning English is cited to be the hardest part of the adjustment process, but is the key to higher earnings and occupational status. With linguistic improvement, comes the transformation of relevant skills, however, those with professional skills often do not achieve the fluency needed to practice in America, causing less-skilled professional jobs to be a long-term solution. [8]

A survey conducted on 310 of Russian Jewish households in New York found that 84% used Russian in their homes when growing up, promoting the retention of Soviet popular culture and affecting the languages spoken in adulthood. [3]

Jews immigrated in much larger proportions from Ukraine than Russia, altering the characteristics and types of communities that were formed in the U.S. [11]

Communities

Soviet Jewish migration consisted of several waves, the main one in the late 1980s. Now, Jews born in the Soviet Union account for 5% of the American Jewish population. [12] 1980 Census data shows that 98.6% of Soviet Jews lived in a Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area, with 36% concentrated in the New York SMSA, or 300,000. [3] [12]

This new class of Jews brought with them their own culture and views, which subsequently had a unique effect on their values and contributions to American Society. The unique circumstances of the Jewish "exodus" from the USSR has led to a tendency with regards to political leanings, as well. Going through communism in a totalitarian regime, has caused Russian Jews to be more conservative and less religious than their American counterparts. [13]

Brighton Beach

Located in the southern-most part of Brooklyn, Brighton Beach, or "Little Odessa" as it has come to be known, is the most dramatic example of a "Russified" neighborhood (despite the fact that Odesa is a city in Ukraine).

Information about visiting Brighton Beach, including recommended restaurants and sights, can be found here.

Labor Markets

As a continuation of the norms of the Soviet Union, Soviet Jews place an abundance of value on occupational status for themselves and their descendants. Lacking an understanding of American social mobility, the group views first jobs as a measure of self-worth and prestige, over purely monetary compensation. [8]

Brain Drain

Despite Jews constituting 0.69% of the Soviet population in 1975, they accounted for 8.8% of all scientists, and 14% of all scientists with a Doctor rank (PhD equivalent). Nonetheless, Jews were systemically discriminated against and quotas were instituted to prevent them from participating in sensitive research, because they were deemed "security risks". [14] The exodus of Jewish intellectuals form the Soviet Union (starting in the 60s) foreshadowed a large scale intellectual migration. [15] This was so loathed by Soviet officials that a diploma tax was instituted on those who wanted to emigrate.

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Refusenik</span> Soviet citizens denied permission to emigrate

Refusenik was an unofficial term for individuals—typically, but not exclusively, Soviet Jews—who were denied permission to emigrate, primarily to Israel, by the authorities of the Soviet Union and other countries of the Soviet Bloc. The term refusenik is derived from the "refusal" handed down to a prospective emigrant from the Soviet authorities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yosef Mendelevitch</span>

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Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union (UCSJ) is a non-governmental organization that reports on the human rights conditions in countries throughout Eastern Europe and Central Asia, exposing hate crimes and assisting communities in need. UCSJ uses grassroots-based monitoring and advocacy, as well as humanitarian aid, to protect the political and physical safety of Jewish people and other minorities in the region. UCSJ is based in Washington, D.C., and is linked to other organizations such as the Moscow Helsinki Group. It has offices in Russia and Ukraine and has a collegial relationship with human rights groups that were founded by the UCSJ in the countries of the former Soviet Union.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maxim D. Shrayer</span> Russian-American writer (born 1967)

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Freedom Sunday for Soviet Jews was the title of a national march and political rally that was held on December 6, 1987 in Washington, D.C. An estimated 200,000 participants gathered on the National Mall, calling for the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, to extend his policy of Glasnost to Soviet Jews by putting an end to their forced assimilation and allowing their emigration from the Soviet Union. The rally was organized by a broad-based coalition of Jewish organizations. At the time, it was reported to be the "largest Jewish rally ever held in Washington."

David Jonathan Waksberg, was a leading activist in the Soviet Jewry Movement during the 1980s and early 1990s. In the 1970s he became involved in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. In the early 1980s he moved to California and began working for the Bay Area Council for Soviet Jews, first as Assistant Director, and later as executive director. He initiated public and political activities on behalf of Soviet Jewry, supervised research and monitoring of their welfare and coordinated financial, medical and legal aid to Refuseniks and Prisoners of Conscience trapped in the Soviet Union. During his first visit to the USSR in 1982, Waksberg was arrested and detained by the KGB while attempting, along with refusenik Yuri Chernyak, to visit Kiev refusenik Lev Elbert. He organized numerous protest demonstrations and vigils to raise public awareness of the plight of Jews in the USSR. In 1985 Waksberg became National Vice-President of BACSJ's umbrella organization, the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews. Waksberg frequently visited Jewish communities of the Soviet Union and the former Soviet states and coordinated briefings of the American travelers interested in visiting those communities. In 1990 Waksberg took on the role of Director of the Center for Jewish Renewal, newly established by UCSJ. The mission of the CJR was to promote the renewal and development of Jewish life in the USSR and the emigration rights, human rights and resettlement needs of Jews in the Former Soviet Union. The CJR established a network of human rights and emigration bureaus in major cities of the former Soviet Union. In mid-1990s Waksberg was a member of Bay Area Council's Board of Directors and served as Director of Development and Communication of the UCSJ. Since 2007 Waksberg has served as Chief Executive Officer of Jewish LearningWorks.

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Louis Rosenblum was a pioneer in the movement for freedom of emigration for the Jews in the Soviet Union, was a founder of the first organization to advocate for the freedom of Soviet Jews, the Cleveland Council on Soviet Anti-Semitism, founding president of the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews, and a research scientist at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Lewis Research Center.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alexander Smukler</span> Soviet-born American businessman

Alexander Smukler is a Soviet-born American businessman, who is the chairman of the board of Agroterminal LTD and the chairman of the board of Century 21: Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine. He is a former managing partner of Ariel Investment Group, which develops commercial enterprises and civil engineering projects in Russia.

References

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