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Thursday, September 1, 2022

Sharansky: Gorbachev wouldn’t have released Soviet Jews if not for global pressure

 

Nice article but there is one thing missing! The giant elephant in the room!

Meir Kahana!
It was Rabbi Meir Kahana that put the plight of the Soviet Jews on the front pages of the New York Slimes!
It was Rabbi Meir Kahana that put pressure on all the Major Jewish Organizations to make this agenda a priority and to advocate for Soviet Jews living behind the Iron Country to bring the issue to Washington DC and to Congress!

I remember that the Gedoilim were against Kahana's ideas to make their plight public. I distinctly remember that the Gedoilim would not allow Yeshiva Students to attend any of Meir Kahana's rallies on behalf of Soviet Jews. They were content with sending care packages to Soviet Jews and sending them Marzos for Pesach. They felt that it was far better to negotiate secretly. This did not move the needle at all and was a dismal failure. 

When the Jews were finally allowed to leave, they thanked Rabbi Kahana publicly and not one had a bad word to say about him. I live in Beit Shemesh and there are many Jews living in my neighborhood that lived under the Communist Tyranny, and they all give credit to his initiatives and his tireless selfless work to get them the freedom that they so deserved. 
I had the honor to meet Sharanski on many occasions and whenever he spoke he mentioned Rabbi Meir Kahana.
I know that the good rabbi will not get recognition for this work in particular, from the leftists politicians, but wouldn't it be prudent for frum Jews to be "makir tov" and give credit where credit is due? Or am I asking too much?


By JEREMY SHARON

Former refusenik and prisoner of Zion Natan Sharansky said on Wednesday that the late leader of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev would never have released Soviet Jewry had it not been for the global pressure campaign to do so.

Sharansky’s comments came following the death of Gorbachev at 91 on Tuesday.

The former Israeli cabinet minister and chairman of the Jewish Agency said that for Gorbachev, the heavy cost the Soviet Union paid due to its political repression was what convinced him to relax policies toward Jewish practice and emigration, not any particular sympathy he had for Soviet Jews.

Sharansky, who spent almost nine years in a forced labor camp, was the first Soviet political prisoner to be released by Gorbachev after the latter assumed the leadership of the Soviet Union in 1985.

“Gorbachev strongly believed in communism and believed that the ideas of Marx and Lenin were truly what was best, but also realized that the system wasn’t working for the Soviet Union,” Sharansky told The Times of Israel.

“He understood that there was a need to give some freedom to people,” such as greater civil rights and economic opportunity.

“What he didn’t understand was that if you give a little freedom, the people will demand a lot of freedom,” he said.

Sharansky said that even before becoming general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1985, Gorbachev had been struck by the tremendous price the Soviet Union was paying in trade restrictions and other sanctions imposed on the USSR by the West for its policies of political repression, including against Soviet Jewry.

“On his first trip to the West, before he was leader, he was asked constantly about the situation of the Jews, about Sharansky, and [prominent Soviet dissident Andrei] Sakharov, and he replied he didn’t know who these people were, and didn’t understand why the Soviet Union was paying such a heavy price for them,” said Sharansky.

The former refusenik also asserted that after Gorbachev had started to release political prisoners, including Jews, he and his communist regime grew concerned about the possibility of mass emigration and resultant political instability and attempted to once again restrict emigration.

Only after Gorbachev’s visit to Washington in 1987 and the Freedom Sunday demonstration organized by US Jewish organizations, attended by some 250,000 protesters, did the Soviet leader begin to ease emigration restrictions, said Sharansky.

He added that Gorbachev never had much interaction with Jews or Jewish organizations, and that the Jewish people in general held little importance for him.

“He wasn’t antisemitic, he didn’t have the prejudice of the Stalin or Brezhnev regimes, but I don’t remember any particular expression of sympathy by him toward Jews,” said Sharansky.

“Was this new policy good for Soviet Jewry? Yes it was. But without the pressure and the struggle by the Jewish world for Soviet Jews, supported by [late US president Ronald] Reagan and other world leaders, Gorbachev would probably never have done it.”

6 comments:

frum but normal said...

Hakoras tov from chareidim, are you kidding me.
Those two don't go together, the perfect example when a famous chasidic Rebbe was plucked out of the Nazi inferno and was saved by a secular and Zionist Jew,did he even once mention it and thanked him for it?, of course not! as a matter of fact he blamed him and the Zionist's for the holocaust.
That was his thank you

Anonymous said...

B"H

https://www.chabad.org/therebbe/livingtorah/player_cdo/aid/618967/jewish/How-Could-He-Have-Known.htm

Moshiach NOW

The Man said...

David Luchins, who worked for Senator Patrick Moynahan, said the demonstrations had a bad effect, and slowed down the release efforts.

Dusiznies said...

The Man
David Luchins made the most idiotic statement, history doesn't agree with him

Anonymous said...

The iron curtain came down 2 years later. The risk to Jews in the Soviet union was very high for protesting in the whole world

Anonymous said...

David Luchins is why Jonathan Pollard spent :0 years in prison Please I don’t respect anything Luchins says and either should you