RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: JEWISH BIROBIDZHAN RUSSIA REPLACES GOD WITH CULTURAL JUDAISM
AUTONOMOUS JEWISH STATE STILL EXISTS IN 21ST CENTURY RUSSIA
BLUFFTON SUN, BLUFFTON SC, HILTON HEAD SC, JUNE 3, 2015 EDITION
RABBI DR ARTHUR SEGAL
Shalom and peace:
In our journey though Jewish international communities, let us study the   relatively unknown Jewish Autonomous Oblast (State) of Birobidzhan in Eastern   Russia on the Chinese border, founded in 1934 with 18,000 Jews. In May 1928 the   first group of Jews from western Russia arrived.  It was   founded by Stalin to 'pursue Yiddish cultural heritage.' By 1948, 30,000 Jews   lived there. The ''USA Communist Organization for Jewish Colonization in the   Soviet Union'' successfully encouraged America Jews'   immigration.
Stalin set up a "Soviet Zion", where Jewish culture developed with   Yiddish, not Hebrew nor Russian, as the state language.  Jewish   literature and arts (so-called Cultural Judaism) would replace God, religion and   Zionism.  Birobidzhan was important for propaganda   purposes as an argument against Zionism which was a rival ideology to Marxism   among left-wing Jews.
Stalin used massive propaganda to induce more Jewish settlers.   Posters and Yiddish-language novels described a socialist Jewish utopia.   Leaflets from an airplane were dropped over USSR Jewish neighborhoods. Stalin   produced a Yiddish film,'' Seekers of Happiness,'' of an American Jewish family   fleeing the Depression to live a happy life in   Birobidzhan.
Settlers established a Yiddish newspaper, theater, schools, synagogues,   and named streets after Yiddish authors like Sholom Aleichem and Y. L. Peretz.    The Birobidzhan Jewish National University specializes in study of Hebrew   language, Jewish history and classic texts. The Jewish center's Sunday school   has children studying Yiddish, Jewish folk dances, and Jewish history.    While the Jewish population has dropped to 4000, Yiddish is taught public   schools, a Yiddish radio station operates, and the once all- Yiddish newspaper,   the Birobidzhaner Shtern, includes sections in Yiddish. Regardless of their   religion, all five- to seven year-olds spend two lessons a week learning   Yiddish, and being taught Jewish songs, dance, and traditions.  Birobidzhan's fourteen public schools must teach Yiddish and Jewish   tradition through the 12th grade. In 2007 the First Birobidzhan International   Summer Program for Yiddish Language and Culture started and   continues.
The New Birobidzhan Synagogue, opened in 2004, marked the 70th   anniversary of the founding Birobidzhan. The Old Synagogue is renamed Beit   Teshuvah with traditional Hebrew services.  In   2007, the world's tallest Chanukia, 69 feet tall, was built for public Chanukah   lightings. The Oblast is another unusual example of Judaism's survival outside   of Israel. 
Rabbi Arthur Segal is an international lecturer, author, and teacher. Visit him at www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org . Email at RabbiASegal@aol.com
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC; Savannah, GA

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Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC; Savannah, GA


