Reclaiming Jewish Life After the Nightmare of Communism – Tablet Magazine
As the calendar year 1989 began, Jews in what were then the Soviet satellite states (Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, East Germany, and Bulgaria) knew pretty much what they could look forward to: calls for world peace (the Soviet way), condemnations of imperialist America and its evil puppet Israel, along with slim pickings in the way of fresh fruit. By the time 1990 began, they were living in a very different world.
Ever since the one party state cemented control of these countries in 1948, rabbis had been run out of town, seminaries and Jewish schools had been closed, kosher food became all but impossible to obtain, and if you showed up for synagogue services (even without a fully ordained rabbi officiating), your future job prospects would dry up.
As if that wasnt bad enough, the official Jewish communities in every one of these countries seemed to exist solely to serve up a steady stream of anti-Israel propaganda, as prepared and precooked for them by the Central Committee of the Communist Party.
Little surprise that most Jews wanted little or nothing to do with the official Jewish organizations, although the communities usually allowed for Hanukkah and Purim parties, which were the two times in a year Jews felt safe getting together without fear of reprisal.
Then something happened. The political changes that began in June 1989, started as a brush fire, gathered strength, grew into an inferno that swept the region, and sent every central committee fleeing for the exit. By the time Hanukkah ended on Dec. 29, the Communists were looking at nothing but scorched earth, while everyone else wanted to start planting seedlings.
That meant Jews in these countries were ready to deal with the official community organs that had been spewing anti-Israel propaganda and preventing their children from studying Hebrewor learning even the first thing about Judaism. It didnt happen everywhere, all at once, but change was in the air.
Although no one loved the community leadership in Hungary, it did operate both a small Jewish school and a rabbinical seminary in Budapest that functioned during the Communist decades, and by 1989, the Lauder Foundation was about to open a new school while the Joint Distribution Committee opened its first office in Budapest since 1948. Further, by September 1989 Zionist youth clubs were given the green light to set up shop once again, Hebrew classes were being held in several locations every week, a half dozen synagogues drew congregants regularly and a Jewish summer camp functioned on Lake Balaton (the much larger camp at Szarvas would open in July 1990).
Romania had always been the odd man out. The dictator Nicolae Ceausescu was the only Warsaw Pact leader not to sever diplomatic ties with Israel in 1967, and the Jewish community operated choirs and a summer camp and Talmud Torah classes ran weekly in four cities. If any family asked for a bar mitzvah, Chief Rabbi David Moses Rosen made sure the child was prepared properly.
Poland was also an outlier. First, there were few Jews who were even registered in the 1980s, and to the communitys credit, at least it ran soup kitchens for elderly Holocaust survivors in Wroclaw and Warsaw along with a Yiddish theater in Warsaw. There was, however, little to nothing on offer for younger Jews. Much would happen in the coming years, as Jewish families came out of the woodwork and hundreds (some claim thousands) of younger Poles discovered genuine, or at least tenuous, Jewish roots.
But it was in Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria, two of the most hard-line states, where Jews launched their revolt during Hanukkah of 1989 and in January of 1990.
Dezider Galsky (born Goldfinger) had been a diplomat in the Czechoslovak foreign service, and a historian who had published several books on the Middle East. In 1980, he agreed to serve as president of Czechoslovakias Jewish Federation.
It was under his aegis that the Prague Jewish Museums blockbuster exhibition, The Precious Legacy, began its world tour. Galsky often went with it to speakalways diplomaticallybut it did him little good. The Communist Party had no idea that an exhibition of Czech Judaicanearly all of it gathered from Bohemian Jewish communities wiped out during the Holocaustwould garner such praise wherever it went, and that infuriated them. Galsky was accused of corruption, removed in 1985 and in his place came Frantisek Kraus, a man of such a complex background it beggars belief.
Born in the Czech Republic, Kraus and his family had been sent to Theresienstadt; I had once photographed him in front of the barracks where he was interned. He and his family were sent to Auschwitz where they perished and he survived. At wars end, Kraus left for Palestine, fought with the Haganah in Israels War of Independence, but decided to return home in the 1950s.
He was immediately imprisoned and, I was told, tortured by the authorities for being a Zionist spy and had even been threatened with a firing squad, but a general amnesty at the last minute freed him. Years later, Galsky gave him a job running the kosher kitchen in the Jewish community center, but when Galsky fell out of favor with the authorities, Kraus offered to take his place.
During his tenure at the Jewish Federation, Kraus forbade any programs that had to do with Israel, and when a group of younger community members asked him to at least consider allowing a Hebrew language course, he informed the secret police, who went and grilled everyone who had even asked him.
The one Jewish organization we did have, said Andrej Ernyei, a piano tuner and jazz musician, was our Jewish choir. Almost all of us were adults, and most of us had kids. Singing Hebrew songs together was the one thing we could do together as Jews, and Kraus didnt think we could do harm to anyone. But he was wrong. Were the one who pushed him out.
When Hanukkah came that December, and choir members were thrilled as the Communists were being hounded out of office, they demanded a communitywide meeting with Kraus. And with no one answering at party headquarters to help him out, Kraus gritted his teeth and prepared for the reckoning.
Hundreds of Jews crowded into the venerable hall on Meiselova Street and demanded he resign, and Dezider Galsky was asked to resume his old post. Kraus agreed, and not long after, Galsky asked Tomas Kraus (no relation), an executive at one of the countrys larger artists agencies, to become the general secretary.
Galsky knew hed need someone to help run things, as he was suddenly the name in everyones Rolodex. I just took Francois Mitterrand around the Jewish quarter, he told me in January 1990, Margaret Thatcher is coming and I cannot count the number of foreign ministers who have showed up, often with no warning at all.
Frantisek Kraus refused to apologize for anything he had done, but later came to Tomas Kraus and he practically begged me to allow him to be buried in the Jewish cemetery. He really did fear this would be the worst possible punishment. Of course I said yes, and he left the community. I never saw him again, although I was told he spent his last years as a security guard in a department store.
If Czechoslovakia was a hard-line Communist state, the countrys leadership was positively enlightened compared to Bulgarias aging Central Committee, headed by Tudor Zhivkov, who, by 1989, had ruled his country since 1954 and was now 78 years old.
With its economy in free fall in 1989, it wasnt hard for more moderate members of the Communist Party to force Zhivkov from power only one day after the Berlin Wall fell on Nov. 9. A few days after that, Bulgarian Jews gathered in the Jewish community center on Stambolijski Boulevard and had come with a suggestion for the Jewish community leadership headed by Iosif Astrukov. Namely: resign. Now.
Robert Djerassi described the scene. We didnt know how many would come but at least 150 people showed up, and although there was some tension and a lot of excitement, I remember saying that we needed to thank those who had run the community until now, but it was time for a new administration. Astrukov agreed to step down, and Eddy Schwartz, a publisher, theater director and novelist, was asked to take over.
By the time 1990 had begun, a new Jewish cultural organization had been launched: Shalom: the Organization of Jews in Bulgaria. And everyone would be welcomed.
Djerassi said that we inherited a five story building with almost nothing in it, other than a typewriter dating from 1880 and a secretary who managed the office. There was also a museum with a giant photograph of Czar Boris III shaking the hand of Adolf Hitler, which led into a museum of how Communists saved the Jews of Bulgaria.
Becca Lazarova, who would be the first director of the Lauder Jewish school in Sofia, said, We, the parents, knew almost nothing about being Jewish, and so at night we would teach ourselves, and then work alongside our children the next day in class.
Although Jewish organizations like JDC and ORT rushed in to help as Bulgarias economic collapse deepened, Schwartz never lost his sense of optimism. In September of 1990, when I asked him how Shalom was going to overcome its difficulties, he said, We have around 4,000 Jews in this country. Out of that we have 10 composers, 10 poets, 150 journalists, 12 theater directors, 200 full professors, six members of parliament with, of course, three on each side, 70 lawyers and nearly 100 doctors. So when it comes to tackling our problems, Id say we have the right people to do it.
The Jewish communities in Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria were the first to make serious changes during and after the fall of Communism in 1989, but they would not be the last. In 1991 the Soviet Union collapsed and communities in Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia started rebuilding Jewish life with an enthusiasm that belied their meager numbers. Then came Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova.
Well over a million Jews would leave the Soviet Union as soon as they could, but that is a topic of another discussion, as is the story of how 150,000 opted to move to Germany, where they have given that community something it did have in the 1980s: a future.
The Central European Jewish communities, the ones wedged between Germany and what had been the Soviet Union, were all about to face a difficult road, a road they are still traveling three decades later. Except for the city of Budapest, where well more than 50,000 Jews live, no Jewish community in this region has a long-term future. The numbers, the critical mass, just isnt there.
But that is not the point. Starting 30 years ago, when 1990 began, the Jewish communities of Central and Eastern Europe started grabbing back a future that had been denied them for far too long. And they were throwing off the mantle of remnant like a garment that no longer fit. It is, after all, not a story about numbers. Its about the dignity of the effort.
***
Like this article? Sign up for our Daily Digest to get Tablet magazines new content in your inbox each morning.
Edward Serotta is a journalist, photographer and filmmaker specializing in Jewish life in Central and Eastern Europe.
Read more:
Reclaiming Jewish Life After the Nightmare of Communism - Tablet Magazine
- Belgium: the Revolutionary Communist Organisation is here For our generation, communism is no longer taboo - In Defence of Marxism - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Communist Party of Ireland: Statement on the Irish General Election 2024 - In Defense of Communism - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Czechia celebrates 35 years since the Velvet Revolution and the fall of communism in Czechoslovakia - Radio Prague International - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Communism, Canada and Cuba: new exhibition showcasing photographer Helena Wilson opens in Prague - Radio Prague International - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- The truth behind the infamous "Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation" - In Defense of Communism - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- John Ivison: They came fleeing communism. Now Ottawas expropriating and redistributing their property - National Post - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Nehru in the age of the RSS-BJP, anti-communism and alignment of chakras - The Leaflet - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Ahoo Daryaei and the hijab of capitalism - In Defense of Communism - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- KKE's General Secretary D. Koutsoumbas on the result of the US elections and its impact on Greece - In Defense of Communism - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- European Communist Action: Statement on the 107th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution - In Defense of Communism - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Letters: What an uneducated world we live in. MAGA is better than communism. - The Columbus Dispatch - October 21st, 2024 [October 21st, 2024]
- Neal Stephenson's 'Polostan' is a compact epic about communism, science, and the dawn of the atomic age - Reason - October 21st, 2024 [October 21st, 2024]
- Documenting Communism: The Hoover Project to Microfilm and Publish the Soviet Archives - Hoover Institution - October 21st, 2024 [October 21st, 2024]
- Communist Party of Sweden brings back the sickle and hammer on its logo - In Defense of Communism - October 21st, 2024 [October 21st, 2024]
- Imperialism: The Example of the Russian Federation - In Defense of Communism - October 21st, 2024 [October 21st, 2024]
- To Overthrow the World: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Communism (Guest: Sean McMeekin) - The Heartland Institute - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Echoes of communism: Study finds Germans who lived in the former GDR value free speech less than West Germans - Phys.org - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Echoes of communism: Study finds Germans who lived in the former GDR value free speech less than West Germans - Phys.org - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Meeting of Communist Parties scheduled to be held in Beirut has been postponed until further notice - In Defense of Communism - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Meeting of Communist Parties scheduled to be held in Beirut has been postponed until further notice - In Defense of Communism - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- The time is ripe for Gandhis philosophical alternative to capitalism and communism - Scroll.in - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Communism Yesterday, Today . . . and Tomorrow? - National Review - September 28th, 2024 [September 28th, 2024]
- A history of communism with an eye on the victims: Review of To Overthrow the World by Sean McMeekin - Washington Examiner - September 28th, 2024 [September 28th, 2024]
- World Order at Stake: Moolenaar, Krishnamoorthi Speak at Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation's Annual China Forum - Select Committee on the CCP | - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Max Boots Reagan Biography Boosts Communism And Trashes America - The Federalist - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Communist Party of Israel - Hadash: It is still possible to prevent an all-out war in Lebanon Ceasefire and hostage deal in Gaza - In Defense of... - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- MEDIA ADVISORY: Moolenaar, Krishnamoorthi To Speak at Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation's Annual China Forum - Select Committee on the CCP | - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- KKE rejects EU Parliament's despicable resolution on financial and military support to Ukraine - In Defense of Communism - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- Fall of Communism opens the world to Schoper - NUjournal - September 14th, 2024 [September 14th, 2024]
- I Grew Up With Soviet Communism; Now as a Trustee I See It Embedded in Californias Ethnic Studies - California Globe - September 14th, 2024 [September 14th, 2024]
- Red Reviews: Left-Wing Communism, An Infantile Disorder - Fight Back! Newspaper - September 14th, 2024 [September 14th, 2024]
- Fox networks have falsely linked Harris and Walz to socialism or communism over 450 times since Biden's exit - Media Matters for America - September 14th, 2024 [September 14th, 2024]
- Revolution Festival 2024: The school of communism is back! - The Communist - September 8th, 2024 [September 8th, 2024]
- The Struggle To Contain Communism in One Book - Washington Free Beacon - September 8th, 2024 [September 8th, 2024]
- Book Of The Week: David McCullagh on Communism's forgotten radicals - RT News - September 8th, 2024 [September 8th, 2024]
- Communist Party of Turkey: Mass protest against US warship docked in Izmir port - In Defense of Communism - September 8th, 2024 [September 8th, 2024]
- The US right keeps accusing Democrats of communism. What does that even mean? | Jan-Werner Mller - The Guardian - September 6th, 2024 [September 6th, 2024]
- A new Reagan film explores the 40th presidents historic struggle against communism - Washington Examiner - September 6th, 2024 [September 6th, 2024]
- Letter: Fact-checking fear: Setting the record straight on Common sense vs. communism - Albert Lea Tribune - September 6th, 2024 [September 6th, 2024]
- Communist Party of Greece (KKE): Article on the war in the Middle East, Palestine and Israel - In Defense of Communism - September 6th, 2024 [September 6th, 2024]
- Transnational Communism Across the Americas offers valuable insights despite its anti-communist tropes - People's World - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- Conservative Who Has Been Complaining About Grocery Prices Says Harris Price-Gouging Ban is Communism - The Hard Times - August 18th, 2024 [August 18th, 2024]
- A new Communist Party to be launched in Cyprus - In Defense of Communism - August 16th, 2024 [August 16th, 2024]
- Isserman Writes about the DNC and Communism - Hamilton - August 14th, 2024 [August 14th, 2024]
- The Reality of Communism - revcom.us - July 22nd, 2024 [July 22nd, 2024]
- PERSPECTIVE: Beijing & Kabul: A Strategic Unity of Communism and Terrorism in Turbulent Times - HSToday - July 22nd, 2024 [July 22nd, 2024]
- 72 Christians Imprisoned or Missing in 4 Communist Countries - International Christian Concern - July 20th, 2024 [July 20th, 2024]
- 35 years after Tiananmen: Communism, Christianity, and China - Mission Network News - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- From communism to stripper restrictions: Florida measures slated to take effect July 1 - Orlando Weekly - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- KKE Europarliament Group: Remove Cuba from the U.S list of "state-sponsors of terrorism" - In Defense of Communism - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Kohei Saito, Marx in the Anthropocene: Towards the Idea of Degrowth Communism book review - Counterfire - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- British Communist Party announces first candidates for 4 July General Election - In Defense of Communism - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- The Communists Are Coming! How YOU can promote the RCI founding conference - The Communist - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- The Southern Truth About Communism - Black Agenda Report - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- Swiss rediscover communist zeal after 84-year hiatus - SWI swissinfo.ch - SWI swissinfo.ch in English - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- Revolutionary Communists take on Tory warmongers - The Communist - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- Communist Party of Ireland: On the 50th anniversary of the 1974 Dublin-Monaghan terrorist attack - In Defense of Communism - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- Florida Governor DeSantis signs new law mandating teaching the evils of communism to children as young as five - WSWS - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Communists to run in Karl Marx hometown's election - In Defense of Communism - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Slow Down. How Degrowth Communism Can Save the Earth book review - Counterfire - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- A Survivor of the Cultural Revolution Reviews New Book, 'The Devil and Communist China' - The Stream - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- European Communist Action: Long live the 1st of May Long live socialism! - In Defense of Communism - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Florida children to learn that communism is evil, slavery a skills training program - The South Florida Times - May 1st, 2024 [May 1st, 2024]
- Pol Pot's Atrocities Still Matter, 45 Years After Khmer Rouge's Fall - Reason - January 12th, 2024 [January 12th, 2024]
- Lenin lives! Join the communists to celebrate his life and ideas! - Socialist Appeal - January 12th, 2024 [January 12th, 2024]
- Goodbye Socialist Appeal The Communist is coming! - Socialist Appeal - January 12th, 2024 [January 12th, 2024]
- Xi Jinpings once-unquestioned authority is showing cracks - The Hill - January 12th, 2024 [January 12th, 2024]
- The Reality of CommunismWhat Is Social Democracy and Why Is It a Capitalist Dictatorship? - revcom.us - January 12th, 2024 [January 12th, 2024]
- Why Did the Berlin Wall Fall? - The Imaginative Conservative - November 13th, 2023 [November 13th, 2023]
- 1947 and now - The Interpreter - November 13th, 2023 [November 13th, 2023]
- Albania's deal with Italy on migrants has been welcomed by many ... - Las Vegas Sun - November 13th, 2023 [November 13th, 2023]
- Grothman's Bipartisan Hmong New Year Resolution | U.S. ... - Glenn Grothman - November 13th, 2023 [November 13th, 2023]
- Another View: DeSantis was strong, Haley was sharp, Ramaswamy ... - Press Herald - November 13th, 2023 [November 13th, 2023]
- Communism in Britain: The unbroken thread - Socialist Appeal - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- November 7 as Victims of Communism Day - 2023 - Reason - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Fate of the West - Breakpoint - BreakPoint.org - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- Cruzs new book Unwoke shows readers how to defeat cultural ... - 1330 WFIN - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- The aftermath of the Velvet Revolution was justice delivered? - Radio Prague International - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- Remember, Remember, the 9th of November - The Imaginative Conservative - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]
- Country Road Chronicles: Communist camp in Westerly in the '30s - The Westerly Sun - November 11th, 2023 [November 11th, 2023]