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A young man studies with an old man in a synagogue on Arkhipova Street in Moscow.   (Photo by Peter Turnley/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)
A young man studies with an older one in a Moscow synagogue. Photo by Peter Turnley/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images.
Observation

June 17, 2021

Podcast: David Rozenson on How His Family Escaped the Soviet Union and Why He Chose to Return

By Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

The Jewish leader recalls his upbringing in Soviet Russia and explains what inspired him to return to the land from which his family fled.

This Week’s Guest: David Rozenson

The Soviet Union was deeply against religion, and in particular was deeply against Judaism, so that the full embrace of Jewish religious observance, or the study of Hebrew, or the slightest approval of Zionism were often seen as criminal offenses against the state. Some Jews, like Natan Sharansky, resisted—brave refuseniks who wouldn’t give in to enforced secularization and who organized underground networks of Jewish life. Eventually, through American and international pressure, the Soviets allowed those desperate Jews to leave. But what of the Jews who didn’t flee, who remained in Russia even after the demise of the Soviet Union? What is their story?

David Rozenson, the executive director of Beit Avi Chai, a Jewish cultural center in Jerusalem, was born in the Soviet Union before his family escaped to the United States. Years later, as an adult, he returned to Russia and stayed there for years. On this week’s podcast, in conversation with Mosaic editor Jonathan Silver, he tells his family story, and explains why, despite his parents having risked so much to leave, he chose to go back and serve the Jews of the former Soviet Union.

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