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People lay symbolic stones and flowers at Minorah Monument at the Babyn Yar (Babi Yar) Holocaust Memorial in Kiev, on September 29, 2019, during a mourning ceremony marking the 78th anniversary of the beginning of mass execution of Jews in September 1941. – The Babi Yar (Babyn Yar) ravine in Kiev, was the location where Nazis shot dead several tens of thousands of Jews between 1941-1944. (Photo by Sergei SUPINSKY / AFP) (Photo by SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images)
People lay symbolic stones and flowers at the Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial in Kyiv, Ukraine, on September 29, 2019. Photo by SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images. 
Observation

March 4, 2022

Podcast: Dovid Margolin on Jewish Life in War-torn Ukraine

By Dovid Margolin, Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

The Chabad writer joins us to discuss how the Jewish communities of Ukraine have adapted to the war.

This Week’s Guest: Dovid Margolin

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began, most of the news coverage has understandably focused on the war’s military, political, and economic dimensions. But there’s another dimension of the war: the religious dimension. How does being in the midst of a war change prayer, or, for Ukraine’s Jews, the operations of a synagogue? What does a rabbi do when his congregation is under attack?

Dovid Margolin, a senior editor at Chabad.org, joins the podcast this week to help answer those questions. In conversation with Mosaic editor Jonathan Silver, Margolin talks about the history of the Jews in Ukraine and how Jewish leaders there have helped their fellow Ukrainians during the war, from sheltering those with nowhere to go to moving entire orphanages out of the country.

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