As Friday’s anniversary commemorating the 70th anniversary of Soviet Russia’s victory over Germany in WWII fast approaches, the escalating violent clashes between Ukraine and pro-Russian forces has Odessa’s approximately 30,000 Jews on edge.
Recently, Victory Girls reported on the distribution of leaflets demanding that Donetsk’s Jews register themselves and everything they own with the city’s pro-Russian separatists, warning of swift consequences if they didn’t. While pro-Russian forces in Ukraine now deny the leaflets came from them, Ukraine’s prime minister has vowed to hunt down the culprits. Nevertheless, Odessa has a long history of anti-Semitism and rising nationalism, and the Jewish population, many of whom have already fled to Israel or are planning to, is taking no chances. Though no specific threat against the Jewish population has been reported to date—several of the wounded from last Friday’s clashes happened to be Jews—the Jewish community has penned out an emergency evacuation plan should the unrest continue to increase and compel them to take action.
“‘The next weekend is going to be very violent,’ Rabbi Refael Kruskal, the head of the Tikva organization, believes.
‘When there is shooting in the streets, the first plan is to take [the children] out of the center of the city,’ said Rabbi Kruskal. ‘If it gets worse, then we’ll take them out of the city. We have plans to take them both out of the city and even to a different country if necessary, plans which we prefer not to talk about which we have in place.’
Rabbi Avraham Wolf, representing the Chabad hassidic community, said they are taking extra security measures, such as posting armed guards, and are prepared for a possible evacuation. Together with the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, they have prepared a fleet of 70 buses, fueled and ready to go.”
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