LONG READS Issue 1002 · March 6, 2024

Faces of the Forgotten War

No longer in the headlines, Ukraine’s battered Jewish communities struggle to survive

Faces of the Forgotten War
Photos: FJCU
While the Russian army is threatening to escalate attacks on Ukraine, we embarked on a road trip through the embattled country in order to meet the rabbis and families who’ve stayed to keep their kehillos alive. Two years ago, there was massive assistance to get the Jews out and support refugees who’d fled across Ukraine’s seven borders, but today, the thousands still there have become an eclipsed community

Days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Rabbi Mordechai Levenhartz found himself holed up with 100 individuals in the small bomb shelter of the school he oversees in Kyiv’s Eastern district. Just ten kilometers away, Russian troops were wreaking havoc in Bucha and Irpin, with the capital looming under threat of capitulation. Rabbi Levenhartz, spiritual leader of Kyiv’s largest Jewish community, reserved his moments of anguish for the privacy of his office, as the cacophony of sirens, bombs, and gunfire from Russian and Ukrainian forces filled the air.

Venturing outside was strictly prohibited, with Ukrainian forces — fearing Russian spies — authorized to shoot anyone on sight. Men, women, and children spent Thursday, Friday, Shabbos, and Sunday inside that shelter. On Monday, after days of uncertainty, the government allowed a brief window for movement. Rabbi Levenhartz could secure an escape for his family, but he insisted they only leave if safety could be assured for the 100 members of his congregation willing to flee the country as well. With cars scarce and fuel in short supply, they eventually organized a convoy of vehicles carrying more people than legally allowed, a journey that stretched two days to reach the Romanian border. Four days later, they landed in Tel Aviv.

While their arrival in Israel might have heralded a fresh start for the Levenhartz family, two months later they were back in Kyiv.

“A rabbi cannot abandon his congregation,” he tells me this week, two years after the war began.

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