I wrote the following article and submitted it to the NFTY (North American Federation of Temple Youth) at 75 series. Whether they publish it or not, I wanted to share it with you. In addition: Happy holidays to all.
Save Soviet
Jews…N.F.T.Y. Social Action in the 1970’s
In communications with the Student Struggle for Soviet
Jewry, an organization from the West
Side Temple in Cleveland, OH. I gathered material on the backgrounds and
stories of Soviet Refusnikim. These were
Jews who stood up for their rights and were refused exit visas to Israel. Many were jailed. For the first time we encountered names like
Anatoly Sharansky, Ida Nudel, and Boris Kochubievsky. My wife Juca and I listened to recordings of
Theodore Bikel singing in Russian and Hebrew and an album of underground
Russian songs smuggled out of Russia and recorded in Hebrew in Israel. We transcribed the words so we could learn
the songs. Some of those songs, Adpusti
Narod Moi (Let My People Go), Kachol V’Lavan, Ani Ma’amin, Artzi Artzi,
B’Dumiah, and Bo’i Ruach would become the mainstays of our Chicago Federation
of Temple Youth Soviet Jewry Caravan presentation.
I enlisted Rob Weinberg, then a CFTYite, and his brother
Michael to develop and create the caravan’s music. Both Rob and Michael would go on to be
seminal camp song leaders at Olin-Sang-Ruby and at the Goldman Union Camp
Institute in Zionsville, IN. Don Rossoff
helped as well. Don was a Northwestern
U. student at the time and a terrific flautist.
In total, eight CFTY members joined the caravan and we put
together a forty minute presentation of songs and dramatic readings. Somehow along the way someone donated a
spotlight, so the group included a tech person to run it. The goal was to encourage synagogues to take
up the banner for Soviet Jewry. We
thought we would be presenting our “show” to youth groups and schools in the
area but soon found ourselves invited to perform for all sorts of adult
audiences. I even recall performing on
the 60th floor of the John Hancock building, surrounded by glass
windows overlooking Lake Michigan while a thunderstorm outside underscored our
songs.
In all, during the years 1970 through 1972 we presented over
forty Caravan performances in and around Chicago. Our experience culminated at a North Shore
Congregation Israel event where we sang and the recently released Boris
Kochubievsky appeared. We had presented
his story during all of those performances, and there he was in the flesh. Deep down we knew that we really had not been
a major factor in his gaining freedom, but I think we all shared a bit of pride
anyway.
And who do you think laughed the hardest when Gilda Radner
proclaimed on Saturday Night Live, “What’s all this talk about Soviet Jewelry,
anyway?” Only to be told, “It’s Soviet
Jewry, not Jewelry…Jewry.” And she
replied, “Oh. Never mind.” I’m pretty sure it was the members of the
Chicago Federation of Temple Youth’s Soviet Jewry Caravan. Pretty sure.