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11 Nissan 5761 - April 4, 2001 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
Shuvu's Pesach Programs Help Russian Families
by Linda Feinberg

How one decorates one's home is often a very personal statement reflecting one's values. Ten years ago, the Horowitz family in Moscow was no exception. Every year in the spring, the Horowitzes would obtain a single matzo through the refusenik grapevine and display it prominently in their living room for the entire family to admire. This was how they celebrated Pesach.

For hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jews, matzo was a powerful symbol of their determination to cling to the last threads connecting them to their lost heritage. Paradoxically, however, when the Iron Curtain fell and they fulfilled their lifelong dream of living in Eretz Yisroel, that desire to connect with Judaism waned.

Take the Horowitz family, for example. Last year the family had the money to buy a box of matzo and the children, who had learned all about Pesach at Shuvu, were eager to celebrate the chag. The parents, however, were less knowledgeable and less enthusiastic -- until they attended a model seder for Shuvu parents, where they got a gift package of matzo and wine.

This year, Shuvu will distribute some 7,100 Kimcha Depishca packages -- totaling 13 tons of matzo and 11,000 bottles of wine -- to Russian immigrant families like the Horowitzs, whose children attend Shuvu schools. But this is not tzedaka in the traditional sense.

Symbols Are The First Step

According to Rabbi Chaim Michoel Gutterman, Shuvu's Director in Eretz Yisroel, because matzo was one of the most inspiring symbols of the refusenik movement, Shuvu is using that symbol to bring Russian immigrant Jews back to their heritage.

"Not everyone was a refusenik," he says, "but most of the Russian Jews knew about the movement and took pride in what the refuseniks were doing. Even if they couldn't attend a seder themselves, they knew that seders were happening. They heard the stories about the matzos that were smuggled in, and how the refuseniks were willing to risk imprisonment for the sake of obtaining even a small piece.

"Our task at Shuvu," he continues, "is to take this symbol from their Russian past and give it a new context that will reconnect them with their Yiddishkeit -- and their future in Eretz Yisroel."

That new context is not just the Pesach packages, but also a series of model seders that Shuvu schools conduct every year a few weeks before the chag. The children, of course, have learned about Pesach in their classrooms, and so they know all about a seder. In fact, it is the children who conduct the model seders for their parents. They are eager to show their parents what they have learned in school, but since many of the children want to practice what they have learned, another purpose of the model seder is to inspire the parents to observe Pesach at home.

This is why the model seders are held in the evening, so that working parents will be able to attend with their children. For many Russian Jewish parents and grandparents this is their first time participating in a seder, and the impact is often incredible. One new immigrant, who is already a grandmother, could barely contain her emotions when she attended a model seder last year.

"This is my grandmother's holiday!" she exclaimed. The woman hadn't been at a seder since she was five years old, and her eyes filled with tears as long-forgotten memories of her grandmother's home rushed back to her.

However, for most participants the highlight of the event occurs at the end of the evening, when each family is presented with a Pesach package that includes a 2.5 kilogram box of matzo, a bottle of wine, a bottle of grape juice, a seder plate, kiddush cups, a Haggadah and hilchos Pesach in Russian.

Sara Grossman, a Shuvu administrator who is helping to organize the delivery of the packages, stresses that it isn't the monetary value of the gift that makes the impression.

"The model seder gets the process going," she says, "because by the time the evening ends the families are very excited about the holiday. When they receive the package -- something they can take home with them -- they get another boost. `Let's do it,' they say. `Let's make Pesach this year.' "

"The children are thrilled when they hear this," she continues, "because many of them are well on their way to becoming fully observant. It's obviously much easier for the kids to be scrupulous in their mitzva observance if their entire family is eating kosher lePesach food during the chag."

From Dress Rehearsal To The Big Night

While most schools are winding down during the weeks before Pesach, Shuvu is gearing up for a whirlwind of activities. The Shuvu staff becomes a major resource for the Russian Jewish community, who need a great deal of help in getting ready for the chag.

Some of the families want to kasher their homes, but they don't know what to do. Rabbi Dov Glass, principal of the Shuvu school in Ashkelon, works closely with Rabbi Avrohom Reisman, Rosh Yeshivas Beit Achiezer-Toras Chaim, to help families in his area who are tackling Pesach cleaning for the first time.

In the meantime, other staff members are busy organizing the public seders that are held in cities throughout Eretz Yisroel.

When the educational network first began organizing the seders 10 years ago for the students and their families, Shuvu could make all of its deliveries in just two days using one rented car. But the school system has grown so rapidly that this year they have had to hire a trucking company, which estimates that the job will take a full four days.

Although the public seders are extremely popular -- and are an important first step in getting new families involved -- some families who have been with Shuvu for a few year are now ready to celebrate the chag in a more homelike setting. Shuvu staff helps place these families with volunteer hosts, which often includes Shuvu teachers and administrators.

According to Grossman, being in another family's home for the seder is often the next step along the path to getting a family to the point where they realize they can conduct a seder on their own.

"Last year there was a boy who brought his parents to his teacher's home," she says, "and during the seder the father got really upset. Why? Because the father suddenly realized that he should be doing the seder himself.

"The family thanked their hosts after the seder," she continues, "but the father told his son's teacher not to expect them back next year. The teacher told me that this was the best `thank you' he could have ever received."

Pesach Is A Part Of Klal Yisroel

Every year more and more Shuvu families take that big step and decide to conduct their own family seder. But every year there is a new group of immigrants who will be celebrating a seder for the first time and need Shuvu's helping hand to guide them through the process.

And that means that while in most schools teachers don't work past Rosh Chodesh Nisan, for Shuvu staff the work actually intensifies during those last two weeks before Pesach. Yet they don't seem to mind.

"After all these families went through in the former Soviet Union, the story of Pesach really touches them in a very deep way," says Rabbi Gutterman. "They're so eager to receive everything we offer them that the staff also becomes incredibly inspired.

"We really feel privileged," he continues, "to be doing all this work, because we get to see firsthand how deeply Pesach -- and the desire for the Geula -- are etched into the hearts of all Klal Yisroel."

 

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