October
17-23, 2012
JCRC’s very productive visit to Dnepropetrovsk coincided
with the opening of the Menorah Center, the largest Jewish communal building in
the world. With this opening,
Dnepropetrovsk confirms its status as a central Jewish address in Ukraine and
all of Eastern Europe. Thanks in part to the
advocacy of the Boston Jewish Community, the building is wheelchair accessible
and offers an unprecedented opportunity for the inclusion of people with
disabilities and their families. Most of
the Jewish community’s offices will be located in the Menorah Center, which
also houses a Museum of Ukrainian Jewry and the Holocaust (with the support of
the JDC), a hotel, a youth hostel, a kosher supermarket and restaurants, a
concert hall, and a large scale ballroom facility.
Rabbi Shmuel Kaminezki has made it clear that the
relationship with Boston has helped make the Menorah Center become a reality. To give a specific
example, the community acted on advice from Boston partners to make the
management of the Menorah Center independent of its other activities, which has
both improved the building and freed the community to focus on its religious,
education, and charitable priorities.
Unfortunately, they do not expect to receive any dividends from its
operations for some years.
Beth Moskowitz, the chair JCRC’s Committee for Post-Soviet Jewry, received the honor of cutting the ribbon for the new museum, and was the only woman to be named during the ceremony—another example of subtle Boston advocacy!
Invited to cut the
ribbon at the entrance to the museum were Yuri Kiperman, one of the pioneers of
the Jewish renaissance in Dnepropetrovsk, Beth Moskowitz, leader of the
delegation from our sister Jewish Community of Greater Boston (USA) and the
chair of their Committee for Post-Soviet Jewry, and Leon Sherman, a
philanthropist who has donated a unique collection of artifacts to the museum (http://djc.com.ua/news/view/new/?id=8101).
Much of our visit was devoted to developing our medical
partnerships with old and new partners.
The Corky Ribakoff Women’s Clinic will soon celebrate its fifteenth
anniversary, and we hope to celebrate that milestone in the spring. We were proud to learn that the training Dr.
Valeria Sidelkovskaya received this past spring in Boston has paid off: her new
skills with the Doppler feature of the Ultrasound Machine we donated in 2009
allowed her to make a life-saving diagnosis.
With our friend Yuri Bolbot, we made plans for a post-graduate course in
pediatrics in the spring, including an effort, in cooperation with the Medical
Academy and the Dnepropetrovsk Municipality, to spur a media campaign
encouraging the immunization of infants and children. Finally, one of our Boston doctors, a psychiatrist, lectured about postpartum depression at Hospital No. 3 to twenty
doctors and nurses from throughout the city.
We also had meetings with several of our agency and
Dnepropetrovsk partners, including one with Marsha Frankel of JF&CS, who
works (among many other projects) with the Educational Resource Center for
Special Needs, and Susan Wolf-Fordham, co-chair of the ERC Steering Committee, where
we came together to sketch out a strategic direction as Beit Chana Teaching
College (the host of the ERC) begins plans to move downtown next to the Menorah
Center. Our collective vision is to make
the ERC a lab school for a new Department of Special Needs Education at Beit
Chana. Both Beit Chana and the community
at large are committed to the inclusion of children with special needs
throughout the community. For instance, our
Jewish Big Brother and Big Sister program for the first time includes “littles”
with Downs Syndrome who have been welcomed with open arms by the other
children.
Thanks to the generosity of an individual donor, the ERC has
been able to add an accessibility ramp to the new van they received from
Women’s Philanthropy during the Community Mission last May.
Beth Moskowitz watches as Tamara Olschanitskaya and Svetlana Efimova ride the new accessibility ramp.
Larissa, Sonia, and Sonia, littles
from Jewish Big Brother Big Sister of Dnepropetrovsk at the Day School.
Finally, Beth and Noga Nevel had a productive conversation
with the leaders of Dnepropetrovsk’s Next Generation Movement, making plans for
a trip to Boston in the spring of 2013 and ongoing social media communication.
The trip culminated in a beautiful Shabbat, with dinner at
Rabbi Kaminezki’s and lunch with Zelig Brez and his family. As usual, we came away with an infusion of yiddishe
ruach in our souls and a sense of the blessings of this remarkable
partnership.
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