The real saviors of Soviet Jewry

The real saviors of Sovi

Zvi Raviv with Golda Meir  248.88 (photo credit: )
Zvi Raviv with Golda Meir 248.88
(photo credit: )
Forty years have passed since the first National Union of Israeli Students demonstrations organized by a few determined leaders at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, demonstrations which acted as a catalyst to challenge the Israeli government and Jewish Agency to initiate the worldwide campaign for Soviet Jewry. As always, the heroes remain uncelebrated while others take the credit. "Success has many parents whereas failure is an orphan," and this is one of the greatest success stories of our time. In May 1969, while both were students at the Hebrew University, Yona Yahav, then national chairman of the National Union of Israeli Students, approached Zvi Raviv asking him to form a committee to take on the concerns of the Jews in Russia who were being persecuted. Raviv was surprised and unaware of the problem, so Yahav arranged for them to meet a new Russian immigrant in Tel Aviv. Raviv agreed, on condition that they did not waste the entire night, and they set up dates for later in the evening. They went to Tel Aviv where they met Dov (Boris) Sperling. The stories that Sperling told of the situation of Jews in the Soviet Union held them spellbound, so much so that they forgot their dates. Sperling told the young men tales of persecution and exile on long train journeys to freezing Siberia, stories which awoke their inherited memory of times not long past when Jews were persecuted, then taken on train journeys to the gas chambers. On their return to Jerusalem they reflected upon the tales of oppression and persecution and they seemed far-fetched. The two spent the next several weeks researching and checking every detail, finding to their amazement that Sperling had not exaggerated. It was all true. What disturbed them even more was that the Israeli government, well aware of the terrible situation, was doing nothing to declare the situation, other than some minor covert activity and polite diplomatic moves. RAVIV AND Yahav understood that the need to save the Jews of the Soviet Union was paramount. They began a movement among the students of the Hebrew University. They led the students in demonstrations, carrying huge banners proclaiming "Let My People Go," echoing Moses's biblical proclamation to free the Children of Israel. Their intention to halt studies for one hour by calling out the entire student body to demonstrate disturbed the dean of the university who called Raviv to his office. He told him that they could not demonstrate on university property and disrupt the daily curriculum; the planned hour-long demonstration had to be canceled. In response, Raviv simply suggested that if the university banned the demonstration, the student body would be called to strike for an entire day. The dean decided that an hour-long demonstration was preferable. The one-hour demonstration was broadcast live on the popular radio show B'hatzi Hayom and the size and volume of the demonstration reached the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), which contacted the three ringleaders telling them to cease and desist their protest. Undaunted, the three asked for a meeting with the prime minister. To their surprise a call came from the Prime Minister's Office for a 20-minute meeting. They walked in, and Raviv, Yahav and Avi Plaskow faced Golda Meir, who explained to them that the government had chosen the quiet diplomatic route to help the Jews of the Soviet Union, since it was unwise to make waves and endanger the Jews under the communist regime. She then politely dismissed them, believing her words to have hit their target. She was mistaken. "Mrs. Meir," said Raviv, "we will continue demonstrating and carrying placards and sending out postcards, because in 20 years' time, when I have children and they ask me what I did to save the Jews of the Soviet Union, I want to have an answer, unlike my father's generation who did nothing and so we lost six million Jews." "You do not know your history, young man," responded Meir, surprised at this insolence. "We sent in paratroopers." "Actually, ma'am, I am a history major. We sent in 37 paratroopers, most of whom did not manage to reach the ground safely," Raviv retorted. "But then we didn't have a country," defended Meir. "Now we do," said Raviv. Raviv incredulously recognized the fear of standing out and standing up as a Jew, right here in the office of the prime minister of Israel. Twenty years after the Holocaust, Meir had not yet absorbed the fact that there was a Jewish state and her Diaspora mentality was obsolete. His words had shocked her into acknowledgment. Meir invited them back into her office, asking them a hundred questions as to strategy, feasibility, education and absorption of such a large number of possible immigrants. To each question Yahav (currently mayor of Haifa) pulled out a file of calculations and suggestions. Instead of the 20 minutes allotted to them, they stayed in the Prime Minister's Office for nearly an hour and a half. As they left, feeling justified in their hutzpa, they understood the gravity with which Meir took their words when they saw who she'd kept waiting. Outside her office were a very impatient vice premier Yigal Allon and Mossad chief Zvi Zamir, somewhat surprised to see three students leave her office on such warm terms with the prime minister. Three days later Meir's private secretary, Adi Yafe, called Yahav to inform the students' organization that a paper had been placed before the cabinet in a special session and an extraordinary vote had been taken to "go public" in the fight to save Soviet Jewry and bring them home. THE PRIME minister agreed to appear on the same stage as former refuseniks and to openly advocate the aliya of Jews from the Soviet Union. The government stood behind its words diplomatically, financially and emotionally. The campaign went worldwide and communities and organizations began to pressure the Soviet government under the banner of "Let My People Go," holding silent vigils at Russian cultural events, sending postcards to Russian embassies demanding the freedom to leave and the wonderful SACSJ "Hands across the Embassies" in London. In 1977 while with Keren Hayesod, Raviv organized the first "Yahdav" mission of young leaders from 30 countries. He met Avital Sharansky who told him of her husband Anatoly's imprisonment and impending exile to Siberia. Raviv invited her to speak before Yahdav, giving her her first platform before an international audience. She went on to speak to hundreds of audiences around the world and her determination to free Anatoly (Natan) Sharansky became symbolic of the struggle for all Soviet Jews. Raviv, at that time, spoke throughout the world to raise awareness of the plight of the Soviet Jews. He worked to raise funds to enable Jews to come home. The "Let My People Go" posters led demonstrations all over the world. The lobbying of international diplomats encouraged perestroika and allowed the Jews to leave for Israel. The dream was fulfilled in 1990 when the trickle of Jews coming home from the former Soviet Union became a flood, culminating in more than a million new Israeli citizens and more than 500,000 free citizens in other countries. In 1991 Raviv went to Moscow with a group of Keren Hayesod leaders. As they reached Red Square, he took something out of his pocket and unraveled a huge Israeli flag. The group stood to be photographed proudly flying an Israeli flag, next to the Kremlin, not knowing that the man who set the wheels in motion here in Israel was the one with the flag in his pocket. Two American tourists passing by were heard to say, "Now I have seen everything!" There are many people throughout the world who worked with zeal and devotion to bring the plight of Soviet Jews to the public notice - too many to mention. But there was a genesis within Israel that deserves recognition, a genesis that enriched and enlarged our little country with fine scientists, doctors, artists and a whole new generation of Israelis. Israel is a richer country for that day in October 1969 when three students with a great deal of hutzpa and a strong memory of the unthinkable disaster that befell the silent Jewish people just over 20 years previously set the wheels of history in motion. Ultimately the true heroes of this story are the hundreds of Jews within the Soviet Union who spearheaded the fight because they were willing to stand up and speak out for all Soviet Jews and place themselves in unthinkable danger so that they could fulfill their dream to be recognized as Jews with the right to openly practice Judaism and, above all, to emigrate to Israel, to come home.