The Jerusalem Post

Venezuela’s tight-knit Jewish community still mourning their Surfside victims

- • By ORGE CASTELLANO

CARACAS, Venezuela (JTA) – The Champlain Towers building collapse in Surfside, Florida, impacted a range of communitie­s whose members lived in the diverse Miami-Dade area: immigrants from across Latin America, Jewish retirees from the Northeast, Jews from Puerto Rico.

One of them still feeling the most pain months later is the Jewish community of Caracas, Venezuela’s capital city.

In the wake of the collapse, seniors Christina Beatriz Elvira and Leon Oliwkowicz, both Venezuelan Jews, were among the first victims to have their remains recovered. Then came the bodies of Luis Sadovnic, Moises “El Chino” Rodán and Andres Levine. The three young men, who were all in their 20s, were raised in the small Jewish community surrounded by the lush El Ávila National Park in the heart of Caracas.

Miami had become an economic stepping stone and a new home for the young Venezuelan­s, just as it had for hundreds of other community members over the past decade.

Many Jewish communitie­s in Latin America are described as “tight-knit,” but Venezuela’s is unique in the region for its intense closeness. Here everyone is part of one extended family.

Few agreed to speak about the tragedy in its immediate aftermath, or months later. They were focused instead on providing moral and financial support to family members of the victims.

But those who did speak emphasized how strongly the deaths of their fellow community members reverberat­ed throughout the country.

“The entire community feels this tragedy in the most innermost core of our beings,” said Miguel Truzman, vice president of the Confederat­ion of Jewish Associatio­ns of Venezuela, known by its Spanish acronym CAIV. “They were boys that we watched grow up. The whole community is deeply traumatize­d and devastated by this tragedy.”

The Caracas area’s Hebraica Jewish community center — the community’s only social,

cultural and religious center, which serves as a country club, sports facility, elementary school and meeting hub — put out a statement in July saying the Surfside events “will undoubtedl­y shape the rest of our lives.”

Besides having shared a joint address at the Champlain Towers South condo building, the three young Venezuelan­s had another thing in common before moving to the US: They all attended Colegio Moral y Luces Herzl-Bialik, a private Jewish high school now housed inside the Hebraica center, in Caracas’ Los Chorros neighborho­od.

Founded in 1946 by Ashkenazi immigrants after quick growth in the community’s population, the school has since served as a common link for almost all Venezuelan Jews, despite their religious denominati­on or ethnic background. It is one of the main pieces that contribute to the community’s sense of unity.

“The Venezuelan Ashkenazim allowed the Sephardim to study in the school without the slightest problem,” said Sami Rozenbaum, journalist

and current editor-in-chief of Nuevo Mundo Israelita, or New Israelite World, the community’s weekly newspaper. “If you go to another Latin American country, like Mexico — or even around the world — every community, depending on their origin, has their own school.”

A history of belonging, an uncertain future

The majority of the Jews left in Venezuela are either the children or grandchild­ren of European or Moroccan immigrants. Their ancestors mostly emigrated from the late 1930s through the late ’60s. Newcomers quickly assimilate­d into mainstream Venezuelan society and never felt like outsiders, since the country was an ethnically and religiousl­y diverse melting pot at the time. Antisemiti­sm and racism were rarely major concerns for the community, and unlike Paraguay, Argentina and Chile, the country has a much less significan­t history of harboring Nazi fugitives.

The Jewish newspaper, founded by Moisés Sananes in 1943 as Mundo Israelita (Israelite World), was the community’s first systematic effort to unite

both its Ashkenazi and Sephardi immigrants, before the Bialik school.

“Our community stands as a reference point in the world because of its integratio­n,” Rozenbaum said. “We are fully united. Here there’s no distinctio­n between who’s from Ashkenazi or Sephardi ancestry. The only separate components are the synagogues and the religious and cultural traditions of each group.”

Although the community was officially establishe­d in the mid-19th century, it wasn’t until 1939 that the country’s first synagogue, El Conde Synagogue, was built. The shul wouldn’t last long, however, as the government at the time approved a series of urban restructur­ing projects in 1954, forcing it to be demolished. In 1963, the Sephardi community in Caracas inaugurate­d the Tiferet Israel Synagogue, the city’s largest to date.

In recent years, the community has seen several of its members leave, as a stagnant socioecono­mic and humanitari­an crisis continues to drive a large-scale exodus from the oil-rich country. From a population

peak of 25,000 in the early 1990s, Venezuelan Jewry has dwindled to fewer than 6,000 members.

The country’s hyperinfla­tion, rampant violence, hunger and deepening poverty have forced many into a new diaspora. Nearly all of these Venezuelan Jewish immigrants have settled in the United States, Israel, Mexico and Panama.

Those who remain are predominan­tly Orthodox and live in Caracas, sometimes depending on each other for survival. Since there are so few left, nearly everyone in the community knows each other by name. Most of them consider themselves staunch Zionists.

The regime of the populist firebrand Hugo Chavez tried for years to plant anti-Israel sentiment into the political fabric of the predominan­tly Catholic nation, and sought to establish closer ties with Iran and Palestinia­n leadership. Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s successor, and his supporters have continued that legacy, but to a lesser extent.

According to the US State Department’s 2020 Report on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom on Venezuela, “criticism of Israel in Maduro-controlled or -affiliated media continued to carry antisemiti­c overtones, sometimes disguised as anti-Zionist messages.” Recent examples include Holocaust trivializa­tion, as demonstrat­ed by Maduro’s comparison of US sanctions against Venezuela to Nazi persecutio­n of Jews, and the promotion of conspiracy theories linking Israel and Jews to the corona pandemic.

Despite that, the government’s

rhetoric has not caught on with the Venezuelan population at large, which remains notably free of antisemiti­sm.

“Venezuelan­s are not antisemiti­c,” said Isaac Cohen, chief rabbi of the Israelite Associatio­n of Venezuela (AIV), an umbrella organizati­on representi­ng Jews of Sephardic origin. “For example, if they see someone wearing a kippah on their head and do not know what it is, they’ll ask you. The unfamiliar does not cause them estrangeme­nt but respect. The reason I have been here for 43 years is that I do not feel, nor have I experience­d, antisemiti­sm. Although, of course, in Europe there is cultural antisemiti­sm, here there is no such thing as an antisemiti­c culture.”

Why some stay

Venezuelan Jews give two answers as to why they stay, both religious reasons and economic ones.

“It’s hard to start again and reinvent yourself from zero,” said one community member who wished to remain anonymous for safety reasons, fearing government retributio­n. “Senior members stay because their home is here. They know that the same comfort and life they have in Venezuela would be hard to obtain somewhere else, especially if one has to learn another language, like English.”

And even amid all the turmoil, observant Jews still thrive in Venezuela. They can practice their traditions openly and maintain a steady relationsh­ip with government authoritie­s, who provide state-sponsored security in front of synagogues. Special food permits allow for the import and manufactur­e of kosher products.

“Venezuela is a great country,” Cohen said. “We remain here because of the hospitalit­y and the generosity of its people. In Venezuela, freedom of worship and whatever the community is willing to pursue is supported. So why move to another country? One decides to emigrate because there is antisemiti­sm, or because commercial­ly, it does not work. I am not a businessma­n. My job is to maintain and preserve the religion in the country.”

Truzman agreed, saying the fact that everyone attended the same school binds them together for life.

“Like me, there are thousands that have stayed,” he said. “Why? Well, because it is our homeland, our country. We strive for whatever adverse circumstan­ces there may be. We stay so that there is a presence of the Jewish community in Venezuela. We have spent a lifetime together.”

 ?? (David Santiago/Miami Herald/TNS) ?? NEIGHBORS GAZE at the rubble at Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside, Florida, a part of which collapsed in June.
(David Santiago/Miami Herald/TNS) NEIGHBORS GAZE at the rubble at Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside, Florida, a part of which collapsed in June.
 ?? (Nuevo Mundo Israelita) ?? STUDENTS AT the Colegio Moral y Luces Herzl-Bialik Jewish school in Caracas, Venezuela.
(Nuevo Mundo Israelita) STUDENTS AT the Colegio Moral y Luces Herzl-Bialik Jewish school in Caracas, Venezuela.

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