The Jewish Chronicle

Row after Ukrainian leader ‘defends’ Nazi collaborat­ors

- BY SAM SOKOL

A SENIOR Jewish leader in Ukraine has been criticised after appearing to defend moves in the country to rehabilita­te wartime nationalis­ts who collaborat­ed with the Nazis.

Josef Zissels, the chairman of the Jewish Confederat­ion (Vaad), was thrust into the spotlight after scholars and Jewish groups abroad criticised recent efforts to praise historical Ukrainian nationalis­t leaders who collaborat­ed with Germany during the Second World War before turning against them.

Many Jewish people were systematic­ally killed in fighting across Ukraine during the war.

A letter signed by 56 Congressme­n in the United States said there had been “incidents of state-sponsored Holocaust denial and antisemiti­sm” in modernday Ukraine.

But Mr Zissels responded angrily, saying the congressme­n were collaborat­ing with “political technologi­sts working for the Kremlin”. He said a 2015 law that rehabilita­ted controvers­ial nationalis­t figures like Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych “states the obvious — the fact that fighters for Ukraine’s independen­ce fought for Ukraine’s independen­ce.”

He also rejected Israeli reports on rising cases of antisemiti­sm in Ukraine, claiming there had been no violent attacks on Jews last year and that critics of Ukraine — including Israeli President Reuven Rivlin — were parroting “Soviet propaganda.”

But at least two Jews were hurt in the western town of Uman last September in a grenade attack that the authoritie­s attributed to “Russian provocateu­rs”.

Mr Zissels’s defence of the government has proved controvers­ial in the local community.

A number of Ukrainian Jewish organisati­ons distanced themselves from him last week, with more than 40 communal leaders issuing a statement expressing “deep concern at the rise of antisemiti­c incidents”.

The statement added that Mr Zissels and the Vaad “do not represent the Jews of Ukraine”.

It also led to divisions within the Vaad itself: the RUPJCU, a body representi­ng progressiv­e congregati­ons, called on members not to “drag themselves into another scandal on behalf of the Jewish community of Ukraine.”

“As a Board member of the Vaad, I had a telephone conversati­on with Mr Zissels,” Reform leader Rabbi Alexander Dukhovny told the JC. “I represent not myself, as an individual, but the RUPJCU and its opinion, which is against the statement made on behalf of the board members of the Vaad.”

Eduard Dolinsky, director of the Ukrainian Jewish Committee advocacy group, said some Vaad board members declined to sign the statement which he called a “total shame on all Jews of Ukraine”.

Mr Zissels has a history of airing controvers­ial remarks.

Early last year, he suggested the Holocaust was the result of a Jewish man’s 1926 assassinat­ion of Ukrainian general Simon Petliura, whose units were connected to Jewish pogroms.

He wrote on Facebook: “When we say that ‘all Jews are responsibl­e for one another,’ do we also mean this case?

“And if we have, do we realize that for many other reasons, this murder paved the historical path to the Shoah?”

In a statement sent to the JC on Mr Zissels’s behalf, Vyacheslav Likhachev, an antisemiti­sm researcher at the Vaad, said he did not support the glorifying nationalis­ts like Shukhevych.

But he added it was important to note that the wartime leader had “never [been] convicted in court for committing war crimes” and that only Poland regarded his network as a criminal organisati­on.

Mr Zissels, he said, would support a law that would prevent the rehabilita­tion of individual­s who had committed war crimes but at present “there is no rehabilita­tion of Nazi criminals in Ukraine.”

Mr Likhachev also accused opponents such as Dolinsky of having chosen the “pro-Russian side” and said he did not regard communal figures such as Chief Rabbi Bleich and Kyiv Rabbi Moshe Azman as leaders because they “were not elected by anybody.”

Jared McBride, a historian who specialise­s in the Holocaust and Ukrainian nationalis­m, said Mr Zissels’s recent statements suggested “he should spend more time studying the troubling events surroundin­g antisemiti­c acts and attacks in Ukraine, not to mention far-right attacks on Roma and the LGBTQ community, and less time on the US House of Representa­tives.

“Accusing everyone you don’t like of being a Kremlin stooge… diminishes the times when Kremlin interferen­ce and misinforma­tion is very real and deserves attention and response.”

Zissels’s stance has divided Jews in Ukraine

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES (EA) ?? Josef Zissels
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES (EA) Josef Zissels
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