The Jerusalem Post

Exhibition reveals secrets of Israeli ‘Mayflower’

- • By ALAN ROSENBAUM

On December 19, a new exhibition commemorat­ing the story of Ruslan, the ship that became a symbol of the Third Aliyah, will open at The Israel Museum, marking the centennial of her voyage and the establishm­ent of the Central Zionist Archives. “And the Ship Sails On: Cultural Pioneers Aboard the Ruslan,” establishe­d with the support of Genesis Philanthro­py Group, will present the story of the

Ruslan, and the subsequent achievemen­ts of its notable passengers, through artwork, film, photograph­s, manuscript­s and historical documents.

On December 19, 1919,

Ruslan, carrying 600 travelers from Odessa, docked at the port of Jaffa. Among them were refugees fleeing war and pogroms, and pioneers burning with Zionist ideology.

Ruslan has been dubbed “the Israeli Mayflower” because many of its passengers entered the pantheon of the yishuv and the State of Israel as people of spirit and action, intellectu­als and ideologues, artists and poets, leaders and activists.

Historical documents from the Zionist archive and other collection­s – many of which will be shown for the first time – will demonstrat­e the contributi­on and influence of prominent Ruslan passengers on the developmen­t of Israeli society, culture and art.

“The unique combinatio­n of an art exhibition alongside historical documents allows a rare glimpse into the formative processes of a significan­t part of Israeli art and culture in pre-state times,” said Prof. Ido Bruno, director-general of the Israel Museum.

“The journey of the Ruslan signifies the renewal of the Jewish nation on the path to independen­ce and the transfer of the cultural and intellectu­al treasure of the Jews of the decaying Russian Empire, from Odessa – a significan­t city in the history of the Jewish people – to the Land of Israel,” said Ilia Salita, president and CEO of Genesis Philanthro­py Group. “Marking 100 years of the journey of this cultural ‘Noah’s Ark’ is an opportunit­y to recall the deep historical connection between the heritage of Russian-speaking Jews and the Jewish national revival in the Land of Zion.”

 ?? (Jabotinsky Institute in Israel) ?? THE ‘RUSLAN’ anchors at the port of Istanbul on its way from Odessa to Israel in 1919.
(Jabotinsky Institute in Israel) THE ‘RUSLAN’ anchors at the port of Istanbul on its way from Odessa to Israel in 1919.

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