The Jerusalem Post

15 Righteous Gentiles lived in Ukraine when Russia invaded, an American Jewish group rushed to aid them

- • By STEWART AIN

After Russia invaded Ukraine early in the morning of February 24, millions of Ukrainians suddenly had their lives upended. The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous was concerned with 15 of them.

That’s how many Ukrainians remained alive from the foundation’s tally of Righteous Gentiles, non-Jews who risked their own lives to save Jews during the Holocaust 80 years ago.

The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous was founded in the late 1980s and over the years it has financiall­y supported 3,600 Righteous Gentiles in 34 countries. At its height, it supported 1,850 rescuers, a number that has dwindled over the years to 134 today in 14 countries. It sends them about $800,000 annually, which includes Christmas gifts that last year amounted to $2,500 each. That tally has increased in recent years as the needs of the rescuers for medicine, home health aides, warm clothing and home heating fuel have grown.

The foundation doles out money to people certified to have helped Jews worldwide each year and had sent the first installmen­t of $1,000 in early February. But it quickly became clear that the elderly Ukrainians couldn’t wait until later in the year for their next check.

“We are at war,” read an email delivered within hours of the invasion from the family of one 93-year-old. “People are leaving their homes looking for shelter [and] they are left without water and food. Shops are closed. Everyone is leaving for safe places indefinite­ly. If there is any way to help our family financiall­y, we will be very grateful to you. Forgive us. With best wishes, Oksana’s family. Peace to all of us…”

Stanlee Stahl, the foundation’s executive vice president, quickly shared the email with her board and it agreed to fast-track the rest of the year’s funding – $2,000 each – to the 15 rescuers in Ukraine.

That decision set off a feverish effort to transfer cash across internatio­nal borders at a time of massive upheaval. The foundation needed to find people who weren’t necessaril­y where they always had been, to navigate around disruption­s in Ukraine’s banking and communicat­ions systems, and to verify that the money was going to the right place.

First, the foundation realized it needed to reach families by phone, because its typical mode of communicat­ing by email did not feel reliable. But because of the decreasing number of living rescuers, the group no longer had a Russian speaker on staff. So it sought a Russian-speaking volunteer to call the rescuers for whom it had phone numbers.

When the foundation announced its need, Dimitri Zolotkovsk­y, an accountant in New York City who grew up in Kyiv, learned about it from his wife and volunteere­d.

“I jumped at the opportunit­y,” he said. “It aligned with my values. We all have families who lived through those times. I have a friend whose grandma was saved by a Belarusian guard who pulled her aside and saved her from the Nazis. These stories are an integral part of my childhood.”

Zolotkovsk­y, 50, said he was able to speak directly with a number of the Ukrainian rescuers and that some of the conversati­ons were “heartbreak­ing” and others “very encouragin­g .... Every time I speak with them or their families it is like touching a piece of history. I don’t have memories of the war but it brings a lot of connection. My grandfathe­r and grandmothe­r fought Nazis. My father’s relatives barely escaped Ukraine before the Nazis occupied it.”

Zolotkovsk­y was able to reach most of the rescuers. Within a short time, each had been sent the $2,000, equivalent to more than a month’s salary for the average Ukrainian and more than the average monthly pension for each of the rescuers, $110, would bring in over the course of a year.

“We have a responsibi­lity on behalf of the Jewish people to make sure that these Righteous Gentiles are taken care of in their time of need,” said Harvey Schulweis, the foundation’s chairman. “We have a moral and ethical responsibi­lity to these men and women to be there for them when they were there for Jews during the Holocaust.”

MORE THAN 4 million people fled Ukraine’s borders in the weeks after the Russian invasion, and millions more were displaced internally as Ukrainians relocated to avoid fighting. For the elderly rescuers on the foundation’s registry, that was not a possibilit­y.

“Most of the rescuers can’t leave because they are too old and too sick,” Stahl said.

The exception was Lidia S., 97, who drove with her daughter from Kyiv to Poland. They then made their way to Switzerlan­d and are now staying with her grandson. The $2,000 was sent to her in Switzerlan­d.

Others relocated within the country. The daughter of Alekander S., who will be 92 in June, wrote that they are now in western Ukraine having “miraculous­ly escaped from the bombing. We fled in what we were wearing. We left everything at home, took only documents, cards and a computer. We are now safe, 1,000 km. from Kherson .... We were taken in by my husband’s sister. How long we will live here we don’t know.”

The granddaugh­ter of Olympiada D., who will be 100 in December, wrote from Odesa to say thank you for the money and to also send a photo to demonstrat­e proof-of-life. The Yad Vashem database contains a listing for an Olympiada D., who was 17 when she worked with her father to shelter and feed Jewish friends of their family, including their baby, when Jews from Odesa were being deported to concentrat­ion camps.

“Please excuse the quality of the photo,” she wrote. “After the air raid we do not turn on the big light.” (JTA)

 ?? (The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous/JTA) ?? ALEKANDER S., who will be 92 in June, is now in western Ukraine after escaping the bombing.
(The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous/JTA) ALEKANDER S., who will be 92 in June, is now in western Ukraine after escaping the bombing.
 ?? (The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous/JTA) ?? OLYMPIADA D. will be 100 years old in December and lives in the port city of Odesa.
(The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous/JTA) OLYMPIADA D. will be 100 years old in December and lives in the port city of Odesa.

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