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#5
BBC
13 October 2001
Israel's 'Russians' fight alienation
By the BBC's Paul
Anderson
The Ukrainian authorities are now admitting to the likelihood that it was one
of their rogue missiles that struck an airliner full of former Soviet
immigrants, killing all on board.
The accident has paralysed Israel's Russian community with grief, and left
many wondering about their place in Israel.
Israel's immigrant Russians are now learning the agony of loss much as the
Israelis have over the past 50 years.
Their spilled blood, grief and frustration, they say, helps them identify
with the people of Israel. But it has also exposed how alien many feel in their
new homeland.
The mid-air explosion which downed Sibir airlines flight 1812, with the loss
of 78 people, was the second major calamity to afflict Israel's Russian
community this year.
Four months ago 21 of 22 young people killed in a suicide bomb attack at a
discotheque in Tel Aviv were former Soviet immigrants.
Masha Bandman, who was 19, was on her way to her grandfather in Novosibirsk,
knowing she would be seeing him for the last time, because he was dying from
cancer.
One of her best friends, Masha Pisatski, said she had just returned from
Italy and instead of resting and catching another flight a week later, booked
the first ticket out so as not to lose time.
"She was like a little sister to me," says Masha. "A
beautiful, intelligent girl, full of life. We can't understand she is not alive
any more."
Israeli indifference
Masha says she was affronted by the response of some Israelis, which bordered
on indifference.
"There was also an explosion in Afula (in the north of the country)
where Israelis were killed. But all they talked about was Afula. I said 70
people were killed in the plane, that they were all Israelis, okay they are
Russian, but they are Israelis.
"And they said 'Ah, okay, it's sad', and walked off as if nothing had
happened. It was so sad, because Masha's family was so Israeli. Her mother
brings so much to Israel."
Israelis have been stung by accusations that the response of some to the
tragedy was less than generous.
Yuli Edelstein, the Deputy Minister for Immigration and Absorption and
himself a Russian immigrant, said many people continued to mark religious
festivals as if nothing happened, which saddened him.
"But thousands of others called our office, offering help, money, food,
even to adopt children. I hope that during the coming weeks we'll see that those
who offer help and want to show solidarity prevail in this country."
In the 1990s almost 100,000 Jews or people with Jewish relatives from the
former Soviet Union came to Israel every year.
This year the figure will be close to 45,000. It's still a huge inflow of
people, who are clearly not put off by the violence of the second Palestinian
intifada.
Nonetheless, many feel aliens in their adopted country, and the fear is they
will choose to emigrate once more.
Showing strength
Some already are, but the numbers so far are small. Masha Pisatski says
tragedies like the airliner crash and the disco suicide attack are making the
Russians fight back against their misfortune. "We want to show the world we
are strong," she says.
Some Israelis feel the same. Schmulik Lem is a volunteer at an informal
emotional and social rapid reaction team for immigrants called the Israeli
Crisis Management Centre. He has no Russian connection and views things from the
outside.
"I am aware there is a problem of immigration, of acceptance," he
said. "Israeli is a melting pot in which people from various places become
one unity, become stronger through tragedy and not more separate because of
tragedy."
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