Home News Israel takes in Ukrainian Jews, but some ask: Should it do more?

Israel takes in Ukrainian Jews, but some ask: Should it do more?

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s request to Israeli lawmakers for a more open-door policy toward Ukrainian refugees was direct and well aimed: His people “are looking for security. They are looking for a way to stay in peace. As you once searched.”

His appeal goes to the heart of Israel’s identity as a state founded as a refuge for Jews fleeing persecution, and hits at a core question facing the country: how to define Jewish values, including compassion and hospitality, in responding to the crisis.

Why We Wrote This

Refugee policy debates are often fraught. How accommodating should a country be? In Israel, which was created as a refuge for Jews, the issue is existential, and is being tested by the Ukraine crisis.

On one side are those who want a more open policy to help anyone needing shelter. On the other, those who argue Israel is a small country that could have its identity overwhelmed.

Diana Bukhman, who left Odesa with her two young sons, is among more than 7,000 Ukrainian refugees have fled to Israel since Russia invaded. Most, like her, are Jewish or have a Jewish relative in Israel. Speaking in the lobby of a Jerusalem hotel, her temporary home, she declines to address the debate, but feels fortunate.

“I’m living in the moment,” she says. “When the boys go to sleep I take a shower and I cry and cry. I wake up in the middle of the night and realize I’m in a hotel. In the morning I wake up, and have to be strong. I have no choice.”

Jerusalem

In some ways Diana Bukhman is still in her Odesa, even as her two young sons bounce around her in slippered feet in the lobby of a Jerusalem hotel, their new temporary home.

Her green eyes sparkle as she describes the Ukrainian port city where she was born, with its landmark opera house, night club scene, and her beloved apartment building in the center of town where she has lived most of her life, as have five generations of her family.

Her parents are still there, refusing to leave even as they insisted that she did. They packed her bags for her when she was too immobilized with the shock of leaving to do so, then took her and her boys to the bus that would transport them and other members of the Jewish community to the border of Romania.

Why We Wrote This

Refugee policy debates are often fraught. How accommodating should a country be? In Israel, which was created as a refuge for Jews, the issue is existential, and is being tested by the Ukraine crisis.

She; her sons, Issac, age 9, and Rafik, age 8; and the others on the bus, including older men and women and the passengers’ cats and dogs, became part of the largest wave of European refugees since World War II.

“Dad, what should I do if they shoot on us?” she asked her father, a well-known photographer in Odesa, as they climbed onto the bus.

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