Berliner Boersenzeitung - Germany welcomes Ukraine's Jews, 77 years after the Holocaust

EUR -
AED 4.099512
AFN 76.984357
ALL 99.279632
AMD 432.840824
ANG 2.0117
AOA 1035.51375
ARS 1074.340751
AUD 1.635204
AWG 2.00904
AZN 1.895592
BAM 1.956437
BBD 2.253773
BDT 133.392204
BGN 1.954913
BHD 0.420605
BIF 3235.894809
BMD 1.116133
BND 1.442356
BOB 7.71351
BRL 6.058062
BSD 1.116233
BTN 93.297054
BWP 14.755404
BYN 3.65299
BYR 21876.209389
BZD 2.249972
CAD 1.513644
CDF 3204.418308
CHF 0.949696
CLF 0.037554
CLP 1036.220769
CNY 7.867842
CNH 7.86961
COP 4636.394708
CRC 579.178056
CUC 1.116133
CUP 29.577528
CVE 110.300886
CZK 25.054931
DJF 198.769327
DKK 7.459888
DOP 67.000598
DZD 147.66206
EGP 54.24362
ERN 16.741997
ETB 129.530722
FJD 2.453652
FKP 0.850001
GBP 0.838411
GEL 3.047082
GGP 0.850001
GHS 17.548709
GIP 0.850001
GMD 76.455821
GNF 9643.921622
GTQ 8.628807
GYD 233.515974
HKD 8.691552
HNL 27.689513
HRK 7.588601
HTG 147.28462
HUF 393.231003
IDR 16990.113376
ILS 4.220378
IMP 0.850001
INR 93.212522
IQD 1462.242986
IRR 46980.831802
ISK 152.095942
JEP 0.850001
JMD 175.373915
JOD 0.791006
JPY 160.854911
KES 143.992586
KGS 94.021383
KHR 4533.393698
KMF 492.605134
KPW 1004.519186
KRW 1491.009022
KWD 0.340416
KYD 0.930182
KZT 535.17213
LAK 24648.577696
LBP 99958.634637
LKR 340.567752
LRD 223.252635
LSL 19.595924
LTL 3.295651
LVL 0.675138
LYD 5.300582
MAD 10.823721
MDL 19.477814
MGA 5048.506827
MKD 61.59503
MMK 3625.156875
MNT 3792.620333
MOP 8.960114
MRU 44.359439
MUR 51.009885
MVR 17.144257
MWK 1935.377652
MXN 21.640375
MYR 4.686081
MZN 71.264933
NAD 19.595837
NGN 1829.654745
NIO 41.082446
NOK 11.684111
NPR 149.272891
NZD 1.787314
OMR 0.429665
PAB 1.116263
PEN 4.183924
PGK 4.369343
PHP 62.232796
PKR 310.145369
PLN 4.271489
PYG 8708.599254
QAR 4.069624
RON 4.973049
RSD 117.075377
RUB 103.801751
RWF 1504.749122
SAR 4.188285
SBD 9.271648
SCR 14.515301
SDG 671.353324
SEK 11.353859
SGD 1.440721
SHP 0.850001
SLE 25.500632
SLL 23404.747974
SOS 637.896108
SRD 33.7128
STD 23101.70237
SVC 9.766959
SYP 2804.317907
SZL 19.602851
THB 36.685625
TJS 11.865648
TMT 3.906466
TND 3.3823
TOP 2.614096
TRY 38.067392
TTD 7.592402
TWD 35.774329
TZS 3042.265291
UAH 46.13667
UGX 4135.345428
USD 1.116133
UYU 46.12418
UZS 14204.303188
VEF 4043250.906352
VES 41.114742
VND 27447.387917
VUV 132.509568
WST 3.122341
XAF 656.152842
XAG 0.036026
XAU 0.000425
XCD 3.016405
XDR 0.827247
XOF 656.152842
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.396004
ZAR 19.443089
ZMK 10046.526221
ZMW 29.55182
ZWL 359.394413
  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

Germany welcomes Ukraine's Jews, 77 years after the Holocaust
Germany welcomes Ukraine's Jews, 77 years after the Holocaust

Germany welcomes Ukraine's Jews, 77 years after the Holocaust

At the entrance to a school in Berlin, multicoloured letters spell out "welcome" for nine Jewish children from Ukraine above a drawing of the German, Ukrainian and Israeli flags surrounded by red hearts.

Text size:

Staff and pupils at the school, run by a "progressive traditional" Jewish movement known as Masorti, warmly greeted the children who fled their homes in Kyiv, Odessa and Kharkiv following the Russian invasion.

Seventy-seven years after the end of the Nazi regime, Germany has become a place of refuge for thousands of Ukrainian Jews.

In Berlin, they have been received by a sizeable community of Russian-speaking Jews who have moved to the capital since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

"It's remarkable that Jews come to Germany given the terrible crimes committed by Germans in Ukraine during the Second World War," Felix Klein, the government's anti-Semitism commissioner, says on a visit to the school.

Some 3,000 Ukrainian Jews -- out of a total of 283,000 refugees from the war-torn country -- have already arrived in Germany, according to figures provided by Klein.

- 'Well prepared' -

That Ukrainian Jews would look to the country for protection "does not go without saying", the president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Josef Schuster says. "But Germany has taken on its historic obligations."

Since the Russian invasion began in late February, Germans have come out in their droves to show solidarity, offering places to stay, warm meals and clothes to Ukrainians who have left everything behind.

The Jewish community in Germany is "particularly well prepared" to greet them, says rabbi Gesa Ederberg at the school where around 60 children between the ages of six and 12 are taught in both German and Hebrew.

"Forty percent of our members have Ukrainian roots," she says, while "80 percent speak Russian."

In the last 30 years, Germany has become a destination for Jews emigrating from the former Soviet Union to whom it has given residence and work permits.

Between 1993 and 2020, more than 210,000 Jews from places such as Russia, Belarus and Moldova have made Germany their new home.

The country's Jewish population, almost extinguished during the Shoah, is now Europe's third-largest behind France and Britain.

A new member of the "welcome class", Sonia, 11, with a blonde fringe and socks pulled up to her knees, says she has found in Berlin a Jewish community "much bigger than in Odessa".

- 'Grateful' -

For Ilona, joining back up with the Masorti community, which she was a part of in Kyiv, has been like finding a family.

"We have a roof over our heads and have been able to bring our children to safety," says the mother of two girls, aged 13 and five.

"We were on a train to Chernivtsi (in the southwest of Ukraine) when the war broke out," Ilona says with tears in her eyes. "We stayed there a week," she says, before being evacuated by bus.

Despite the anxiety that grips her when she thinks of her husband, who stayed behind to fight for Ukraine, or her sister and niece stuck in Kyiv, Ilona says she is "extremely grateful" to Germany.

The strong links between Jews in Ukraine and Germany have helped to evacuate 120 children from Odessa, most of them orphans, and moved many to open their doors to refugees.

Berliner Till Rohmann has made the spare rooms in his house available to host two families from Odessa and Kharkiv.

"We are doing what we can to make them feel at home," says Rohmann, a musician who has previously welcomed refugees from Syria into his home.

"Compared with 2015, we have some cultural similarities with the Ukrainian Jews," says Rohmann, himself Jewish.

"We can communicate in Hebrew and can say the Shabbat prayers together."

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)