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Three young girls hold up their costume props at a JDC Purim celebration.
Minsk, 2004.
Belarus occupies a central place in the history of global Jewish life. And the story of Jewish Belarus is also a big part of the story of JDC, which began supporting the Jewish community there more than 100 years ago, when JDC itself was just a few years old. The two have grown side-by-side, and today JDC is proud to help revive Jewish life from Minsk to Mogilev and beyond.
Belarusian Jews have a millennia-long history. Fleeing the Crusades in the 700s, Jews first arrived in what is now Belarus more than 1,300 years ago. Throughout the 15th century, Jewish life thrived here and is now considered the golden age of Belarusian Jewish life. Under Soviet rule, Jewish life was silenced, and when the Nazis invaded, they murdered more than two-thirds of the country’s Jewish population.
When the Soviet Union fell, Jewish life reemerged. JDC returned to the region in the early 1990s, establishing Jewish educational institutions, youth programs, and supplying much-needed aid — like food, medicine, and homecare — to the country’s most vulnerable Jews. Today, JDC cares for the country’s poor and elderly while powering the next generation of Belarusian Jewish life.
In Belarus, Jewish life is being reborn — JDC is proud to help with this exciting work.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, many Belarusian Jews reengaged with Jewish life. JDC played a major role in this and continues to support initiatives that cultivate Jewish life and community. In Belarus alone, JDC now supports more than five Jewish Community Centers (JCCs) and five Volunteer Centers that reach more than 2400 clients across the country. Through programs like Active Jewish Teens (AJT), a Jewish youth leadership network that spans 63 cities across the former Soviet Union in partnership with BBYO and the Genesis Philanthropy Group, as well as volunteer centers and the JCC of Minsk, JDC is cultivating the next generation of Jewish life and leadership in Belarus. Many young Belarusian Jews also attend Szarvas, the JDC-Ronald S. Lauder Foundation international Jewish summer camp in rural Hungary.
The collapse of the Soviet Union and many decades of economic strife left many Jews in Belarus and throughout the region without financial support. Between rising inflation and meager pensions, many now struggle to survive on just $2 a day. A cornerstone of JDC’s work is to provide aid to the country’s poor and elderly Jews, many of them isolated and without family. JDC serves more than 6,500 vulnerable Jews throughout Belarus from four Hesed social welfare centers. JDC supports more than four Hesed social welfare centers in Belarus, and programs like Jewish Family Services (JFS) provide food, medicine, and homecare to those who need it most. JDC also coordinates a wide range of in-person and virtual programs, connecting the most vulnerable Jews to a vibrant community that was unimaginable just a generation before. This vital work is made possible by JDC through its many partners — among them, the Jewish Federations of North America, Claims Conference (Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany), and The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, many Belarusian Jews reengaged with Jewish life. JDC played a major role in this and continues to support initiatives that cultivate Jewish life and community. In Belarus alone, JDC now supports more than five Jewish Community Centers (JCCs) and five Volunteer Centers that reach more than 2400 clients across the country. Through programs like Active Jewish Teens (AJT), a Jewish youth leadership network that spans 63 cities across the former Soviet Union in partnership with BBYO and the Genesis Philanthropy Group, as well as volunteer centers and the JCC of Minsk, JDC is cultivating the next generation of Jewish life and leadership in Belarus. Many young Belarusian Jews also attend Szarvas, the JDC-Ronald S. Lauder Foundation international Jewish summer camp in rural Hungary.
The collapse of the Soviet Union and many decades of economic strife left many Jews in Belarus and throughout the region without financial support. Between rising inflation and meager pensions, many now struggle to survive on just $2 a day. A cornerstone of JDC’s work is to provide aid to the country’s poor and elderly Jews, many of them isolated and without family. JDC serves more than 6,500 vulnerable Jews throughout Belarus from four Hesed social welfare centers. JDC supports more than four Hesed social welfare centers in Belarus, and programs like Jewish Family Services (JFS) provide food, medicine, and homecare to those who need it most. JDC also coordinates a wide range of in-person and virtual programs, connecting the most vulnerable Jews to a vibrant community that was unimaginable just a generation before. This vital work is made possible by JDC through its many partners — among them, the Jewish Federations of North America, Claims Conference (Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany), and The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, many Belarusian Jews reengaged with Jewish life. JDC played a major role in this and continues to support initiatives that cultivate Jewish life and community. In Belarus alone, JDC now supports more than five Jewish Community Centers (JCCs) and five Volunteer Centers that reach more than 2400 clients across the country. Through programs like Active Jewish Teens (AJT), a Jewish youth leadership network that spans 63 cities across the former Soviet Union in partnership with BBYO and the Genesis Philanthropy Group, as well as volunteer centers and the JCC of Minsk, JDC is cultivating the next generation of Jewish life and leadership in Belarus. Many young Belarusian Jews also attend Szarvas, the JDC-Ronald S. Lauder Foundation international Jewish summer camp in rural Hungary.
Three young girls hold up their costume props at a JDC Purim celebration.
Minsk, 2004.
A man in costume reads the Story of Esther at a JDC Purim event.
Minsk, 2004.
A group of children attend a music class at a JDC-supported daycare.
Minsk 2004.
An elderly JDC client receives food and other essentials from a JDC homecare worker.
Minsk, 2004.
Group of patients at a JDC-supported TB clinic.
Vitebsk, 1923.
Young women cutting millet at a JDC-supported agricultural colony.
Mozyr District, 1925.
Students learn Physics in Yiddish at a JDC-supported school.
Minsk, 1928 or 1929.
Elderly JDC clients at a Hesed Culinary Club.
Minsk, 2019.
Children attend a dance class at a JDC-supported Hesed social welfare center.
Minsk, 2019.
A computer class for elderly JDC clients.
Minsk, 2019.
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Belarus
|Dessert
Belarus
|Appetizer
Belarus
|Dessert
Chicken legs and thighs
1 zucchini, diced
1 carrot, diced
4 garlic cloves
1 onion, diced
1/4 lemon
2 1/2 to 3 cups pomegranate juice
Oil, for frying
Salt, to taste
Pepper, to taste
Chili powder, to taste
“Jewish traditions and family values bring us together. The dish we cooked is a perfect example. This isn’t a five-minute meal; it requires preparation and patience, almost like a meditation. But the result is worth every minute!” — Ludmila Katz, 39, member of the Gomel, Belarus Jewish community and mother of Timur, 14, and Amalia, 11
—
About 2 ¼ lb. potatoes (1 kg)
1 egg
1 onion
3 tbsp. flour
3 garlic cloves, minced
Salt, to taste
Pepper, to taste
Oil, for frying
1/2 cup milk
~2 cups flour (300 grams)
1 egg
2 tsp. yeast
2 tbsp. butter
2 tbsp. sunflower oil (for dough) + 2/3 cup sunflower oil (for frying)
2 tbsp. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
8 tbsp. jam
Powdered sugar, to taste
JDC
P.O. Box 4124
New York, NY 10163 USA
+1 (212) 687-6200
info@JDC.org