9.4 million
country population 
~45,000
Jewish population 
1920
JDC entry date 
189
number of locations in which JDC operates

Care for the Elderly

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.

JDC in Belarus: Images Across Time

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1

Three young girls hold up their costume props at a JDC Purim celebration.

Minsk, 2004.

2

2

A man in costume reads the Story of Esther at a JDC Purim event.

Minsk, 2004.

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3

A group of children attend a music class at a JDC-supported daycare.

Minsk 2004.

Stories from Jewish Belarus

A Taste of Jewish Belarus

Belarus

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Dessert

Timur’s Stewed Chicken with Pomegranate Juice

Belarus

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Appetizer

Daria’s Draniki (Belarusian Latkes)

Belarus

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Dessert

Marina’s Donuts

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