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Behind the Aegis

(53,952 posts)
Tue Mar 1, 2022, 01:22 AM Mar 2022

(Jewish Group) In Brooklyn's 'Little Odessa,' Jews from Ukraine and Russia find the war 'terrifying'

In Brighton Beach, New York, a community in Brooklyn known to many as “Little Odessa,” named after the port city in Ukraine, many Jews are struggling to navigate the fear and uncertainty that has wracked the community as Russia wages an unprovoked war on their former country.

In the weeks of saber-rattling by Russian President Vladimir Putin, and with Russia’s invasion on Feb. 24, many have become distraught and terrified thinking about what might happen to the towns they grew up in and to their families and friends still living in Ukraine.

“It’s very painful, it’s very unfair to the military, it’s unfair to children,” Lyudmila Ruda, a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant who works at the Shorefront Jewish Community Council Food Pantry, told The New York Jewish Week. “We need help.”

The seaside neighborhood, where English is still heard less often than Russian and Ukrainian, is a thriving enclave of Jews who moved to the United States in the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s as refugees from the former Soviet Union. Cyrillic signs mark the restaurants, pharmacies and stores on Brighton Beach Avenue, a main commercial street that runs parallel to the Coney Island boardwalk.

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(Jewish Group) In Brooklyn's 'Little Odessa,' Jews from Ukraine and Russia find the war 'terrifying' (Original Post) Behind the Aegis Mar 2022 OP
I grew up in Brooklyn, going to Brighton beach MyMission Mar 2022 #1

MyMission

(1,850 posts)
1. I grew up in Brooklyn, going to Brighton beach
Tue Mar 1, 2022, 11:26 PM
Mar 2022

And I remember it well, along with the changes, over time, as Russian and Ukrainian Jews moved there. The restaurants and markets and food carts, the Russian signs, the shoes and clothing stores displaying the most outrageous, colorful creations that they insisted on, after living in the USSR and having only bland clothes, and hearing Russian more often than English, especially on local busses. And even after my parents moved away, when I Iived in Manhattan I'd take the train to Brighton Beach.

As with most of the world, my thoughts and prayers are directed to Ukraine emerging from this horror as a free country; and my heart goes out to the Ukrainians in Brighton beach and the lower east side of NYC, where I spent a lot of time over the years.

Terrifying is an apt description for what they're feeling.

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