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This story celebrates the tenth anniversary of our Midreshet Yerushalayim's
Camp Ramah-Ukraine which was featured in the Jewish Agency's online magazine in
October 2002.
Our director, Gila Katz, is already well into planning next year's summer program.
She is hopeful that even larger numbers of children from additional Ukranian Jewish communities will be able to
taste the beauty of Midreshet Yerushalalyim and its vivid Jewish educational experience.
What A Difference A Decade Makes
By Simon Griver
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Vera Etzion
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| Philip Galpert, who immigrated to Israel from Ukraine, said that over
the years he has come to appreciate the importance of his Jewish heritage and its central place in Israel's culture. |
Philip Galpert participated as a teenager in the first Midreshet Yerushalayim Ramah Yahad summer camp in Ukraine back
in 1993. Then a Ukrainian high school student, he immigrated to Israel the following year, and this summer returned
as a counselor to the tenth consecutive annual Ramah Yahad camp.
"How things have changed," observed Galpert. "When I was at the camp we knew nothing about Judaism. We could not read or write Hebrew.
This summer most of the children at the camp were familiar with Hebrew and some could even speak the language.
Having grown up in the former Soviet Union and knowing very little about his Jewish heritage, Galpert, who studies
sports physical rehabilitation at the Wingate Institute in Israel, recalled that when he attended the camp he felt
very alienated from prayer. It was the first time he had ever seen, let alone opened a siddur.
"It was very different this time around," he explained. "The children seemed very comfortable with the tefilot and so
was I. That gave me great pleasure."
In August, 180 youngsters aged 9-17 came from 10 cities across Ukraine to spend[I two weeks learning about Judaism and
Israel at the Ramah Yahad camp. The camp, run by Midreshet Yerushalayim, the Eastern European and FSU outreach arm of
the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, the Masorti (Conservative) Movement's graduate and rabbinical
school in Israel, reflected how far Russian-speaking Jewry has come over the past decade. The camp was also funded by
the Jewish Agency.
Galpert, who regularly returns to Ukraine to visit his parents in his native city of Uzghorod, is impressed at how the
Jewish Agency and other global Jewish organizations have re-built Jewish communities and re-kindled the Jewish spirit
across the FSU.
"As a child I knew almost nothing about Judaism and my Jewish identity," he explained. "My grandparents had survived the
Nazi concentration camps and my grandfather would tell me stories about the Jewish festivals when they came round.
He would tell me about Passover and we would pretend we were celebrating it. But at the same time he was a devout
communist."
Located in the Carpathian Mountains in a part of Ukraine that used to belong to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Uzghorod
once had a large Jewish community and an attractive synagogue, which the Soviets turned into a concert hall.
"Today there is a small synagogue in the city," he said, "and the former synagogue remains a concert hall. Most of the
young Jews have left the city and it is mainly the elderly that remain."
Galpert came to Israel on his own. "I have uncles and aunts here," he said, "But it was difficult building a new life
here without my parents." Having served in the army and qualified as a hotel chef, he changed his career direction
several years ago and is now committed to a career in rehabilitation.
"When I receive my Bachelor of Education degree I would like to go on for a Master's degree and ultimately combine
western and eastern methods of healing - blending such disciplines as physiotherapy, yoga and tai chi together," he said.
"I have always felt at home in Israel," he stressed. "Wherever I've been working or studying I've always found colleagues
who treat me like family. I left Ukraine because I saw no future there. I was really an immigrant seeking a better life.
But over the years I have come to appreciate the importance of my Jewish heritage and its central place in Israel's
culture."

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