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The Jewish Chronicle

Ukraine: why we should worry

Economic meltdown could unleash barely hidden anti-semitism

December 18, 2008 12:27

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

3 min read

There is a little grave in a vast cemetery on the outskirts of Kiev that stands out from its dilapidated and rundown surroundings. It is swept daily and fresh flowers are arranged in a vase. In March, hundreds of Ukrainian nationalists will make their annual pilgrimage there to commemorate the 98th anniversary of the death of 13-year-old Andrei Yushchinsky and the last major blood libel case in Europe — the Beilis Trial.

What for most of us is distant and almost incomprehensible history, for many in Ukraine is still a living symbol of ancient fears and hatreds that — despite the respectable face presented by a nation seeking EU and Nato membership — are never far beneath the surface.

Almost every European country has its own dismal record of Judeophobia, but in no other that I have visited does it feel so much a part of everyday life as it does in Ukraine. This is a country whose pro-western President awards the highest national honours to partisan commanders who murdered thousands of Jews and whose largest university routinely publishes material revisiting the Beilis case and listing other historical calamities that can be blamed upon the Jews.

That is why we should be taking seriously the warnings of a wave of antisemitism in Ukraine over the coming months, as the local economy is expected to implode and hundreds of thousands are laid off once the festive season is over.