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There is a Jewish children's choir in Budapest, young peoples' chavurot, Shabbat services, study groups. "Of course, you can't compare it to the way it was, but there are still Jews writing stories and plays, some artists, lots of creativity in music. It's not just a relic of the past. They are still creating. There are Jews living, breathing and creating in Eastern Europa" And living as Jews. Strom's favorite ex- ample of that is a man whose name is Bela Hap but who is known as Ephraim and who lives in Budapest with his wife and two children. "For the first 37 years of his life, Ephraim had no interest in Judaism," Strom said. "He knew he was Jewish and that was about it. His parents were staunch communists. He did marry a Jew- ish woman, not because he looked for one but because he fell in love with one. "A couple of years ago, Ephraim went to visit friends in Belgium where there is a strong Chasidic community. That made - him realize that he felt he was missing something in his life. And so over the last couple of years, he's become more and more religious. He invited us to his house for Shabbos. The feeling there, the cholent, it was like going back a hundred years, like my bubbie was in the room. "Sunday morning, when we were ready to leave, I saw a table set up and men in white coats. I thought, 'Oh boy, there's go- ing to be a bris. How many chances will I get to see that in Eastern Europe.' And so we got ready to photograph it. All of a sud- den, I see Ephraim pull down his pants, look at me and smile. 'It's my bris,' he said. I couldn't believe it. All of a sudden he's on the table, a 41-year-old man having a bris. He said he wanted to be one with the Jewish people." Strom's favorite Jewish place in Eastern Europe was Dorohoi, a little town in north- east Romania. "It's almost like a shtetl of the 1920s. People speak Yiddish on the streets. It's like time has stood still for 60 years." And, Strom said, there should be Jewish life in Romania for at least another 60 years. With 28,000 Jews, Strom said, Romania is a "very strong community, very traditional and strong not only in Bucharest but in several other cities. They have a network connecting the kehillot, several rabbis and, in Chief Rabbi Moshe Rosen, a very charismatic leader, who's also a member of the Parliament. "Romanian Jews, on the other hand, are also very Zionistic and leave in droves to Israel. Aliyah is what's going to cause the end of the community." Hungary, said Strom, is another strong community and the one, he said, that will be around the longest. With more than 80,000 Jews, it has the largest Jewish population in Eastern Europe outside of the Soviet Union, the only rabbinical seminary in Eastern Europe, 15 synagogues in Budapest alone, a day school and a relatively high birthrate. Also, because of its large population of Satmar Chasidim, Hungarian Jews get a regular influx of visitors and money from Satmars who live in New York and Israel. Czechoslavakia, by contrast, is a dying community. Virtually all of Czechoslavak- ia's 10,000 Jews live in Prague, the only ci- ty with any real life left. Prague, however, does offer some hope, Strom said, thanks to the recent appointment of the first rab- bi in 20 years and to the presence of the Alteneushul, the oldest synagogue still in use in Eastern Europe. Those factors, Strom said, have "caused a rebound with a substantial number of Jews freshly com- mitted to their culture and to teaching it to their children." That's not the case in Yugoslavia, the most secular Jewish community in East- ern Europe. "They have one rabbi who's 75 years old and they won't have another one." But, he says, the country's 7,000 Jews do have a strong central organization, a Jewish newspaper and a community center and so should last for awhile. The end, Strom said, will come as a result of intermarriage. Poland, too, is a community "going downhill." But, Strom said, thanks to a re- cent revival of interest in Judaism among young Polish Jews in Warsaw and Kracow, "it's going downhill at a slower rate, only 45 MPH, not 60." Ironically, Strom said, it is the interest of non-Jewish Poles in maintaining "the great Jewish culture" that "gives a spark of hope. But with only 5,000 Jews, much assimilation, much death and not enough kids, Poland's future doesn't look bright." It will not, however, be the first Jewish community to go. Bulgaria, with 4,000 Jews, Strom said, will likely win that dubious honor. "There is no sense of com- munity, no young people, no rabbis, no education. It will be the first to die." As for Odessa and Kishinev, the two cities in the Soviet Union he visited, Strom said they will stay Jewish for a long time if for no other reason than that they're not allowed to. "If they can't, you can be sure they're going to." In fact, both cities have one synagogue each, a daily minyan and a strong sense of community. "There is a lot of holiday celebration and studying of Hebrew." The bottom line, said Strom, is that there will be Jewish life in most of Eastern Europe for at least another generation and in Hungary and Romania for at least another 70 or 80 years. "As one woman told