LEV KRICHEVSKY Jewish Telegraphic Agency Moscow IV hen Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt first arrived in Moscow 10 years ago, the city near- ly scared him away. "It was like traveling 50 years back in a time machine," the chief rabbi of Moscow says. "The streets, the cars, the way peo- ple looked — everything was not just another country, it was like another century." When Goldschmidt arrived to teach at a newly opened yeshiva, the Soviet Union still existed. The Jews were a beleaguered population — Jewish life was confined to few syna- gogues, and the shadow of the all- powerful KGB was still hanging over the Jewish community — whose only hope seemed to lay in emigration. The policy of glasnost, or openness, instituted by then-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, offered some hope, yet few believed the policy would last — or lead to political or societal overhauls. Goldschmidt admits that before he moved to Moscow he never thought of becoming a Russian rabbi. Indeed, why would he? The Zurich-born son of an Orthodox Jewish family, he has no Russian her- itage. His family fled to Switzerland from Germany and Hungary during the Holocaust; the chief rabbi of Denmark was one of his great-grand- fathers. He traded a pulpit in Israel for a position in Russia to avoid the more- well-trod rabbinical paths. "I was always looking for a place where there is nothing — to try to cre- ate something," says Goldschmidt, 36. "To be a rabbi here, you have to start from zero" and be willing "to work with people who completely were not in touch with the Jewish world." When he was offered a job as an adviser on Jewish law to Russian Chief Rabbi Adolph Shayevich soon after he arrived in 1989, Goldschmidt could never have imagined the whirl- wind of change that the next decade would bring both to himself and his new community. At 25, Goldschmidt was probably the youngest member of the congrega- tion that he also took over soon after he arrived. "In those days, the synagogue was like an old-age home," Goldschmidt recalls. 9/24 1999 30 Detroit Jewish News Jewish kindergarten in Moscow in 1989. His older son was in its first class. "It was mostly for our children and the children of the refuseniks, who in fact were half out the door," he says. But soon after the collapse of com- munism in 1991, it became clear that not every Jew was going to leave right away and Goldschmidt increased his involvement in Jewish school projects. His wife Dara, an American who is a graduate of Yeshiva University, is now the principal of a Jewish day school in the Russian capital. The home life of the Goldschmidts, 0 0 the first rabbinical family from abroad to make Russia their home, was filled with different challenges. For several years, kosher food was impossible to get at local stores, and the family had to bring in the majority of their rations from abroad. Goldschmidt, the father of six, says that his family had to abandon their notions of healthy eating. "In the morning, we usually had kasha or roasted potatoes. It was a totally different diet, and it took some time till we got used to it." Today, Goldschmidt runs an active kashrut program, negotiates with food factories, issues lists of kosher foods available from Russian stores and oversees some kosher catering businesses in Moscow. The family also had to learn Russian. Today he speaks only Russian to his congregants, and his children converse mostly in Russian with each other. During the past decade, Jewish life in the former Soviet Union had to rely on funds from abroad. As a result of inflation and price increases, Jewish leaders realized that foreign donors could not keep up with the growing needs of a community undergoing a rapid revival. binical court, he dealt with cases corn- In 1995, Goldschmidt, along with ing from across the Soviet Union. other Jewish leaders, started to plan a The task was especially challenging local organization of Jewish business- given the fact that many families were people to fund some of the communi- coming out of the Jewish closet after ty's activities. 50 or 60 years, Goldschmidt "Most people were afraid of Moscow's chief says. touching Jewish topics, so they rabbi, Rabbi "It was an exodus of biblical wouldn't even agree to see us proportions," Goldschmidt says Pinchas and talk," he recalls. Goldschmidt, of a mass wave of aliyah in the People close to the Russian late 1980s and early 1990s. "No stands behind the lectern in Jewish Congress credit one was doing any long-term the Choral Goldschmidt with persuading planning; we just tried to help Synagogue. Vladimir Goussinsky, a promi- people with their immediate nent banker-turned-media- needs. I felt like I was a rabbi magnate, into giving his name and for a DP camp." Yet Jewish leaders had financial support to a new Jewish to think about the future — if only as group. it pertained to their own children. The creation of the RJC, the first Goldschmidt helped start the first Russian eaco Moscow's chief rabbi forges a future for Jews who stayed after Soviet fall. The congregants were mostly elder- ly pensioners who did not risk their jobs or benefits by going to syna- gogue. "On my very first visit to the syna- gogue, an old man came up to me and said in Yiddish, pointing at another pensioner, 'Don't talk to him, he is a KGB collaborator.' Minutes later, that second man approached me and repeated the same thing, referring to the first old man. When the Iron Curtain fell in late 1989, and Jews began to pour out of the country to Israel, Goldschmidt's career took a new twist as he now had to authenticate many of the would-be emigrants' Jewishness. As the head of the beit din, or rab- ',