for college students by college students attendance felt Chanukah was a traditionally important Jewish holiday. There had been very little Jewish educa- tion, even after the fall of the Soviet Union, particularly among the elderly. The younger generation knows more about Judaism than their grandparents, but they are unable to put it into a broader context. They know they are Jewish, but have trouble expressing the meaning behind their Jewish identity as part of a bigger picture. Respecting Religion Her only support is the help provided by the Jewish community. This situation is heart- breaking anywhere, but particularly acute when only a few blocks away a new financial district is emerging. Traveling Central Asia Following my Peace Corps service, I trav- eled around Central Asia and the Caucuses for four months. The middle of winter is not usually a time to travel though mountain passes, but it did give me the chance to move far outside traditional tourist sites. In each country, I met with civil society and human rights activists, Peace Corps volunteers and the Jewish community. pronouncing "Levi," mixing it up with "Levy." Oleg, our guide, asked about my background. While I usually was upfront with my Judaism, because I was told to be particularly careful with Judaism in Turkmenistan, it took another shot of vodka to get "Jewish" out of my mouth. Oleg, clearly amused that I found it difficult to say I was Jewish, followed with "my best friend is Jewish!" I decided to go on a limb, "Is his name Zinovi?" Our guide's best friend is the head of the Jewish com- munity in Turkmenistan, and he was back in town. Small world barely describes this experience. Peace Corps volunteers have an often- difficult balancing act between representing the United States all day, every day and expressing their own views. While Azerbaijan I had met a part of the Jewish In America, we usually community, I still did not focus on large divisions know how the general commu- within the Jewish com- nity would view my Judaism. munity — Ashkenazic, Kazakhstan is a primarily Sephardic and Mizrachi Muslim country, although it and more often Reform, also has a very large Russian Conservative and Orthodox. Orthodox community, along to Through traveling, I was being home to more than 100 introduced to many other other nationality groups. Jewish communities. An As I became closer with American Azeri friend my Kazakh colleagues and told me I should go visit as my Russian improved, we the Mountain Jews in began to discuss religion. Azerbaijan. I thought he Around my second Yom Kippur was joking. I had first been in Kazakhstan, I asked my introduced to the Mountain Kazakh supervisor if it would Jews through Absurdistan Teicher and friend Sahib Isganderay atYanar Dag, be OK to not come to work by Gary Shteyngart. How near Baku, Azerbijan, where natural gas creates a wall of flames in the ground. the next day, as it is a Jewish could they be real? holiday. My colleague looked stunned. She was shocked I would even need Turkmenistan to ask; of course, I should not come to work Sitting in a yurt (hut) in a on my holiday, particularly if I would be fast- village of 200 people in ing. This type of response was very common. the middle of the Karakum Throughout my travels, across Muslim and Desert was not the place I Christian countries, people were genuinely expected to be introduced to interested in Judaism. the Turkmenistan Jewish com- Most of my work took place in Aktobe, munity. I was told the head of but I also had the opportunity to work with the Turkmenistan Jewish com- the American Jewish Joint Distribution munity was away on vacation; Committee (JDC) and the Jewish community they gave me his contact infor- in Almaty. When the war in Georgia erupted mation, but noted there would in 2008, a group of Tufts University students be no reason to call. I was came to Kazakhstan instead to work along- warned that organized Judaism side Jewish youth. As an alum of JDC uni- occupies an illegal position in Young Kazakhstani Jews from Almaty lead Shabbat versity trips, I was invited to help this trip. the country's laws. As I had evening services during a Joint Distribution While there is a strong revitalization occur- to be with a guide through my Committee program Teicher helped run. ring amongst Jewish youth in Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan trip, I decided the position of the elderly is increasingly there would be no point in try- fragile. The government support system ing to get in touch. Then I arrived in Azerbaijan and received is minimal. A main component of the trip I had only crossed the border from a quick rundown in Jewish history foreign involved teams of American and Kazakhstani Uzbekistan into Turkmenistan a day earlier. to most American Ashkenazic Jews. A week youth visiting the homes of elderly Jews and We already felt very close to our guide, later, I took a four-hour bus ride and arrived cleaning and talking with them. a wonderful ethnic Russian man from in Quba, the home of the largest commu- One woman has lived in the same house, Turkmenistan. The yurt night, we had been nity of Mountain Jews in the Former Soviet right behind the central bus station, for more drinking and we started talking about jeans Union. The city is divided into two parts: than 50 years. She still has no running water — Levi jeans. As I hadn't talked or thought the Jewish part (Krasnaya Sloboda) and the and no more relatives left in Kazakhstan. about jeans in a couple years, I had trouble Muslim part (Quba). A Peace Corps volunteer in the city had wanted to explore Krasnaya Sloboda since arriving in Azerbaijan, so we crossed the bridge into what is considered the last com- pletely Jewish settlement outside Israel. If you did not know everyone was Jewish, you would have no idea people weren't Muslim Azeri. Then, you look up and see Jewish stars and Hebrew text on every other building. We wandered through the streets and found the one functioning synagogue. Like many Jewish communities in small towns, there was a clear demographic shift; mainly only young kids and the elderly. Young adults and middle-aged men seem to have largely left. It's a similar problem, but exacerbated, that we have in many American cities — if there's no opportunity, you leave when you can. We have it much easier being Jewish in America than overseas. It is relatively easy to blend in in America. Our ethnicity isn't on our passports and, more so, Judaism is gener- ally recognized as a mix of ethnic, religious and national factors. While traveling, I was first considered an American and then Jewish. I grew up in a warm, welcoming and inspiring Jewish com- munity, but it was while traveling and spend- ing time with Jewish communities overseas that I gained a better perspective on my own Jewish identity. I could not have chosen a better way to spend the last three years than in the Peace Corps and traveling around the region. I rec- ommend Peace Corps and similar opportuni- ties to those willing to embrace a challenge and move outside their comfort zone to learn about themselves. The opportunity to make a meaningful, measurable and sustained difference, to get to know individuals and com- munities in another part of the world, and to better understand myself will serve me well in araduate school and will be a t continuing connection for the rest of my life. @ , Perry Teicher, 25, of West Bloomfield, majored in organizational studies and political science at the University of Michigan; he will be attending a 1D/MBA program in fall 2011. To see more photos and read about Perry's experiences, go to pteicher.wordpress.com and picasaweb.google.com/pteicher. For more information about Peace Corps, go to www.peacecorps.gov. November 11 2010 35