
Memorial at Buenos Aires Jewish
Center that terrorists blew up killing
85 people |
Cry For Your
Jews, Argentina
By Sally Ogle Davis and Ivor
Davis
Photos by Ivor Davis
T’S
a balmy night as we file into the basement social hall of the
venerable Libertad Synagogue in downtown Buenos Aires. It
resembles a Friday night service crowd anywhere in the U.S.
The
hall is packed—standing room only.
An
elderly man sings Yiddish songs in a still strong tenor followed
by a young duo on saxophone and clarinet playing selections from Fiddler
on the Roof.
The crowd applauds while
sipping tiny paper cups of kiddush wine.
This is what they’ve come for. This and the food—especially
the food. Not that it’s anything to write home about.
The meal is stuffed
tomato and gefilte fish—served terrine style.
Dessert is ice cream straight from the carton, simple in
the extreme. But
there are few leftovers. When you’re hungry it all tastes good.
And these people are
hungry.
The catastrophe that
ravaged Argentina in December 2001—the peso was devalued to a
third of a dollar and all savings were frozen – hit particularly
hard at the middle class. Since
most Argentine Jews – 80 percent live in Buenos Aires – are
part of that class, they are suffering.

Rabbi Sergei Bergman |
“Fifty
percent of the Jewish community are experiencing actual hunger,”
George, who owns his own small electrical business and is a member
of the Temple, told us. “And it’s going to get worse.”
Families
who had their cash in dollars in one of the many Buenos Aires
banks—many of them owned by Jews—saw their savings disappear
literally overnight. Dollar accounts were frozen as the peso
crashed. 100,000 pesos used to be worth 100,000 dollars. Now it’s
worth $27,000.
As
a result of the economic meltdown children can no longer afford to
help their aging parents. Parents can no longer help children with
their education or their housing.
Since
the crash some 72 welfare centers have been set up to help the
beleaguered Jews in Argentina—53 of them in Buenos Aires where
80 percent of the 200,000 thousand Jews live.
More
than 36,000 Jews are being helped with food vouchers and subsidies
to help them eat and pay medical and utility bills. The poverty
lists grow by 1,500 a month.
Evelyn
Kollmann, a tour
guide and English teacher, says her Vienna-born pensioner mother
is now the “rich” member of the family by virtue of the
$1, 200 she gets every month in reparations from the
Austrian government.
Other
seniors are less fortunate. Many are trying to live on 150 pesos
or $30 a month. These are the people Rabbi Sergio Bergman is
entertaining at Shabbat dinner at the Libertad Synagogue.
The
40-year-old rabbi looks exhausted. His well-tailored suit seems to
hang on his slender frame. His eyes are blood shot. He’s too
busy trying to inspire his guests to partake of the spirit of
Shabbat and touch a bite of his dinner.
|
If
You Want To Help
Contact:
Will
Recant at JDC: 212-885-0839
or will@jdcny.org
The
American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee,
711 Third Avenue,
New York NY 10017.
Phone: 212 687 6200.
Fax: 212 370 5467.
www.jdc.org.
|
He
parades between the tables singing familiar Ashkenazi melodies. He
softly cajoles the congregation to get involved in the political
protests against the government’s inaction and corruption in the
face of human suffering and to wear the colors of the Argentinian
flag in their lapels as he does.
He
knows he is flying in the face of Argentine culture and tradition,
he tells us.
Argentina,
he explains, does not have a culture of philantrophy and so
neither do the Jews.
“We need to teach our
people to give money,” he explains sadly. “We need to teach
our politicians to be mensches and not destroy this country
because it’s a country with plenty of blessings, and plenty of
resources. The
Argentine people are the problem—our culture, our way of life.”
During
our two weeks in Argentina we heard the same story repeated.
Populist governments from Peron on had corrupted the people
by giving them handouts rather than teaching them to farm the rich
land and fend for themselves.
“We
were all immigrants,” says Rabbi Bergman whose grandfather came
from Poland, “but we have lost the values of the immigrant
culture – the values of effort and work and sacrifice to make a
future.”
Faced
with the result of that culture, those welfare centers are trying
to cope with 36,000 and counting – poor Jews where once their
maximum load even in the worst of times was 4,000. One third of
the current caseload are children.
Major
aid, some $40 million, has come from the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee (JDC) headquartered in New York, who help
feed and clothe and provide medicine to the newly poor or help
with Jewish day
school fees.

Temple Libertad, biggest
synagogue in Buenos Aires |
The
situation is dire. As we talked to people from all walks of life
all over Argentina a consistent picture emerged. Once the Jewish
community in Argentina was one of the wealthiest and most cultured
in the world. Not any more.
“It’s
as bad as America was in the Great Depression,” says Steven
Schwager, the JDC’s executive vice president.
“In
America we had Franklin Roosevelt. In Argentina the government
seems incapable of dealing with the problem. For the first time in
the country’s history you have a middle class who used to go to
work and now they come to us for handouts.”
Adds
Schwager, “No one has long term solutions. It’s hard to
imagine the Jews of Los Angeles, New York or Chicago going hungry
like this.”
Argentineans,
once considered by the rest of Latin America as a proud even
arrogant people who, because of their European ancestry,
considered themselves a cut above the rest of the continent, have
been humbled.
The
new Jewish poor include businessmen, and shop and factory owners
who can no longer get business loans, and can’t afford to import
the parts they need to carry on their businesses.
Students
have had to drop out of school and college to try and search for
non-existent jobs to help their families. Unemployment is over 25
percent.
While
the old are struggling to eat, the young are leaving in droves.
Argentina’s
difficulties represent a potential windfall for dwindling Jewish
communities all over the world who have set out to seduce young
professionals to bring their education, professional skills and
especially their youth to their communities.
While
we were in Buenos Aires, Communidades, the newspaper of
Argentina’s Jewish community, ran ads offering jobs and
resettlement expenses to professionals who would like to relocate
to Birmingham, England.
Devora,
who works at AMIA Communidad Judia, the building that was blown up
in l992 with 85 dead, is leaving with her computer analyst husband
for Winnipeg, Canada. The
folks from Winnipeg flew them out for a month and promised jobs
and housing.

Homeless man at River Plate Football
Stadium |
They
could have chosen Australia or New Zealand—“too far.”
Barcelona where Devora’s brother lives or other countries in
Latin America also beckons. European
anti-Semitism, however, worries them.
The
irony of a community who came from Europe just like that of the
U.S., now returning from whence they came, is not lost on the
citizens of Buenos Aires.
“Canada
is a civilized country where things work," says Devora. “They
want us. They will help us. And our children will have a future.”
Jewish
leaders tried to encourage them to make aliyah to Israel but
Devora turned that option down.
“Not
because of the war,” she hastens to explain. She’s been to
Israel and she doesn’t like it. It was too different from the
laid back tempo of the Buenos Aires boulevards. “Too aggressive,
too loud and rude,” she says. She was just not comfortable
there.
She
clings to every tiny piece of good news. “This month
unemployment didn’t rise,” she notes with a smile. “I have
hope. Why should I leave? It would be like asking American Jews
who have known only the good life to trade for some other place on
the other side of the world.”
Raquel
visited her journalist son in Los Angeles
and found the people “cold and aloof.”
“And
everybody works all the time,”
she complains.
“We
love BA,” her husband George says, “ the gaiety, the smells,
the life , the activity.”
But
they admit they are more fortunate than most. Raquel works for
herself as a traveling midwife – one of only three in the city.
George has his own electrical business.
On
their second marriage they have no children at home. They own
their own home, can afford two small cars and still have an
occasional dinner out or go to the theater. “But we used to
save,” they say. “Now we can’t.”
But
they have a sense of proportion. We are at the Four Seasons in
downtown Buenos Aires and they take us to the hotel window and
point to a mere four blocks away where we can see a shanty town
that houses the homeless who have poured into BA in search of
jobs.
It
is a bleak picture. But for any Argentinean, however bad things get, to
leave their beloved country is a wrench.
Melina
Fiszerman, who works for the JDC, is a parttime student in
marketing and admits, “I have no future here but I will stay as
long as I can. I have hope. I love this country, which is rich in
resources. Why should I leave?”
|