As the World Waited, a Jewish School on Eastern Ukrainian Border Celebrated 30 Years

Thousands of children have been educated in Kharkov’s Ohr Avner School

Some of the 400 students of Kharkov’s Ohr Avner Jewish School who excitedly marked 30 years since the eastern Ukrainian Jewish school opened its doors.

Updated Feb. 24 at 12:51 p.m. EST: This celebration took place one day before war broke out. This morning the children of Kharkov’s Ohr Avner Jewish Day School were told to remain home, as they were in schools across the country. We pray for the safety of everyone in harm’s way and an immediate end to hostilities.

Despite tensions continuing to build on Ukraine’s border just 25 miles away, the 400 students of Kharkov’s Ohr Avner Jewish School excitedly marked 30 years since the eastern Ukrainian Jewish school opened its doors.

In the summer of 1990, Rabbi Moshe Moskovitz, now Chief Rabbi of Kharkov, was sent to Ukraine’s second-largest city as a Chabad-Lubavitch emissary together with his family by the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, to revive Jewish life in the region. The central task handed to them by Rebbe, said Moskovitz, was clear from the beginning: Chabad’s concern first and foremost had to be Jewish education, which had been virtually non-existent during the Soviet era. The Communist regime had closed the last Jewish school in Kharkov in 1936.

In February 1992, the Moskovitzes opened Kharkov’s Ohr Avner Jewish Day School together with Grigory Shochet, who has been the school’s director ever since. The school has for decades served as a second home to the thousands of children who are proud to have been students of the school, explained the rabbi.

During today’s celebrations at the high school, Shochet reminisced about the beginnings of the school and how it has grown. “Who would have believed when I met Rabbi Moshe Moskovitz in the synagogue on Pushkinskaya Street in the early 1990s … that we would end up making a school that has thousands of alumni,” he said.

“The whole world is looking at Ukraine now and asking: What is happening with the Jewish communities there? Are schools open? Are people walking in the streets as usual?” Rabbi Moskovitz said during his address to the students. “We can proudly say that all of you are here, learning in our Jewish School, smiling and proud of your Jewish heritage.”

The smiles and excitement also were evident in the elementary school, where the children had prepared for weeks for the big day, putting on a special program and singing “Oseh Shalom” and “Happy Birthday” amid the festivities.

Vlada Koshiy, a former Ohr Avner student and mother of Masha, a current second grader explained that “the school is not just a building. It is alive and growing, and with all the changes over the years it has always remained a family, a place where all the students, teachers and alumni feel like one.”

The smiles and excitement also were evident in the elementary school, where the children had prepared for weeks for the big day.

The Kharkov Jewish School is an integral part of the Kharkov Jewish Community that has since August 1990 developed into a warm and vibrant center of Jewish life. The community is in the midst of distributing hundreds of Shabbat food packages to local Jewish homes, sending a message of hope and unity.

Jews in the former Soviet Union have long looked to the worldwide Jewish community for help and support. As Kharkov’s 25,000 Jews watch and wait to see what each new day brings, they’ve turned to the community for support and encouragement, praying together for a miracle.

The Ukraine Jewish Relief Fund has been established to help provide assistance to the Jewish communities in Ukraine impacted by the war.

A guide to prayers and good deeds on their behalf can be found here.

To help continue the work of Chabad-Lubavitch in Kharkov visit their donation page here.

The Kharkov Jewish School is an integral part of the Kharkov Jewish Community that has since August 1990 developed into a warm and vibrant center of Jewish life.
Rabbi Moskovitz and one of this children receive a dollar and a blessing from the Rebbe.
In February 1992, the Moskovitzes opened Kharkov’s Ohr Avner Jewish Day School.
Rabbi Moscovitz with Grigory Shochet, who has been the school’s director since its founding.
The Kharkov Jewish School in 1991. (Photo: Konstantin Yamnitskiy)
Rabbi Moscowitz with students at the celebration.

Source: https://www.chabad.org/news/article_cdo/aid/5414721/jewish/As-the-World-Waited-a-Jewish-School-on-Eastern-Ukrainian-Border-Celebrated-30-Years.htm

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