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Who Helped Us


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From Soviet
Jewry Activist to L.A. Mayor?

No More Action
by Pauline Yearwood

In memory of
Micah Naftalin

Chana and Jacques
Berlowitz

Refusenik
By Carol Katzman

Cream of the Crop: Shirley Goldstein, Part I
By Leo Adam Biga

Cream of the Crop: Shirley Goldstein, Part II
By Leo Adam Biga

In Memory of Lynn Singer

Nicholson Medal

Michael Sherbourne.
by Si Frumkin

Dr. Solomon Schimmel.
Part 1.

Dr. Solomon Schimmel.
Part 2.

Dr. Solomon Schimmel.
Part 3.

Dr. Solomon Schimmel.
Part 4.

Letter to Mother.
by Tamara Brill
Part 1.

Letter to Mother.
by Tamara Brill
Part 2.

Sir Martin Gilbert.
by Evgeny Lein

Baruch Eyal.
by Evgeny Lein

Shoshana Merkle.
by Evgeny Lein

Senator
Henry M. Jackson.
by William Kori and site editorial board

Dorothy Hirsch.
by Evgeny Lein



In Memory of Lynn Singer



      On the 30th of November, Lynn Singer left this world. She died after a long and tortuous illness which she fought with all her might. Consistent with her character, she never lost hope and, as throughout her life, she never complained.

      Many of the aliya activists, Prisoners of Zion and Refuseniks were personally acquainted with Lynn and there were a number who counted her as a close family friend.

      Lynn Singer was the quintessential activist of the grassroots movement – a mass voluntary movement of ordinary people whose activities were motivated by their conscience and sincere concern for the destiny of Soviet Jews. Activists of the movement clearly recognized the necessity to save Soviet Jews from full assimilation, constant repression and the threat of physical extermination. Their activities were not defined by orders but by the movement of their souls.

      Lynn Singer understood well the great potential of this voluntary movement. From the moment of its birth, an uninterrupted flow of visitors arrived to a country surrounded by the Iron Curtain. These were ordinary American Jews and Jews from other countries. Suddenly, the Refuseniks understood that they were not alone; that in the United States and in other countries there were people who were not indifferent to their fate; that they were part of one big Jewish family that never abandons their brethren in trouble. It is not surprising that we called Lynn Singer our Yiddishe Mama with a heart big enough to encompass all her children, no matter how many…

      But he was not only a Yiddishe Mama but was a leader of the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews, one of the most influential American Jewish organizations. Lynn had the ability to address even the highest governmental officials and she always knew precisely what to say and do. No obstacles could ever stop her from achieving her goals.

      Without diminishing the role of the United States government and other Western countries in their policies toward the former Evil Empire, we can say that the grassroots movement of American Jews played a decisive role in keeping alive the hope for freedom for Soviet Jews. The role that Lynn played in our final victory is priceless.

      Lynn Singer is gone.

      Our Yiddishe Mama, a member of our family is gone.

      May her memory be a blessing. We will remember her to our last breath.


Evgeny Abeshaus
Pasha Abramovich
Anatoly Altman
Marta Balashinskaya
Josef Begun
Dina and Joseph Beilin
Michael Beizer
Lev Blidstein (USA)
Irina and Victor Brailovsky
Frida and Mark Budnyatsky (USA)
Vladimir Dashevsky
Boris Deviatov
Natasha (Segev) Drachinskaya
Alevtina and Mark Dymshits
Tatyana and Yuly Edelstein
Lev Elbert
Klara and Anatoly Epstein
Anna and Ilya Essas
Shoshana and Beniamin Fain
Mira and Oscar Fishkis (USA)
Maya and Victor Fulmacht
Alexander Geller (USA)
Laura and Alexander Genusov (USA)
Helen and Gregory Genusov
Larisa Gershtein
Helen and Boris Granovsky
Mark Grunkin (USA)
Bella Gulko

Nataly Harmatz
Nataly and Gennady Hasin
Rosa and Alexander Ioffe
Abram Kagan (USA)
Boris Kalandar (USA)
Evgenia and Michael Kalandarev
Sima and Lassal Kaminsky
Nataly and Gregory Kanovich
Maria and Leonid Kelbert
Alla and Boris Kelman (USA)
Anna and Ephraim Kholmyansky
Oksana and Michael Kholmyansky
Vladimir Kislik
Edward Kuznetsov
Irina and Evgeny Lein
Sonia Lerner
Anna and Vladimir Lifshitz
Nataly and Boris Likhtik (USA)
Irina and Leonid Lotvin (USA)
Ludmila and Edward Markov
Alexander Maryasin (Canada)
Josef Mendelevich
Marina and Yakov Mesh (USA)
Inna Mizrukhina
Mark Nashpitz
Ida Nudel
Eleonora Poltinnikov
Alla and Leonid Praisman
Elena and Vladimir Prestin

Josef Raday
Lilia and Lev Shapiro
Avital and Natan Sharansky
Raya and Leonid Sharansky (USA)
David Shechter
Vera and Lev Sheiba (USA)
Simon Shnirman
Nelly Shpeizman
Yuri Shtern
Masha and Vladimir Slepak
Nataly and Leonid Stonov (USA)
Elizaveta and Villi Svechinsky
Ida, Aba and Michael Taratuta
Svetlana and Mark Terlitsky
Viktoria and Pavel Tsimberov
Inna and Igor Uspensky
Nataly and Lev Utevsky
Yehezkiel Vainstein
Zvi (Grisha) Vasserman
Ludmila and Ar’e Volvovsky
Evgenia and Mordechai Yudborovski
Wolf Zalmanson
Israel Zalmanson (USA)
Silva Zalmanson
Galina and Roald Zelichonok
Mira and Leonid Zeliger

Home
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Recollections Our
Interview
Prisoners
of Zion
From the History of
the Jewish Movement
What Was Written
about Us by the Press
Who
Helped Us
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Album
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