1999: Putin rekindles Jewish practice in Russia – PUTIN TO JEWISH DELEGATION: I WAS FIRST TO RESTORE JEWISH PROPERTY!
[Again one sees that Putin is not clean himself. He has plenty of dealings with Jews and Blacks. He's no Hitler. He definitely does NOT have the intelligence and ability of Hitler, Napoleon, Frederick the Great, etc. KEEP ON REMEMBERING THAT PUTIN AND THE RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT HAVE SAID THEY ARE BUSY WITH THE DENAZIFICATION OF UKRAINE. Take note that Putin grew up in a communal apartment that his family shared with Jews. Jan]
PUTIN TO JEWISH DELEGATION: I WAS FIRST TO RESTORE JEWISH PROPERTY!
Nov 26, 1999
https://www.chabad.org/news/article_cdo/aid/1119/jewish/Chanukah-Journal.htm
CHANUKAH INTERNATIONAL
NEW YORK — Chabad-Lubavitch centers around the globe are busy preparing for the more than 8 million Jews expected to be reached during this year’s worldwide Chanukah campaign.
Some 5.4 million holiday guides (in 13 languages) and Chanukah menorah kits, thousands of menorah lighting ceremonies in public squares and high-traffic venues, family-oriented Dreidel Houses and hands-on olive oil presses, and "Chanukah-mobiles" cruising suburban neighborhoods are parts of the worldwide effort to light up the world.
Synagogues, schools, Jewish community centers and federations across the United States are calling upon their local Chabad-Lubavitch centers to conduct Chanukah workshops for their children. Hundreds of government officials and celebrities around the globe – including scores of U.S. governors, mayors and other dignitaries – are attending Chabad-Lubavitch menorah lighting celebrations.
RUSSIA’S PM TO JEWISH DELEGATION: I WAS FIRST TO RESTORE JEWISH PROPERTY!
MOSCOW — In an extraordinary 40 minute meeting with Russian Jewish leaders yesterday (November 25), Russian Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin promised to assist the Jewish community in combating anti-Semitism, building schools and reclaiming former synagogue buildings for Jewish communities.
Rabbi Berel Lazar, chief Lubavitch emissary to the region, who was recently elected as the head rabbi by delegates to the newly-formed Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia, accompanied Federation officials Lev Leviev, Michael Gluz and Mark Grubarg to present the prime minister with a silver Menorah. Rabbi Lazar described the Menorah as a symbol of religious freedom. Speaking about the miracle of Chanukah, the rabbi and his colleagues described the resurgence of Jewish life in Russia since the fall of communism as a modern miracle.
Mr. Putin said he was familiar with both the menorah and the Chanukah holiday, because as a child his family shared their communal apartment with a Jewish family. He fondly recalled the pleasant demeanor of the various family members, as well as their attempts to preserve their traditions despite Communist reprisals for practicing religion. The Prime Minister recalled that he often saw the father of the house poring over large Talmudic tomes.
Meeting attendees report that Prime Minister Putin demonstrated a keen awareness of efforts to rekindle Jewish practice in Russia — along with an acute knowledge of both positive conditions in the country that have encouraged this resurgence as well as anti-semitic incidents that thwart Jewish development.
The Prime Minister also hailed the 30 schools that were opened throughout the country within the last decade.
Prime Minister Putin recalled that as an official in St. Petersburg in 1991, it was he who signed the official documents giving permission for the first opening of a Jewish school in Russia in more than 70 years. Another official was technically to have signed the papers, but, as a Jew himself, he declined, stating that he did not wish people to think he was using his position to assist Jews. Mr. Putin said he willingly undertook the task and considered it to be a high point in his career.
Focusing on the Federation, Mr. Putin described its founding as a positive development to bring diverse groups within the Jewish community together to work toward common goals. He expressed his hope that the new Federation would help foster a climate of communal strength that will make Russia a country where Jews will live comfortably.