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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Illia Novikov

Thousands of Jewish pilgrims make journey to Ukraine despite war warnings

Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Prayer chants and the sounding of ram's horns fill the air in the town of Uman as thousands of pilgrims join an annual gathering to mark the Jewish new year in Ukraine, despite the war against Russia.

Despite Ukrainian and Israeli diplomats warning of the security threat, officials said that 35,000 pilgrims made the journey to Uman in central Ukraine this year, the same as in earlier years.

Uman, 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, is transformed for the celebration of Rosh Hashana. The streets are plastered with signs in Hebrew for the pilgrims who come to pray at the tomb of Rabbi Nachman, the great-grandson of the founder of Hasidic movement.

Rabbi Moshe Reuven Azman, a leading figure in Ukraine’s Jewish community, was one of those who urged international pilgrims not to visit Ukraine due to security concerns but acknowledged that many would still make the trip regardless of the potential risks involved.

“Every year (since Russia's full-scale invasion), I speak on Israeli television and radio, and I call on the (Jewish) pilgrims not to come to Ukraine. My primary concern is for the lives of people,” he said.

As the war in Ukraine rages for a third year, Russian army fires barrages of drones and missiles at Ukraine almost daily, leaving no region completely safe. Active combat is taking place along a 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front, as Russian forces press their advantage in the eastern Donetsk region. This year alone, the Russian army has managed to capture several thousand square kilometers (miles) of Ukrainian territory, with the capture of the city of Vuhledar being their most recent notable achievement.

Orthodox Jewish children pray at the gravestone of Rabbi Nachman, the great grandson of the founder of Hasidic movement (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Nachman Shitrit, 18, who traveled to Uman from Haifa, Israel with his father, said he had made the pilgrimage over a dozen times.

“The war here didn’t scare me from traveling to Ukraine; there’s also war where I came from,” he told the AP.

This year’s pilgrimage comes at an increasingly volatile time in the Middle East. Israel is now engaged in a multifront war that includes the battles with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, attacks from Iran and strikes inside Syria, plus ongoing confrontations with armed militants in the West Bank and occasional attacks launched by Iranian-backed militants in Iraq and by the Houthis in Yemen.

The hostilities posed additional challenges to some pilgrims travelling to Ukraine this year.

Orthodox Jews dance at the tomb of Rabbi Nachman, the great grandson of the founder of Hasidic movement (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Ukraine closed its air space in February 2022, at the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion, forcing visitors to travel overland via other European countries in order to reach Uman.

The United Jewish Community of Ukraine said Wednesday that more than 14,000 pilgrims were unable to travel to Uman, partly as a result of Iran’s attack on Israel Tuesday. Iran fired a barrage of nearly 180 missiles, causing cancellation of multiple flights from Israel in an act Iranian officials called retaliation for Israel’s recent strikes on Hezbollah.

Orthodox Jews pray near the lake at the tomb of Rabbi Nachman (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Meir Shpanier, 23, who travelled from Tel Aviv, said the difficulty of the journey had made the experience more meaningful to him this year.

“I managed to get here by a miracle. My travel agent booked airplane tickets from Tel Aviv to Budapest. From there, a Ukrainian driver picked me up, and we drove 22 hours to Uman. But some of my friends had to travel through five countries.”

“Because I had to work hard to get here, it means more to me now. I think we’re all blessed to be here,” Shpanier said.

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