Second exodus
Some Ukrainian Jews who fled the Germans as children were again forced to flee from the Russians 80 years later

For some elderly Jewish residents of eastern Ukraine, 2022 was not the first time in their lives that they were forced to flee their homes. Eight decades after running from the invading German army as children in 1941, some of the same people — by now well into their old age — found themselves fleeing once again, this time from the invading Russian military.
Michael Gold, who edits the Ukrainian Jewish newspaper Hadashot, has been interviewing Jewish refugees since the start of the full-scale Russian invasion for the Exodus 2022 project, which records the testimonies of Ukraine’s Jewish community in the wake of the Russian invasion. Gold chose some of the most moving stories he’s collected for Novaya Europe’s readers.
“On the day of the Russian invasion, I reproached myself: how could a historian fail to have seen this coming?”
“He always thought you needed to be ready to drop everything and leave. And that’s what happened. We dropped everything and left.”
“They promised to live until the end of the war, and I promised to bring them home.”
Over 80 years later, he was faced with the same decision whether to stay or go, only now he was 96.
“One of them handed me a bowl, and the second read off a piece of paper, in Ukrainian, ‘Help yourself to some borscht’. And I burst into tears right into the borscht.”
“Don’t go near the windows and don’t turn on the light. I remember all that from the last war,”


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