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BIROBIDJAN - JEWISH AUTONOMOUS REGION

BIROBIDZHAN - JEWISH AUTONOMOUS REGION Co-ordinates: 48°47′N 132°56′E/48.783, 132.933 (Russian: Биробиджа́н; Yiddish: ביראָבידזשאַן) is a town and the administrative centre of the JEWISH AUTONOMOUS OBLAST (REGION), RUSSIA. It is located on the TRANS-SIBERIAN railway, close to the border with the People's Republic of CHINA, and is the home of two synagogues, including the Birobidzhan Synagogue, and the Jewish religious community of the Jewish Autonomous OBLAST. The 2002 Census recorded the town as having a population of 77,250 (down from the 83,667 registered in the census of 1989). BIROBIDZHAN is named for the two largest rivers in the autonomous oblast: the Bira and the Bidzhan, although only the Bira flows through the town, which lies to the east of the Bidzhan valley. Both rivers are tributaries of the Amur River. Visitors find the town surprisingly green. The chief economic activity is light industry. According to Rabbi Mordechai Scheiner, the Chief Rabbi of Birobidzhan and Chabad Lubavitch representative to the region, "Today one can enjoy the benefits of the Yiddish culture and not be afraid to return to their Jewish traditions. It's SAFE WITHOUT ANY ANTI-SEMITISM, and we plan to open the first Jewish day school here." Mordechai Scheiner, an Israeli father of six, has been the rabbi in Birobidzhan for the last five years. He is also the host of the Russian television show, Yiddishkeit. The town's synagogue opened in 2004. Rabbi Scheiner says there are 4,000 Jews in Birobidzhan, just over 5 percent of the town's 75,000 population. The Birobidzhan Jewish Community was led by Lev Toitman, until his death in September, 2007. Jewish culture was revived in Birobidzhan much earlier than elsewhere in the Soviet Union. Yiddish theaters opened in the 1970s. Yiddish and Jewish traditions have been required components in all public schools for almost fifteen years, taught not as Jewish exotica but as part of the region's national heritage. The Birobidzhan Synagogue, completed in 2004, is next to a complex housing Sunday School classrooms, a library, a museum, and administrative offices. The buildings were officially opened in 2004 to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast. Concerning the Jewish Community of the oblast, Governor Nikolay Mikhaylovich Volkov has stated that he intends to "support every valuable initiative maintained by our local Jewish organizations." In 2007, The First Birobidzhan International Summer Program for Yiddish Language and Culture was launched by Yiddish studies professor Boris Kotlerman of Bar-Ilan University. For the Chanukah celebration of 2007, officials of Birobidzhan in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast claimed to have built the world's largest MENORAH. The Birobidzhan Jewish National University works in cooperation with the local religious community. The university is unique in the Russian Far East. The basis of the training course is study of the Hebrew language, history and classic Jewish texts. The town now boasts several state-run schools that teach Yiddish, as well as an Anglo-Yiddish faculty at its higher education college, a Yiddish school for religious instruction and a kindergarten. The five to seven year-olds spend two lessons a week learning to speak Yiddish, as well as being taught Jewish songs, dance and traditions. The school menorah was created in 1991. It is a public school that offers a half-day Yiddish and Jewish curriculum for those parents who choose it. About half the schools 120 pupils are enrolled in the Yiddish course. Many of them continue on to Public School No. 2, which offers the same half-day Yiddish/Jewish curriculum from first through 12th grade. Yiddish also is offered at Birobidzhans Pedagogical Institute, one of the only university-level Yiddish courses in the country. Today, the citys 14 public schools must teach Yiddish and Jewish tradition. L'Chayim, Comrade Stalin! A documentary film, L'Chayim, Comrade Stalin! on Stalin's creation of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast and its partial settlement by thousands of Russian and Yiddish-speaking Jews was released in 2003. As well as relating the history of the creation of the proposed Jewish homeland, the film features scenes of life in contemporary Birobidzhan and interviews with Jewish residents. According to the NY Times, Josef STALIN [as with Adolf HITLER were BOTH FUNDED by the ROCKEFELLER family & the Globalist International Bankers that control the PRIVATE FEDERAL RESERVE - see the authoritative books by Professor Dr Anthony C. SUTTON: i) "WALL STREET & THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION" & ii) "WALL STREET & THE RISE OF HITLER" who verify that both STALIN & HITLER were funded by the Globalist International Bankers] established the city to protect secular JEWS.

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