I buzzed with excitement as I boarded the plane to Vienna. I, along with 23 other SAR High School seniors, would be spending the next week working with school age Ukrainian refugees, providing Shabbat programming for children, preparing and serving Shabbat meals, infusing a sense of ruach and learning about the Austrian Jewish community pre-WWII and contemporary society. The purpose of the trip was to be a chesed mission to Vienna to support Ukrainian refugees. I assumed that just by being in Vienna we would pick up an understanding of the culture and history, but our primary goal was to do chesed. I imagined we would do some touring of the Jewish community, but our focus was really going to be on spending time with the Ukrainian refugees. I did not understand that I was about to receive an intense education in a part of Jewish history that I really knew very little about.
It quickly became very clear that Austria has a very rich but also extremely difficult Jewish history, which I knew nothing about. On Shabbos, we had the incredible opportunity to go on a walking tour of Jewish Vienna, which began in Judenplatz, the town square that was the center of Jewish life in the middle ages. We learned about the killing of Jews that occured in the very spot where we stood. We walked through places where shuls, Jewish-owned stores and Jewish homes stood before being burned or bombed during Kristallnacht and the Holocaust.
We were fortunate to be joined by Greg Schneider, executive vice president of The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference), who relayed the story about the first time that he traveled to Austria along with a colleague who happened to be a Holocaust survivor from Vienna. His colleague said that though Vienna is an objectively beautiful city, when he looks at the city, he does not see its beauty. He still sees Nazis and Austrians tying up Jews, throwing them in the Danube River and drowning them. That very disturbing story had an effect on every single person listening. It framed and helped us understand our trip to the Mauthausen Concentration Camp the following day. I was shocked when we walked into Mauthausen. I expected to walk into a dark and gloomy place. However, the views as we walked into the concentration camp were among some of the prettiest views I have ever seen. I could not grasp how I could be walking down a path in a place of death on one side and look at the beautiful country views on the other side.
Though Austrian Jewish history is quite disturbing, understanding the history made me appreciate the immense kindness that is occurring right now. The community in Vienna, a place that has kicked out Jews in the past, is now opening their arms to Jews who had to flee their homes and are in need of a safe space. Over the past few months, the Jewish community in Vienna has absorbed over 1,000 Ukrainian Jews, providing them with everything from basic living needs to a community. Witnessing the heroism that is occuring in Vienna helped me understand what we, as a group, were doing in Vienna: “Kol Yisrael erevim ze baze” (All Jews are responsible for one another).
We were very fortunate to meet and hear from many individuals who exemplify the concept of Kol Yisrael erevim ze baze throughout our trip. We had the opportunity to spend time during our trip at the Chabad school and hear from Rav Yisrael Wolosow about the role their school has played supporting the Ukrainian refugees. We learned that the Chabad school has taken in over 150 Ukrainian children for free, adding to their previous 400 students. The school is working extremely hard to make the lives of the Ukrainian refugees somewhat more manageable. By taking in these students, the school has given the students a safe place to be during the day and alleviated some of the parents’ worry. The school gives the children so much support, including intensive education in the German language and social and emotional support, along with regular academic studies. There are even a handful of high-school-age Ukrainian girls who have chosen to help by teaching the younger children.
On one of our visits to the Chabad school, we heard from one of those girls. She and her family stayed in Ukraine taking care of family and neighbors until the buildings surrounding their house were bombed and they realized they were no longer safe and had to leave. It was a difficult journey for them because they had to smuggle her father out of Ukraine, and her new baby sibling did not have a passport. They were able to illegally cross into Moldova and eventually made their way to Israel to stay with her grandparents. She and her friends traveled to Vienna because they speak Russian and wanted to come help children who just arrived from Ukraine. Her story was extremely inspiring.
On the last night of our trip, we went out for dinner, which then became one of the most meaningful moments on our trip. We walked into the restaurant and noticed some of the Ukrainian refugees we ate Shabbos dinner with at Chabad, including a Ukrainian Chabad rabbi and his wife. The rabbi was so excited to see us and somehow we ended up standing in the middle of the restaurant with our arms around each other and the refugees, singing “Am Yisroel Chai.” This is the work that we came to Vienna to accomplish. We came to bring ruach and lift the spirits of the refugees. We were able to accomplish this because we share the connection of being Jews. Throughout the trip, the language barrier was difficult, but we had something in common that bonded us together—our Jewish identities. The unification of Jews across the world to support the Jewish Ukrainian refugees is an example of Jews taking care of each other and this is why we always survive and flourish. Am Yisrael Chai.
By Gabby Blechner, SAR High School Class of 2022