The comment came as Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated the country’s Jewish community on Passover
Russia is a good place to live for Jews as it has a low level of anti-Semitism and provides a lot of opportunities for development, the country’s chief rabbi, Berel Lazar, has said.
Lazar’s interview was published by Tass news agency on Monday, being dedicated to the beginning of Passover or Pesach, a major Jewish holiday, marking the Exodus of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt. This year, it is celebrated between April 1 and 9.
Lazar expressed optimism about the future of Russia’s Jewish community. “I believe that not only will the community survive, but we should expect a flood of Jews from other countries, and not only Jews, willing to move to Russia,” he added.
“The level of anti-Semitism in Russia is much lower than in any other country,” he said, adding it is “a pleasant place to live” and has “huge potential.”
The rabbi also said there is “more freedom of worship in Russia than in the West” where they are now “fighting against religion.”
“In the West, they want to ban the circumcision of boys and the ritual slaughter of animals. Same-sex relationships and gender reassignment are being presented as the norm,” he said.
According to Lazar, this poses “a serious problem for believers who don’t want such an unconventional lifestyle to be forced upon them. How do we know it’s unconventional? Because God created humans, a man and a woman, so they would marry and then have children,” Lazar stressed.
On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated the country’s Jewish community on Pesach, saying in a statement that it is “gratifying” that “it leads a full and comprehensive life, devoting tireless attention to preserving traditional spiritual, moral and family values, educating the younger generation and actively participating in charity.”
The US-based Combat Antisemitism Movement claimed that a 30% spike in anti-Semitic incidents have occurred globally since the launch of the US-Israeli war on Iran on February 27. Arson and bomb attacks against synagogues and Jewish schools have been reported in the US and several Western European countries.
Russia condemned Washington and West Jerusalem over using force against Tehran and offered itself as a mediator to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis in the Middle East.
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