Hesed is a network of nonprofit community welfare centers to serve the Jewish community in former Soviet Union states (FSU's).[1][2] The network provides services to Jews who remained in post-Soviet states after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[3][4][5] Hesed uses its volunteers and charity centers to provide basic necessities and medical services within a physical location in which community members can meet and participate in cultural and religious activities.[6][7][8]
History
The first Hesed center opened in 1993 in St. Petersburg.[9] The organization was formed by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC)[10][11][12] and funded by JDC, International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ), World Jewish Relief, and other donors.[3]
Hesed based its structure and activities on a model developed by Amos Avgar, who was Director of the JDC-FSU Welfare Department.[13]
Volunteering, fostering community and Jewish traditions or Yiddishkeit were central to the model.[8]
As of 2003, there were 174 Hesed centers operating in 2,800 Jewish communities[5] and serving over a quarter-million people in the FSU.[7]
Hesed continued to operate through the war between Russia and Ukraine in Crimea and the Donbas starting in 2014.[14][2] During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Hesed continued providing services[15] to its approximately 37,000 Ukrainian clients.[16] The organization also offered psychological counseling and operated a hotline for those needing assistance and treatment during the hostilities.[15]
Services
In addition to activities in the Hesed centers, volunteers visit the homebound.[17]
Hesed's services included food programs and packages,[4] meals-on-wheels, soup kitchens, winter relief, homecare, providing medicine, medical equipment[7] and medical services.[3][8]
Social and community services include day centers, library services, and Jewish holiday celebrations.[4][8]
^ abcWeiner, Anita (2003). Renewal : reconnecting Soviet Jewry to the Jewish people ; a decade of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (AJJDC) activities in the former Soviet Union ; 1988-1998. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. pp. 176, 205. ISBN9780761824763.
^ abRadler, Melissa (17 October 2003). "Acts of kindness". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
^ abcShachtman, Tom (2001). I Seek My Brethren: Ralph Goldman and 'the Joint' : Rescue, Relief, and Reconstruction. New York: New Market Press. p. 240. ISBN1557044953.
^ abcdHarrison, Andrew (2003). "Book Review: Renewal: Reconnecting Soviet Jewry to the Jewish People; A Decade of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (AJJDC) Activities in the Former Soviet Union, 1988-1998". American Jewish History. 91 (1): 191–193. doi:10.1353/ajh.2004.0029.
^Avgar, Amos; Mirsky, Julia; Kaufman, Roni (2006). "Chapter Three: From Model to Movement: The Development of Hesed Centers in the Former Soviet Union". In Mirsky, Julia; Kaufman, Roni (eds.). Social Disaster as Opportunity: The Hesed Model. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. p. 198. ISBN9780761833383.