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Chabad Poland launches emergency campaign to feed 9,000 Ukrainian Jews over Passover

Jewish Ukrainian refugees who were smuggled today are sheltered and accommodated in a Chabad shelter run by rabbi Pinhas Zaltsman in Kishinev, Moldova, March 2, 2022. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90

As the world marked the anniversary of the Russian incursion into Ukraine and the reverberations the war has caused throughout civilization, Chabad of Poland is launching an emergency campaign to feed nearly 9,000 Ukrainian Jews during Passover.

The group’s Passover fundraising initiative seeks to raise nearly US$500,000 to support holiday expenses for Ukraine’s Jewish communities and their refugees in Poland. Funds will be used for sending out Seder kits to families unable to attend communal meals, hosting communal Seder meals in various locations in Poland and Ukraine, and providing food and accommodation for those families in greater need during the holiday.

Since the beginning of the conflict, Chabad of Poland has helped thousands of Jewish Ukrainian refugees resettle in Poland or by serving as a religious waypoint for those resettling in Israel and other nations. Throughout their time in Poland, Chabad’s locally based emissaries have provided shelter, food, and religious services to those in need.

“Passover is widely celebrated by Jews of all backgrounds. But it is an expensive holiday because of the special types of food that week. The cost of celebrating Passover for an average family is high, but for refugees, it is almost impossible for them to shoulder those expenses without our help.  Last year at the start of the war in Ukraine, we saw an influx in the number of Ukrainian Jews who relied on us for refuge from the war and those from abroad who opened their hearts to support these victims of the conflict,” said Chabad of Poland Co-Director Rabbi Mayer Stambler.

“But as the war still wages, there is still a great need to support these families to assure that we can provide them with as much of a positive holiday experience as possible.”

Passover begins at sundown on April 5 and celebrates the exodus of ancient Jews from Egypt, a transition from slavery to freedom. Celebrated annually, the holiday starts with two Seder nights recounting the story of the miracles of the exodus and runs eight days during which Jewish tradition dictates a special diet excluding leavened products and legumes.

Since the start of the Russian incursion into Ukraine, Chabad of Poland based in Warsaw has opened its doors to Ukraine’s Jewish community offering refuge, transportation, kosher food, medical aid, financial and material assistance, childcare, educational and social services, communal activities and administrative and legal aid to tens of thousands displaced by the conflict.

For more information or to contribute to relief efforts, please visit: https://chabad.org.pl/wsparcie/.-30-

 

 

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