Russian
Jew named prime minister brings out
Jewish pride - and anxiety
By Lev Krichevsky
MOSCOW,
March 2 (JTA) - The
Jewish man named Russia's new prime
minister is little known to the
country's Jewish community.
But Jewish leaders welcomed Russian
President Vladimir Putin's
selection this week of Mikhail
Fradkov, currently Russia's envoy
to the European Union in Brussels.
Jewish leaders said Fradkov, who was
expected to be approved by the
pro-Putin majority in the Russian
Parliament on Friday, has had no
interaction with the organized Jewish
community.
If approved, Fradkov would be the
first identified Jew to serve as
Russia's prime minister. His father is
known to be Jewish, and while the
background of his mother is unclear, he
was profiled in a biographical volume
of the Russian Jewish
Encyclopedia that was published in
1997.
Berel Lazar, one of Russia's
two chief rabbis, told JTA he has met
with Fradkov in the past.
"He is very knowledgeable about
economics. He hopefully will direct his
Cabinet toward resolving Russia's most
serious problems, such as the problem
of poverty," Lazar said.
Russian
experts, whom the choice of Fradkov,
53, has taken by surprise, describe
him as a civil servant who is likely
to become a bureaucratic prime
minister devoted to Putin.
Whether he will serve in his post
for very long is unclear.
Russian voters go the polls March 14
in an election that is believed to be a
rubber stamp for Putin, and a new
Cabinet has to be approved after the
election.
But most experts believe he will
remain in office for at least a
year.
Fradkov has been a foreign trade
official since 1972, when at the age of
21 he got a job as an economic adviser
with the Russian Embassy in New
Delhi.
He first joined the Russian
government in 1992, shortly after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, when he
was deputy foreign trade minister in
the reformist government headed by
Yegor Gaidar
[Website
comment: who was also
Jewish]. He served as trade
minister for less than a year in 1997,
and was named foreign trade minister
two years later. He lost his job when
Putin was elected president in
2000.
Before this week's appointment,
Fradkov high point came in March 2001,
when he was made head of the tax
police, charged with ending Russia's
massive tax evasion. The agency was
disbanded during a government reshuffle
in 2003, and Fradkov was sent to
Brussels to represent Russia in the
European Commission.
For
some Russian Jewish leaders, Fradkov's
Jewishness is welcome.
"This nomination sends a clear
signal to everyone," said Yevgeny
Satanovsky, left, president
of the Russian Jewish Congress. "It
means that Russia's president is an
absolute pragmatist, it means that a
person's nationality does not mean
anything to him, and that he is judging
people by their business and personal
qualities."
Satanovsky said that while Russia's
next Cabinet's policies may remain an
open question, Russian Jews already
have received an answer to an important
question.
"This question is: Can a Jew become
Russian prime minister? The answer is
yes. The next question can only be
whether a Jew can be Russia's
president. But this nomination
basically means that in today's Russia
a Jew can be anything. And this is very
positive," Satanovsky said.
But others are expressing mixed
feelings about Fradkov's nomination,
worrying that it could cause a
backlash.
"Of course, this is an overall
positive thing to Jews," said
Lyudmila Krasnopolskaya, an
English-language instructor at a Moscow
college. "Yet given this, I'm not sure
this choice will necessarily make all
Russians that happy."
A recent conference on xenophobia
and racism in Russia held last week in
Moscow reported that more than 60
percent of Russians have xenophobic
sentiments, and many are
anti-Semitic.
"There are people in the society who
can try to make this an issue," said
Lazar, speaking of Fradkov's Jewish
background.
"I know there are people even inside
the Kremlin whom this nomination will
not make extremely happy," Satanovsky
said.
Two major politicians have come
[out]
against the nomination. Communist
leader Gennady Zyuganov and
ultranationalist Vladimir
Zhirinovsky
[Website
comment: who also claimed once to be
Jewish], both members of
Parliament, said their parties would
vote against Fradkov when the
nomination is voted on in the Duma on
Friday.
Zhirinovsky called Fradkov a "gray
and faceless person."