Opinion | Here’s how we can help 100,000 new Ukrainian refugees

0
Elana Broitman
Elana Broitman (Via JNS.org)

By Elana Broitman

After my family and I escaped from Odessa in the mid-1970s, an awful feeling of statelessness settled upon me. Our family had lived there for generations, but my parents understood that Jews had limited opportunities in the Soviet Union. They resolved to leave while my sister and I were young enough to learn a new life, even if it meant leaving so much behind.

I’ll never forget both the joy and trepidation we experienced in finally getting the green light to come to America. We arrived not speaking the language and with only the minimal possessions that we were able to take with us. But the Jewish community supported us tremendously and we felt that we were not alone.

Now, as the United States prepares to take in 100,000 Ukrainian refugees, I can’t help but reflect on the multiplicity of challenges that await them and what our society will need to do to make their transition successful.

Refugees’ entire lives have been uprooted and upended. They need help finding not just housing but community. They need schools for their children and emotional support for their families, job opportunities, transportation and language instruction. Their family relationships have typically been subjected to a great deal of strain. Many will need mental-health counseling.

The nonprofit and faith-based sector has developed a tremendous depth of expertise in providing all these services and must play a role in any resettlement strategy.

Take my organization, the Jewish Federations of North America. We’ve collectively raised more than $50 million from across the continent to aid Ukrainian refugees and will raise much more in the coming weeks and months.

These funds are being directed to four main areas: humanitarian aid to the refugees and help with resettlement in other countries; enabling Jewish refugees to emigrate to Israel if they wish to do so; preparing to help the Jews of Russia and Belarus escape if the need arises; and rebuilding Ukraine after the war ends.

Right now, my focus is on resettlement.

More than three decades ago, we in the Jewish community stood proudly with New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg when he sponsored the successful bill to allow 400,000 Soviet Jews and other refugees to reunite with families in the United States; it is the Lautenberg Amendment that the Biden administration is using to permit some of the Ukrainian refugees to come here. In recent weeks, Federations have collaborated with 375 Jewish and interfaith partners across North America to lobby the government to permit refugees in.

I know from my own experience that welcoming the stranger isn’t just about the bare necessities. Community-based nonprofits are a key partner in ensuring that these refugees get what they need.

The government has partnered with Jewish agencies and other humanitarian organizations for decades to help resettle refugees in communities.

The emergency aid package that Congress recently approved will provide desperately needed resources, but that’s just a start. I hear every day about the burdens that Ukrainian refugees face and know that more funding will be necessary. And in the short term, many Ukrainians are seeking work authorizations, but they face significant backlogs.

For those who wish to remain beyond the two years that the humanitarian parole program authorizes, these Ukrainians must have a path to citizenship.

I firmly believe that these approaches will allow American nonprofits and volunteers to play our part.

Elana Broitman is senior vice president of public affairs for the Jewish Federations of North America.

Never miss a story.
Sign up for our newsletter.
Email Address

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here