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Soviet Jews: Barometer of Gorbachev's Strength


Article # : 16300 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 3 / 1989  3,346 Words
Author : Adam M. Garfinkle
Adam M. Garfinkle is adjunct professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania and research associate at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. He is also a contributing editor of Orbis.

       Mikhail Gorbachev is, among other things, a gambling man. Over the past few years he has attempted to revamp Soviet society and economy in ways that most Western observers thought impossible as recently as 1983. Many doubt that Gorbachev will succeed in all that he aspires to change and feel that this will lead to his being reduced in stature or ousted altogether before many more years have passed. Yet, as time goes by, Gorbachev's staying power seems to grow as he meets and survives challenge after challenge.
       
        Clearly, for Gorbachev to succeed--whatever that may mean by his own lights--he will need to manage the various forces that are working against him and his reformist programs. He needs to marshal all possible allies to do this. One factor in this equation--not the most important, to be sure, but not a trivial one either--concerns Soviet Jews. How does "the Jewish Question" in the Soviet Union relate to the vortex of political struggles that will determine Gorbachev's fate and the fate of his program? What does Gorbachev want from the Jews? To answer this question one must examine the relative significance of the Jewish Question in Soviet politics.
       
        Not all Russians are anti-Semites, but historically many Russians have been and still are anti-Semitic. This is not because Russians are especially evil people, but is derived from the historical role of Jews in Russian political culture. An example closer to home may help elucidate this.
       
        Most Americans grasp the importance of Negroes in U.S. political history. Since Negroes have been the largest and most distinctive minority group in American society for more than two centuries, U.S. ... (1996 of 19980 Characters)
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