In the wake of Limmud FSU’s initiative, a request for permission to place a memorial plaque in the city center in honor of Nava Semel, will be submitted by the Jewish community, with the aim of dedicating it in 2020.

CHERNIVTSI, UKRAINE, September 23, 2019 /Neptune100/ — Dozens of local citizens, prominent officials and 70 members of the Limmud FSU Ukraine organizing committee who arrived in the city this past weekend to plan the annual event which will take place this October in Odessa, took part in the launch of an exhibition honouring two Israeli cultural icons, the writers Aharon Appelfeld and Nava Semel, both of whom had a close connection to the city of Chernivtsi, also widely known as Czernovitz, with its deep historical and important Jewish heritage.

Appelfeld and Semel wrote extensively about the city and an exhibition – “My Chernivtsi – two authors, two generations “- on display at the State University of Chernivtsi, tells the story of this connection and its effect on their creative work. The exhibition was initiated by Limmud FSU founder Chaim Chesler, and curated by Dr. Joel Rappel, the founder of the Elie Wiesel archives in Boston University.

As part of the launch at the university a symposium on the life of the two writers was held with the participation of leading local officials, including the mayor of Chernivtsi, Oleksii Kaspruk, Vice – Governor of the Chernivtsi region, Vasilii Gostyuk, Chairman of the Jewish community of Chernivtsi, Ilya Hoch, the Chief Rabbi of the Chernivtsi region Menachem-Mendel Glitsenstein, the Vice-Rector of Chernivtsi State University, Tamara Marusik, among others.

Following the event, it was announced that, in the wake of Limmud FSU’s initiative, a request for permission to place a memorial plaque in the city center in honor of Nava Semel, will be submitted by the Jewish community of Chernivtsi to the local authorities, with the aim of dedicating it in 2020.

The acclaimed novelist, Ervin (later Aharon) Appelfeld was born in Bukovina near Chernivtsi (then in Romania) in 1932. In 1941, when he was nine years old, the Romanian Army retook his hometown after a year of Soviet occupation and his mother was murdered. Appelfeld was deported with his father to a forced labor camp. He escaped and hid for three years before joining the Soviet army.

After World War II, Appelfeld spent several months in a displaced persons camp in Italy before immigrating to Palestine in 1946. One of Israel’s most prominent literary figures, he won the Israel Prize in 1983. Philip Roth once called him a “displaced writer of displaced fiction who has made of displacement and disorientation a subject uniquely his own.”

Award-winning Israeli author and playwright Nava Semel, who died in 2017, wrote some 20 works of fiction, plays, scripts and opera libretti. Her short story collection Kova Zekhukhit (“Hat of Glass”) was one of the first literary attempts to address the topic of the so-called “Second Generation” – the children of Holocaust survivors. Semel’s parents were from Chernivtsi, and she frequently mentioned the city in her stories. Her husband, Noam Semel, the long-time director of the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv, attended the exhibition launch, together with their daughter, Ealeal Semel, also a theater director.

Noam Semel said: “This event was a very emotional for me, my daughter and for our family. Nava was not born in Chernivtsi and did not actually live there, but she wrote about it as if she did, with her parent’s experiences beautifully reflected in her stories. We are very excited about the possibility of the city honouring Nava with a memorial.”

Limmud FSU founder Chaim Chesler added; “This is our first time in Chernivtsi, a city so full of rich Jewish history, and many notable people who were born or had deep roots here. Holding our Limmud FSU Ukraine volunteers’ seminar and the special exhibition here – are proof that Jewish history is not forgotten.”

Vice-Governor of the Chernivtsi region Vasilii Gostyuk remarked that: “We are grateful for this unique opportunity from which we can learn, so we can tell people more about our joint history and appreciate it.”

The preparatory seminar in Chernivtsi took place with the generous support of the Pincus Fund for Jewish Education, and the Hesed – Shushan charitable fund.

The Limmud FSU Ukraine 2019 festival is scheduled to place on October 31-November 2 in Odessa, with several hundred participants. It is led by Limmud FSU Executive Director Roman Kogan, Project Manager Galina Rybnikova, chair of programming committee Lera Ogorodnyk, chair of volunteers committee Dasha Yefimenko, chair of the public relations committee Yevgeniy Khorzgevskiy, chair of the special events committee Valeria Kholodova, chair of participants care committee Olena Kolpakova, chair of logistics committee Katya Zubko and many more.

Photos courtesy of Limmud FSU.