Post-Soviet Jewry in Transition
At the same time, about 900,000 Jews and their family members still live in post-Soviet countries, despite certain negative demographic trends. Post-Soviet Jews around the globe maintain customs, worldviews, and networks of their own, produce new subcultural realities, and are active in the public sphere.
They form a new, transnational subethnic group of Jewish people, a new Russian-speaking Diaspora, whose collective identification appears against the backdrop of a gradual decay of the former Soviet Jewish identities. Most Russian-speaking Jews enjoy their own networks and infrastructures in local communities, embodying a changing balance of identification between country-of-residence and the broader transnational Russian-speaking Jewish Diaspora.
This series sheds light on post-Soviet Jewry across the globe, a new type of modern Jewish Diaspora in transition”.