Dov Schperling (Hebrew: דב שפרלינג, or Boris Shperling); (17 December 1937 – 5 Mar 2014) was a Zionist activist and leader who was amongst the first Jews to immigrate from the Soviet Union to Israel. He began his Zionist advocacy during the reign of the communists in the Soviet Union, when such activity was illegal, and as a consequence was imprisoned in a Russian gulag for two years. After his released, he emigrated to Israel, there he continued his struggle for the freedom of Soviet Jews. He was a member of the Herut right wing party and was a delegate of the Jewish Agency to Austria.

Dov Schperling

Early life edit

Dov Schperling was born in 1937 in Riga, Latvia. His father Samuel (Sasha) was a soldier in the Latvian army and his mother was a housewife. In 1941, his mother fled with Dov from the advancing Nazi forces, to East USSR and his father joined the ranks of the Latvian division of the Red Army to fight against the Nazis. In 1945, after the liberation of Riga they returned and reunited with his father. His mother and his father, who worked in commerce, and Dov lived with three families of relatives in a two-room apartment. In 1950 his father died of a heart attack.

Politics in the Soviet Union edit

In 1955 he first heard the sounds of Israeli anthem ("The Hope") during a football match between the Israeli and Soviet Union teams, and although he did not know the anthem, hearing it for the first time gave him a strong sense of identity. In 1956, when he was a student at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics in Riga, he heard about the Israeli military operation "Operation Kadesh" during the Suez crisis. The description of the operation and events in Israel brought to his attention the power and capabilities of the State of Israel. This affected him greatly; he began to be an active Zionist and the Land of Israel became the center of his world. Dov began to distribute material about the land of Israel and the Jewish people to Jews of his age.[1] Schperling was imprisoned for two years in the camp,[2] where he met other dissidents, including Joseph Schneider, David Chavkin, Alec (Elhanan) Feldman,[3] maintaining contact with them throughout his life. In the camp, his connection with Judaism and the Zionist ideal grew and he began studying Hebrew.

When he returned to Riga in 1959, he became a prominent figure in the Zionist underground in the city.[4] Along with other idealists like him, he copied Zionist writings, including "Exodus" and distributed the material to many areas of the USSR.[5]

Emigration to Israel edit

After the Six-Day War, Soviet authorities wanted to get rid of "problematic" Zionist activists and as a consequence, Dov immigrated to Israel in 1968. After he immigrated to Israel, Dov continued to fight for the right of Soviet Jewish immigration, even when the methods of this struggle were not accepted by the Israeli establishment.[6] Dov rallied the Israeli University Students Association to his struggle, organized rallies, met with key figures across the country[7] and used the media and other means to enable the immigration of Russian Jews to Israel.

Political activism edit

 
Dov Schperling addressing students during a rally in Jerusalem for the Freedom of Soviet Jews

During the late 1960s and early 1970s he traveled to different cities in the world to hold demonstrations, often unconventional, and campaigns for freedom of emigration-Aliyah to Israel. In 1970, he flew to New York,[8] along with the fellow immigration activist Jacob Kedmi (Yasha Kazakov),[9] who went on to become the head of the Nativ organization. There they had a nine-day hunger strike in front of the United Nations.[10] The strike made waves in Israel and around the world,[11] during which Kedmi devised the slogan "Let my people go", that became a symbol of the struggle for Jewish immigration.[12] In 1971, Schperling was one of eight former Soviet Jews who cabled American Jewish leaders protesting their denunciations of the Jewish Defense League and calling the League's activities "most effective."[13] He claimed that a recent cancellation of the Bolshoi Ballet's scheduled American tour was forced by the Jewish Defense League and hailed it as the first public surrender by Soviet authorities to Jewish pressure.[14] Over the years, Dov was active in the Herut [Israeli right wing] Central Committee.[15] In 1979 he joined the Department of Soviet Union Immigration of the Jewish Agency. Later on, Dov was the head of the Jewish Agency for Israel delegation in Vienna,[16] and the head of the Jewish agency travel department.[17]

 
Dov Schperling with prime minister Menahem Begin and IDF commander in chief Ariel Sharon

Family and heritage edit

In 1973 Dov Schperling married Ella Clear and had their daughter Rachel and their sons Schmuel and Yair. After retiring from the Jewish Agency, he received an award from the Keren Hayesod foundation for his struggle for Soviet Jewry, was interviewed by the Israeli Kneset channel, and appeared in a television event in honor of Geulah Cohen.

Dov Schperling died from cancer in 2014. A memorial event was held in the Jabotinsky Institute,[18] hosted by the head of the institute, Yossi Achimeir. Schperling was mourned by Silva Zalmanson, Jacov Kedmi, Geulah Cohen (who due to her medical condition sent a letter that was read in the event), friends and his sons Schmuel and Yair.

In 2019 the "Dov Schperling Plaza" was inaugurated in Hatsvi 10 street, outside the central station in Jerusalem.

 
The sign of the Dov Schperling Plaza in Jerusalem

References edit

  1. ^ Yosef Mendelevich; Iosif Mendelevich (2012). Unbroken Spirit: A Heroic Story of Faith, Courage, and Survival. Gefen Publishing House Ltd. p. 16. ISBN 978-965-229-563-7.
  2. ^ The Jewish Spectator."Dov Sperling". School of the Jewish Woman. 1982. p. 61.
  3. ^ "Jewish activism, leadership and All Union Coordination Committee (VKK)Yuli Kosharovsky". Kosharovsky.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  4. ^ Leonard Schroeter (1 January 1979). The Last Exodus. "Dov Shperling". University of Washington Press. pp. 71–. ISBN 978-0-295-95685-5.
  5. ^ Bet ha-tefutsot ʻal shem Naḥum Goldman (2007). Jews of struggle: the Jewish national movement in the USSR, 1967–1989."Dov Shperling". בית התפוצות על שם נחום גולדמן. pp. 15, 182. ISBN 9789654250146.
  6. ^ Meir Kahane (24 October 2000). The story of the Jewish Defense League. "Dov Sperling". Institute for Publication of the Writings of Rabbi Meir Kahane. pp. 10, 52, 150. ISBN 978-965-7044-04-9.
  7. ^ Libby Kahane (2008). Rabbi Meir Kahane: 1932-1975."Dov Sperling". Institute for the Publication of the Writings of Rabbi Meir Kahane. pp. 348, 606, 618. ISBN 978-965-524-008-5.
  8. ^ Response."Dov Shperling". Response. 1979. p. 11.
  9. ^ "ארכיון ActivePaper". Jpress.org.il. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  10. ^ Noam Kochavi (2 July 2010). Nixon and Israel: Forging a Conservative Partnership."Dov Sperling". SUNY Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-4384-2787-4.
  11. ^ AMERICAN BUSINESS DIRECTIONS."Dov Sperling". 1947. pp. ix, 236.
  12. ^ Jewish Affairs."Dov Sperling". Jewish Board of Deputies. 1970. p. 32.
  13. ^ "Former Soviet Jew, Brought to U.S. by Jdl, Calls Violent Protests Unavoidable". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. January 26, 1971.
  14. ^ "Cabinet Condemns Violence in Struggle for Soviet Jews; Former Soviet Jews Applaud Jdl". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. January 18, 1971.
  15. ^ "ארכיון ActivePaper". Jpress.org.il. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  16. ^ http://www.csmonitor.com/1988/0929/oemi.html%7C"Dov Schperling"
  17. ^ Stuart Altshuler (1 January 2005). From Exodus to Freedom: A History of the Soviet Jewry Movement."Dov Sperling". Rowman & Littlefield. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-7425-4936-4.
  18. ^ "Google Translate". Retrieved 2014-08-04.

Sources edit

External links edit