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18 things to know about Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Jewish defender of Ukrainian democracy

The Ukrainian president has galvanized his country against an unprovoked attack by neighboring Russia, inspiring Jews everywhere

On Dec. 21, 2022, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy made his first known wartime trip outside Ukraine to meet with President Joe Biden and address a joint session of Congress. In honor of this historic visit, we’re reposting 18 things you should know about the Jewish Ukrainian president.

(JTA) — The world has had a crash course on Volodymyr Zelenskyy as the Ukrainian president has galvanized his country against an unprovoked attack by neighboring Russia.

The broad strokes of Zelenskyy’s career have long been known to those who pay attention to Ukrainian politics — or to their spillover effects in American government. He’s young, funny, Jewish and committed to a strong democratic Ukraine, even at the risk of death. “I need ammunition, not a ride,” he reportedly told American authorities this week after they offered to evacuate him from Ukraine.

But as someone who has long been in the public eye, and not always in politics, Zelenskyy has left more to know than that. We scoured interviews in multiple languages, scrolled back through his social media posts and compiled some amazing YouTube clips to offer a more nuanced portrait.

Here are 18 things you should know about the man who has captured the world’s attention.

1. He had an “ordinary Soviet Jewish upbringing.” Zelenskyy told the Times of Israel in early 2020, on the eve of visiting Israel to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, that his family was typical of Soviet Jews in the 1980s when he was growing up. That meant, he said, that they were not religious, because “religion didn’t exist in the Soviet state as such.” Indeed, Jewish observance was illegal and Jews were routinely surveilled, although many Jews did preserve some elements of their Jewish identity as acts of resistance. If that was the case in Zelenskyy’s family, he hasn’t said so. “I never speak about religion and I never speak about God because I have my own personal opinion about it,” he said in the interview. “Of course, I believe in God. But I speak with him only in those moments which are personal for me.”

2. He grew up in what was once known as the “Pale of Settlement.” Like much of Ukraine, Zelenskyy’s hometown of Kryvyi Rih is located in the only region of the Russian Empire where Jews were permitted to live. The area, known as the Pale of Settlement, was formed in the late 18th and early 19th centuries after the Russian government barred Jews from living elsewhere under its supervision. Pogroms, or organized attacks against Jewish communities, originated in the Pale of Settlement and terrorized the Jews living there for generations.

3. As with most Ukrainian Jews, the Holocaust is part of his story. Zelenskyy has said that his great-grandfather and three of his grandfather’s brothers died as a result of the Nazi invasion of Ukrainian territory. His grandfather and his grandfather’s brothers took up arms against the Nazis in the Red Army; his grandfather was the only one to survive. He did not specify whether they died in combat or in the extended massacre of more than 1 million Ukrainian Jews that the Nazis carried out, often with local collaboration. His grandmother, he has said, survived because she left Kryvyi Rih for Kazakhstan; almost all of the Jews who remained were murdered. A Holocaust memorial not far from his parents’ home in Kryvyi Rih was defaced in January 2020.

4. He says being Jewish is a small part of his identity. Zelenskyy rarely discusses his Jewish identity publicly, and by all accounts it was not a prominent part of his campaign, even by his detractors. Asked about his Jewishness by the French Jewish philosopher Bernard-Henry Levi in early 2019, Zelenskyy declined to explore it at length, Levy wrote when the interview appeared in the French newspaper Le Point. “The fact that I am Jewish barely makes 20 in my long list of faults,” he told Levi.

Want to see Zelenskyy and his comedy partners say “L’chaim”? Head to 3:00 in this video, a skit from before Ukraine’s 2010 elections.

5. He has credited his Jewish parents with giving him his moral compass. Zelenskyy’s father, Oleksander, is a mathematician who heads a university computer science department; his mother Rimma was an engineer for many years. He said in a 2018 interview, shortly before officially running for president, that because of them, he is unable to accept lies. “I always react painfully to lies,” he said. “This is the main feature that my parents gave me.”

6. He has many personal ties to Israel. Zelenskyy has said he has relatives who moved to Israel in the 1990s, during the wave of Jewish emigration from the newly dissolved Soviet Union. He has also conducted business there as an actor and comedian, and performed in venues throughout the country. As Ukrainian president, he has visited just once, for the Holocaust commemoration shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic began. “I know Israel,” he said in the Times of Israel interview. “I know people there.”

7. Married for nearly two decades, he’s the father of two children. Zelenskyy dated his wife Olena, a school acquaintance 11 days his junior, for eight years before they married in September 2003. Their daughter Oleksandra was born the following year, and they had a son, Kyrylo, in 2013. Olena has been an advocate for women and children since Zelenskyy took office, and posted on Instagram about the bravery of Ukrainian women who are defending their country against the Russians. Zelenskyy has said that his family remains in Ukraine but that he will not disclose their location; he told CNN at one point that he had not seen them in three days.

8. He got a scholarship to study in Israel but didn’t go. In a 2018 interview with a friend from the entertainment industry, he described scoring so high on an international English exam that he had an opportunity after high school to study in Israel. Most of his classmates took advantage of the option — he named one woman specifically who moved to Israel — but he did not, saying that his father prohibited him from moving. He studied law in Ukraine instead.

9. He won the Ukrainian equivalent of Dancing with the Stars in 2006. A highlights reel of a 28-year-old Zelenskyy twisting and dipping in a series of outlandish outfits, including a pink leisure suit, went viral over the weekend.


10. His most prominent acting role foreshadowed his presidency. On the political satire TV show Servant of the People, Zelenskyy played a history teacher so outraged by government corruption that he runs for president — and stuns the country and himself by winning. Produced by Zelenskyy’s company, the show aired on Ukrainian television from 2015 to 2019, its final episode launching just weeks before Zelenskyy was himself elected president.

11. He voiced Paddington in the Ukrainian-dubbed versions of the Paddington movies. A clip about the movies’ dubbing shows the soon-to-be president giving his voice to a delightful cuddly CGI bear. At one point, Zelenskyy makes the sounds generated when Paddington sticks electric toothbrushes up his nose. The Paddington books were inspired by Jewish children who took refuge in England during World War II.

12. He has … unconventional piano skills. One piece of his comedy team’s shtick was to pound the keys with their pants at their ankles and their hands in the air — leaving little room for guessing how the music was getting made. One of their standbys: the Jewish classic “Hava Nagila.”


13. He likes dogs, working out and shawarma. Zelenskyy pre-presidency Instagram account reflects his passions from before he was responsible for representing Ukraine on the world stage. He frequently posted workout selfies, which continued at a less frequent pace after he became president. He also posted pictures of his dogs Peter and Nora. And shortly after taking office, he posted a picture of himself eating a shawarma sandwich, writing, “When you have a busy schedule, shawarma can be the solution. … For those in power, I recommend it!”

14. He went shirtless for his COVID vaccination. Most world leaders posted pictures of themselves with rolled-up sleeves getting their inoculations against COVID-19 in 2021. Zelenskyy went the distance, removing his shirt entirely, in a move that drew international side-eye. For another shirtless view, check out this 2014 video of his comedy troupe performing a parody of a popular Ukrainian band.

15. The conversation about casting his inevitable biopic has already started. It’s unclear how the Volodymyr Zelenskyy movie will end, but his admirers have already started suggesting stars to play him. One suggestion that appears to have gained steam is Jeremy Renner, who has acted in war films and bears a resemblance to Zelenskyy. But Renner is not Jewish, leading some to suggest that he would not be an appropriate choice. For his part, Zelenskyy was dismissive of the adulation in a CNN interview from his bunker, saying, “It’s very serious, it’s not a movie … I’m not iconic, I think Ukraine is iconic.”

17. He doesn’t like to lose. In the 2018 interview with his entertainment industry friend, Zelenskyy characterized himself as someone who commits to a fight for the long haul — a resonant idea as his country nears the end of its first week at war with Russia. “I’m such a guy that if I get involved in a battle, I usually don’t get out of it. I can lose, but go out in the middle of it … no,” he said. “The white flag is not our flag!”

18. People who know him say he is who he seems right now. “I’ve always thought he is a person who has a profound sense of right and wrong,” a senior adviser to Zelenskyy told the Washington Post on the condition of anonymity. “He will never acquiesce when he thinks something is wrong.” The newspaper asked the adviser whether he believed Zelenskyy was prepared to die. “The adviser answered without hesitation: ‘Yes.’”


The post 18 things to know about Volodymyr Zelenskyy, showman, ‘Paddington’ voice and Jewish defender of Ukrainian democracy appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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