As war rages, IDF soldiers from Ukraine reunite with families in Moldova

CHISINAU, Moldova — For young immigrants to Israel who make the move on their own and enlist in the Israel Defense Forces, the physical distance from their countries of birth and rigors of intensive military service pose significant hurdles to seeing their families.

While that divide can always be a strain on so-called lone soldiers and their relatives — particularly during the Jewish High Holidays which begin Sunday evening with Rosh Hashanah — the feeling of being apart has taken on a whole new meaning for soldiers originally from Ukraine, whose loved ones have been living in a country wracked by war since Russia invaded seven months ago.

Beyond the inherent risks of traveling to a war zone, as well as Kyiv’s current ban on flights, many of these troops would be unable to return to Israel if they visited their families, due to the Ukrainian prohibition on fighting-age males from leaving the country.

The families, meanwhile, face steep challenges to exiting Ukraine beyond the absence of commercial flights, including the dangers of traversing areas close to the front or which are liable to be attacked, and the need to care for relatives who are unable or unwilling to leave.

To overcome these difficulties and enable some lone soldiers from Ukraine to be with their families for Rosh Hashanah, a group of 19 such troops was recently flown from Israel to Moldova while their families were bused in from next door.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to the terms

The trip and complex logistics involved – including the need to shuttle the relatives across the border – were arranged by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. The charity drew on its work assisting lone soldiers in Israel, as well as its role in facilitating immigration from Ukraine through Moldova since Russia launched its invasion on February 24.

A delegation of IDF lone soldiers organized by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews is seen at Ben Gurion Airport prior to departure for Chisinau, Moldova, to see their families from Ukraine, September 18, 2022. (Chen Schimmel)

According to the Israel Defense Forces, there are currently around 370 serving troops who moved to Israel from Ukraine. These soldiers’ service conditions have not changed because of the war, but the IDF stressed that commanders “take the issue into consideration and make accommodations to make it easier for soldiers whose families live in combat zones.”

‘Your parents are there and you’re here’

As the flight ferrying the soldiers touched down in Moldova’s capital Chisinau early on Monday morning, September 19, two mothers who came early were on hand to greet their children at the airport.

“As we left [passport control] I saw her and started crying… It was really moving,” Yelyzaveta Kudriavtseva said of the moment she saw her mother Yelena.

Kudriavtseva, a soldier in the Home Front Command’s Search-and-Rescue Brigade, recalled her initial sense of fear as the invasion began and the difficulty to determine the situation on the ground amid the fog of war.

“On the first days it was very scary to know your parents are there and you’re here. You can’t help, don’t really know what is going on,” she said. “All the time you think about if everything is alright.”

Yelyzaveta Kudriavtseva and her mother Yelena in Chisinau, Moldova, September 19, 2022. (Chen Schimmel)

Kudriavtseva said she never lever lost contact with her family and that there is now a certain sense of normality after seven months of fighting. In her unit, she is the only soldier to come from Ukraine.

“At first it was really discussed and now it’s every once-in-a-while. There is still a war,” she said. “Everyone looks out for me. They give me a lot of attention.”

She also emphasized there were “no fights” with comrades who came to Israel from Russia. “It’s all good. Here they understand the situation. They are supportive, understanding… ask if I need help.”

Kudriavtseva, who moved to Israel to complete high school before enlisting, also has an older brother in the country. She said her parents have Israeli citizenship but did not want to make Aliyah — the Hebrew term for immigrating to Israel — before the war, as “they have a home, friends and everything.”

Even after Russia’s invasion, she continues to have mixed feelings about her parents moving to Israel, as they do not know Hebrew or “have anything” in the country. She said it would be difficult to help them out, between her brother’s work and her own service in a combat unit. She added that her father is barred from leaving due to being in the fighting-age range, and her mother could not leave her father there alone.

“When everything works out, we do want them to come,” Kudriavtseva said.

‘Respect my decision to stay’

Other troops on the trip recounted talking with their parents about moving to Israel due to the war, but being rebuffed.

Corp. Emil Allakhverdieev, 20, said his mother and younger brother came to Israel after fthe ighting started, but his father would not.

“I wanted to bring him to Israel, but he refused to leave. He said if there is a war somewhere, men don’t flee war,” said Allakhverdieev, who serves in the Golani infantry brigade’s reconnaissance battalion. “He contributes and does everything he can for the Ukrainian military to defeat the Russians who came to take over the land.”

Allakhverdieev is the first of the family to see his father Rafik, one of the only male relatives permitted by Ukrainian authorities to travel to Moldova for the trip from his home in Odesa.

Corp. Emil Allakhverdieev and his father Rafik pose for a selfie in Chisinau, Moldova, on September 19, 2022. (Chen Schimmel)

According to Allakhverdieev, his father — a Muslim originally from Azerbaijan — had wanted him to move to Israel since he was a young child so he could enlist in the IDF and live in the Jewish state. The trip marked the first time in three years they were together in person.

“I was really moved. I was not in touch with him. I didn’t know where he was, when he would arrive,” Allakhverdieev said of the initial reunion with his father.

“I don’t care how I spend the time with him, I just want to be together with him, speak with him, hear stories,” he added.

Allakhverdieev said that while in Israel he texts with his dad every day and continues to feel “a sort of anxiety” over the fighting in Ukraine, but also touted the support he receives from his fellow troops and commanders.

“All my friends in the army are always with me. They ask me how’s my dad, how’s my family, if I need anything, if I’m missing something,” he said.

Staff Sgt. Elizabet Zborowski, 22, of the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps also said she speaks regularly with her mother, with the frequency of their contacts increasing because of the war.

Her family lives in the central Ukrainian city of Vinnytsia which, though well away from the front, has been targeted in Russian missile attacks, including a strike in July that left 25 dead.

“I always need to check how they’re doing and everything,” she explained.

Zborowski described a mix of feelings upon seeing her mom, which she attributed to not being together in person for over a year as well as the ongoing war.

“It’s all together — it’s good but also sad,” she said.

Staff Sgt. Elizabet Zborowski and her mother in Chisinau, Moldova, September 24, 2022. (Chen Schimmel)

Zborowski, who moved to Israel at 15 to finish high school, also said her family’s perception about her service in a combat unit has evolved.

“I can really remember the moment when I told my family that I want to be a combat soldier. It was a serious blowup,” she recalled, citing their concerns of her being injured in either training or operational activities. “The feelings [now] are really different, it’s more pride.”

While Zborowski has lobbied her mother to join her in Israel, her mom does not want to leave Ukraine.

“She has her life in Ukraine and is really connected,” Zborowski said. “Of course, I tried to convince [her], but she told me, ‘I respected your request to move [to Israel] at 15, so respect my decision to stay.’”

‘A lot of challenges’

As part of the trip, a festive Rosh Hashanah meal was held for the families so they could celebrate the upcoming Jewish New Year together, along with a visit to a winery and a tour of several Jewish sites in Chisinau.

The latter included a wreath-laying ceremony at the memorial for the infamous 1903 pogrom in the city, then part of the Russian Empire, during which 49 Jews were killed over a “blood libel” that claimed a member of the Jewish community murdered a Christian child for ritual purposes. The massacre is seen as a turning point in Jewish history that ushered in a new form of antisemitic persecution.

Alexander Vinaru and Anatoly Zarik, two members of the local Jewish community who took part in the event, said local Jews do not forget the massacre and come regularly to clean the memorial.

The two added that they were moved to see Israeli soldiers at the site, as proof that they too have not forgotten the pogrom.

They also said ties between Moldova and Ukraine have always been good, both at the national and personal levels, and that this has remained the case as the fighting rages next door.

Shoulder tags bearing the insignia of IDF units are placed on a memorial to the 1903 Kishinev Pogrom, in Chisinau, Moldova, September 20, 2022. (Chen Schimmel)

Moldova, like other countries on Ukraine’s western border, has seen an influx of refugees due to the war. According to the UN Refugee Agency, over 91,000 Ukrainian refugees have been recorded in Moldova.

Along with Poland, Moldova has served as a key transit country for those fleeing the war and moving to Israel.

“When the war broke out, we understood aliyah from Ukraine became a completely different scenario, with people just fleeing to neighboring countries. There are thousands who want to move to Israel,” said Benny Hadad, the head of the IFJC’s Aliyah and Immigration Absorption Department.

At the outset of the war, Hadad said his organization and the Jewish Agency agreed to join forces rather than work in parallel, with the latter tasked with bringing immigrants from Ukraine to Israel through Poland and the former through Moldova.

The IFCJ then moved to set up a logistical support system in Moldova to enable and smooth the immigration process. The group used that same infrastructure to arrange bringing the parents of the lone soldiers to Chisinau.

“This delegation combines our activities… Aliyah is not only flying someone. There is a lot of background work, explaining and preparation and work within Ukraine,” Hadad said.

Benny Hadad of the International Fellowship for Christians and Jews speaks with IDF lone soldiers who immigrated from Ukraine and their families, in Chisinau, Moldova, September 19. 2022. (Alexander Fulbright/Times of Israel)

He noted some of the difficulties in bringing the families on buses from Kyiv and Odesa to Moldova, including “technical reasons” that prevented some relatives from coming, including the exit ban on males and Ukraine’s refusal to let one of the mothers leave the country because of an unpaid debt.

Other complications included curfews that prohibit overnight travel and the breakdown of the bus from Odesa near the border, requiring another bus to be sent from Chisinau to retrieve the family members. A soldier’s mother who now lives in Montenegro had to fly back a day after arriving due to the requirements of her refugee status there.

“There were a lot of challenges,” Hadad said. “We did what was in our power.”

He added that it was too early to say whether there would be further such reunions involving additional soldiers.

“Personally, I would be happy to do other things like this, it’s moving and brings happiness,” he said.


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

3:16 At least 16 killed, dozens injured in mass shooting in Maine
2:46 French soccer league suspends player for sharing antisemitic social media post
1:59 Biden and PM discuss freeing hostages held by Hamas, letting foreigners out of Gaza
1:35 ‘Glory to our martyrs’ protected onto building at George Washington University
1:35 ‘Glory to our martyrs’ projected onto building at George Washington University
1:11 Ministry issues ‘protocol for treatment’ of freed captives after press event slammed
0:51 Biden: There’s no going back to pre-war status quo, there must be vision of 2 states
23:23 Cooper Union Jewish students attacked by pro-Palestinian student group
23:23 WATCH: Cooper Union Jewish students attacked by pro-Palestinian student group
22:14 Settlers rampage through Palestinian olive grove, harass activists in West Bank
22:12 Nineteen days since the massacre, Israel has achieved nothing. It’s time to go in
22:10 Israeli and Jewish-owned restaurants in the US are raising money for Hamas victims
22:09 The war with Hamas could threaten Israel’s imports
21:27 6 lightly hurt following rocket barrage from Gaza toward central, southern Israel
21:27 6 lightly hurt in rocket barrage from Gaza toward central, southern Israel
21:15 Irish Wix employee fired for inflammatory posts about Israel-Hamas war
20:51 UN chief doubles down on Hamas remarks, decries ‘misrepresentations’
20:50 Israeli Opera soloists sing ‘Bring Him Home,’ for Gaza captives
20:09 Netanyahu: Following war, everyone will have to answer for failures, ‘including me’
20:09 Netanyahu: After the war, everyone will have to answer for failures, ‘including me’
20:05 Ending weeks of gridlock, Republicans elect Trump ally Mike Johnson as House speaker
19:17 Israel said to delay Gaza invasion to allow US to bolster air defenses in region
19:09 500 Hamas, PIJ terrorists trained for October 7 attack in Iran last month – report
19:04 Danny Vovk, 45: ZAKA diver fended off 20 terrorists before death
18:57 Palestinian arrested in Brussels for talk about planning a suicide bombing
18:50 Noam Slotki, 31, Yishay Slotki, 24: Brothers fought and died together
18:46 Barkat slams Treasury, presents rival emergency aid plan for war-affected businesses
18:41 Sgt. Yarin Peled, 20: Medic who scrawled last request facing death
18:39 Serving up love: Israelis see war as catalyst to matchmake
18:35 Ben Mizrachi, 22: Former IDF medic killed while helping others
17:52 Senate panel okays Biden’s pick for Israel envoy, with final vote likely next week
17:37 NYPD data shows spike in antisemitic attacks during Israel-Hamas war
17:28 Germany seeks to bar antisemites from gaining citizenship amid spike in incidents
17:25 4 עקרונות מפתח לחינוך בעת מלחמה
16:59 Arab Israeli actress freed to house arrest amid alleged Hamas support
15:18 משרד הבריאות: חטופים שישוחררו יטופלו במתחם נפרד בבית החולים
15:18 חטופים שישוחררו יטופלו במתחם נפרד: "לתעד עדויות לפשעי מלחמה"
15:18 מתחם נפרד לטיפול בחטופים הבאים שישוחררו: "לתעד פשעי מלחמה"
15:08 Jordan queen skeptical Israeli children were beheaded by Hamas during onslaught
15:05 Hostage negotiators say pilloried Israeli envoy a nonfactor in talks
14:49 Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen resumes testimony in business fraud lawsuit
14:48 Rights group reports over 100 assaults by settlers on Palestinians since war’s start
13:36 בגלל מחסור במאבטחים: בתי החולים הונחו לגבש כיתות כוננות
13:05 "הקליעים חוררו את הציורים": האמנית זיוה ילין הצילה את עבודותיה מקיבוץ בארי
12:55 "החזרה לשגרה של הילדים האלה היא המשימה הגדולה שלנו כמבוגרים"
12:24 יהיה בסדר? סמוטריץ', תקשיב לרופאים | טור
10:37 השר עמיחי אליהו: "לסגור את התאגיד, הוא מחליש את הרוח"
8:14 מאמר בכתב עת רפואי: "ישראל תקפה את בית החולים בעזה, הכיבוש אשם"
10:18 בואו נדבר על ביטחון: האם ללמוד בבית ספר או בזום?
8:52 אנשי החינוך, אתם המנהיגים האמיתיים שלנו
11:35 Gaza group threatens renewal of border clashes, blaming ‘desecration’ of Temple Mount
11:21 Daily Briefing Oct. 1: How ‘Jewish space missiles’ will soon protect Germany’s skies
10:25 This artist sees romantic realism at the beach, in a hammock and on the street
10:25 Artist sees romantic realism at the beach, in a hammock and on the street
10:15 Dingy carrying foreign nationals’ ID papers, but no people, washes up in Netanya
9:43 סרטן שד בישראל: פחות נשים מאובחנות, יותר נשים מאובחנות בשלב מוקדם
8:53 אישה אושפזה במצב קשה ברמב"ם עקב שתיית אלכוהול מזויף
8:37 Suicide bomber detonates device in Turkish capital, wounding 2 police officers
8:33 Pro-Russia former premier leads leftist party to victory in Slovakia elections
8:15 After 75 years, IDF identifies remains of soldier killed in War of Independence
7:58 After shots fired, kibbutz residents enter nearby Palestinian village
7:32 גילי ניצלה ממפרצת נדירה, המנתח: "כזה דבר לא ראיתי מעולם"
7:24 Explosion heard in Turkish capital, media report
5:59 Palestinian-Italian student, held by Israel for a month, faces court hearing
5:00 מה הקשר בין אהוד אולמרט לרוברט דה נירו?
4:05 כל מה שרצית לדעת על הנקה: התנוחה, התדירות והקשיים | המדריך המלא
3:56 כוננות שפעת: עלייה באשפוזי ילדים בחצי הכדור הדרומי
3:49 Yom Kippur War a needed ‘slap in the face,’ says vet who helped reverse battle’s tide
2:59 NJ megamall to offer gender-segregated swimming on Sukkot for Orthodox clientele
2:11 Is Poland’s government shooting itself in the foot with its cooling stance on Ukraine?
1:29 Threat of shutdown ends as Congress passes temporary funding plan, sends it to Biden
1:18 Jimmy Carter admirers across generations celebrate former president’s 99th birthday
0:58 IDF reportedly strikes Iranian weapons shipment near Damascus
0:13 Haredi MK: Yom Kippur scuffles prove anti-gov’t protesters waging ‘religious war’
22:34 90% of ethnic Armenians flee Karabakh enclave overrun by Azerbaijan army
22:13 Democrat pulls fire alarm in House building amid vote on bill to prevent shutdown
21:35 Last-gasp House drama moves US away from government shutdown
21:20 Dozens arrested in Iran in demonstration commemorating ‘Bloody Friday’ anniversary
20:45 Five dead, five hurt in Illinois collision that leaked toxic substance
20:32 Eritrean man stabbed to death in Netanya, in latest brawl between migrants
20:29 Female prison guards, officials to be questioned over alleged sex scandal
19:32 New York City begins to dry out after record rainfall, intense flooding
19:31 ‘You won’t divide us’: Protesters against overhaul rally for a 39th weekend
18:59 Azerbaijan says serviceman killed by sniper, Armenia denies incident
18:43 Head of think tank behind overhaul push says it was rushed, poorly prepared
18:24 Arab man shot and killed in north, community’s 11th murder this week
16:08 Man stabbed to death in Jerusalem in apparent criminal incident
16:05 Women of the Senate remember Dianne Feinstein as tireless fighter, true friend
15:46 Chicago Sukkot festival reflects on complex history between city’s Blacks and Jews
14:07 Netanyahus set to vacation again at Golan Heights hotel, despite local opposition
13:54 A New York exhibit explores the etrog’s journey around the Jewish world
13:54 Thick-skinned world traveler: NYC exhibit explores the life and times of the etrog
11:04 Musk wades into German political debate over migrant ‘invasion’
10:17 יותר מ-100 אלף איש ברחו לארמניה: "האזרים ישחטו את כולם"
10:15 Thousands expected at 39th week of anti-overhaul demonstrations
10:15 Tens of thousands expected at 39th week of anti-overhaul demonstrations
9:33 Putin marks anniversary of annexation of Ukrainian regions as drones attack
8:41 Jerusalem Latin Patriarch among 21 new cardinals anointed by Pope
6:42 US on brink on government shutdown, funding chaos
5:37 US pro-Palestinian group lauds Second Intifada that ‘renewed flame of resistance’