Jimmy Carter was eulogized on January 9 at his state funeral in the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, in a hymn-laden, scripture-laced service recalling a lifetime of good deeds and spirituality. Overlooked in the tributes to the 39th US president and born-again evangelical Baptist – who died on December 29 at age 100 – was his critical role in 1979 in preventing the demolition of the mausoleum of Hassidic master Rebbe Nachman of Breslov (1772-1810) in Uman, Soviet Ukraine.

Nachman chose to buried in Uman’s Jewish cemetery – the site of a mass grave of the victims of the 1768 pogrom – after his home burned down in Breslov in 1810. The great-grandson of the Baal Shem Tov (c.1700-1760), who founded the Hassidic movement that swept across Eastern Europe, Nachman promised blessings for those who recited Psalms at his graveside. Since his followers never appointed a new rebbe, they became known as the “dead Hassidim.” Many became attracted by the movement’s outreach through music and Nachman’s enigmatic parables, which influenced Czech Jewish writer Franz Kafka.

Notwithstanding the Russo-Ukraine war, which has forced pilgrims to fly to Moldova to reach Ukraine, the shrine, 211 km. south of Kyiv, continues to attract tens of thousands annually, especially during the two-day Rosh Hashanah festival in September. During the Soviet era, however, the modest grave behind the Iron Curtain was infrequently visited and was in danger of being demolished. Local authorities planned to raze the ramshackle neighborhood built atop the historic cemetery in order to erect nine-story apartment blocks.

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