A screening of the documentary film "Refusenik" at the Boulder Jewish Community Center on November1, 2009became the catalyst for the Boulder Action for Soviet Jewry Oral History Project. The film depicted the history of Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union during the 20th century, including the plight of Jewish "refuseniks," who were persecuted for seeking the human right to leave their country, and the American Soviet Jewry movement created to champion their cause. A local branch of this movement, Boulder Action for Soviet Jewry (BASJ), assisted refuseniks resettling in Boulder, Coloradobetween 1987 and 1997. The Boulder Action for Soviet Jewry Oral HistoryProject produceda comprehensive body of oral histories about the work of Boulder Action for Soviet Jewryby recording interviews with a cross-section of BASJ organizers, board leaders, volunteer host families, ESL tutors, and medical professionals.
Members of BASJ identified who should be interviewed, contacted each potential narrator so the oral historians had immediate credibility, and helped guide the development of interview topics with the advantage of insider knowledge. The, a program of the Boulder Public Library’s Carnegie Branch Library for Local History, brought 35 years of experience in the field of oral history and contributed a wealth of knowledge about oral history practice as well as the ability to archive and disseminate the oral histories through its existing online digital archive and social media vehicles such as a blog, Facebook, Tumblr, Vimeo, podcasts, and a YouTube channel.The Program in Jewish Studies at the University of Colorado offered an honors seminar as well as internships around theproject, allowing students to obtain a rich academic background in the subject as well as training as oral history interviewers.
The Boulder Action for Soviet Jewry Oral History Project produceda comprehensive body of oral histories about the work of BASJ by recording interviews with a cross-section of BASJ organizers, board leaders, volunteer host families, ESL tutors, and medical professionals, in addition to a former refusenik whose family plight helped to inspire creation of BASJ and multiple generations of new Americans from the former Soviet Union who benefited from and/or received services from BASJ when resettling in Boulder, Colorado, between 1987 and 1997. This body of oral histories constitutesa comprehensive historical resource for research and understanding of the significance of this human rights and refugee resettlement organization.
Theseoral histories are available through the at the Carnegie Branch for Local History of the Boulder Public Library. Together, these collectionsserve as primary sources of BASJ's work and constitute a comprehensive historical resource for research and understanding this Boulder human rights and refugee resettlement organization.