| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1203.1 | Some tips on how to help | CXCAD::BERZON |  | Wed Apr 08 1992 03:13 | 29 | 
|  |     I still have some close relatives stuck (hopefully for not too much longer)
    in that hell of a country.  They are also in Kiev.  My father is
    constantly coming up with new ways of getting food to them.  There is a
    company that advertises in Novoye Russkoye Slovo, that will
    deliver alot of food to your relatives in a few large cities (including
    Kiev) for around $20.  Also King Soopers (a subsidiary of Kroger foods
    operating in Colorado) had a list that you could put names on, and they
    would than deliver food (to people in the former USSR) at no charge.  A
    friend of mine in San Francisco said that he could not find any Jewish 
    efforts to send food over there, but he found a Russian Orthodox Church
    that took donations to send food to people needing help (no particular
    names.)  But all of the above efforts provide only non-kosher food
    - not that it matters for 99.99% of Jews in Russia.  However, if it
    does matter, the only way I know of sending kosher food over there is
    by hooking up with some orhodox Jewish tourists, who will almost always
    let it be well known (within the community) that they are soon to visit
    the former Soviet Union, and will volunteer to take kosher food to your
    relatives. 
    
    By the way if you want to wire money directly to your relatives I know
    that it is very possible.  The only problem is that they may not be
    able to access that money. (Oh well!)  Alternatively you could find
    transfers of $1 here for 100 or so Rubles over there on the black
    market.  I hear that you can exchange the two currencies freely at the
    banks over there at widely ranging exchange rates, but beware the rules
    of this game change at least daily.
    
    Jake
    
 | 
| 1203.2 | I can personally help a little... | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Wed Apr 08 1992 14:14 | 13 | 
|  | 
	I travel to Poland at least twice a month - I can bring money to
	relatives there (I have already done this once).  In Poland, the
	situation is not as bad as in USSR-zt"l, but $100 is about
	the average monthly salary, and amounts like $20 can really
	significantly help people out.
	I will probably be travelling to Moscow and other places in Russia
	starting next month, and would be willing to make the same offer.
	(We're also travelling to Bulgaria, if that's of interest...)
don feinberg
 | 
| 1203.3 | Cash delivered in Moscow ... | DSSDEV::TENENBAUM |  | Wed Apr 08 1992 17:21 | 6 | 
|  |     Probably, I can help. I have a friend who frequently travels to Russia
    And we used to use these trips to deliver cash to our friends and
    relatives. If somebody has relatives in area of Moscow - let
    me know :
    Boris Tenenbaum,
    DTN 381-2299, e-mail DSSDEV::TENENBAUM
 | 
| 1203.4 | Caveat canem... | TAVIS::JUAN |  | Thu Apr 09 1992 10:38 | 15 | 
|  | 
    I don't know what the legal status of bringing cash money to Russia
    is now.
    There are countries where you have to declare any amount of money you
    bring in and report how you spent it, where all transfers of money
    to local residents _must_ go thru official banks and/or channels.
    If there is a chance that bringing cash with you may not be "Kosher"
    according to the local country regulations, I would like to suggest 
    you should be careful on where and how you write about it.
    Regards,
    Juan-Carlos 
 | 
| 1203.5 | Poland - yes; Russia - <tbd> | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Thu Apr 09 1992 13:35 | 21 | 
|  | >    I don't know what the legal status of bringing cash money to Russia
>    is now.
>
>    There are countries where you have to declare any amount of money you
>    bring in and report how you spent it, where all transfers of money
>    to local residents _must_ go thru official banks and/or channels.
	In Poland, they officially don't care.  You fill in a foreign
	currency form at the airport listing how much of what you're
	bringing in, and they stamp it.  My observation is that amounts
	less than a few thousand dollars are greeted by little more
	than a snore, as the clerk wakes up long enough to stamp the
	form.
	In Russia, I don't know, but I will be finding out (officially).
	I have observed large quantities of dollars going across the
	Polish-Russian border without interference; the practical
	answer may be that illegal or legal, the Russian government is 
	clearly not doing anything about it.
 | 
| 1203.6 | Russia is "OK" 2... | CXCAD::BERZON |  | Fri Apr 10 1992 00:47 | 18 | 
|  |     I was in Russia three (long) years ago.  At that time they cared very
    much about what you did with the $ you brought into the country - you
    could not spend it anywhere other than the one or two official hard
    currency stores, or you could exchange them $1 to 0.65 Rubles at the
    "bank".  You had to keep receipts and so on.  There were the
    declaration forms on entry and exit from the country.  However even 
    back then they didn't check the accuracy of your declarations (for
    reasonably small accounts.)  
    Now that the country has collapsed, they are starving for hard
    currency.  The government does not care how it gets $.  They even made
    it legal for citizens to buy stuff in the hard currency stores, that where
    previously restricted only to the foreign nationals and Soviet citizens
    able to explain where they got the $ (Wow, what a concept!)  They do
    change rules all the time and all the place, but I wouldn't worry too
    much about bringing in an extra $100. (You could fill out an entry form
    saying you have $100 less, if that makes you feel safer... So, you are
    not so good at counting money, that's why you are (not) a millionaire.)
    
 |