Maya Serebryanaya and Valeriy Utvenko dancing at the Halom JCC in Kiev
Maya Serebryanaya and Valeriy Utvenko dancing at the Halom JCC in KievCourtesy of Halom

Less than a year after it opened, this city’s American-style Jewish community center celebrated the first wedding by a couple who met here: a 68-year-old woman and a 72-year-old man who fell in love during one of the classes.

Maya Serebryanaya and Valeriy Utvenko civilly married earlier this month after meeting several months ago at Halom, the community center that opened in November in downtown Kiev with funding from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, or JDC.

“When we saw each other in Halom, we understood we’ll be together and we were waiting for Wednesday and Friday because every week both of us went to Halom for those programs,” Utvenko said. Both he and Serebryanaya had been married, but their spouses died.

To prepare for the marriage, Utvenko fixed up his Kiev apartment where he had lived alone, according to Anna Bodnar, the director of Halom.

“Their relationship came as a surprise to me, actually,” she said. “I thought they were just friends.”

Although the couple are the first to wed after meeting at Halom, interaction at its spacious offices helped formed at least one more couple – two septuagenarians who met under similar circumstances.

Kiev, where at least 100,000 Jews live, has several Jewish community centers, but nearly all of them are built around synagogues or Jewish community offices.

Re-creating the success of Odessa’s Beit Grand American-style JCC, which opened in 2008, Halom is the first purely cultural center for Jews of all ages in Kiev.

“In Halom we love to dance, watch concerts, take part in city tours of Jewish places and of course communicate with our friends here,” said Serebryanaya, adding that she “would not have even dreamed” of getting married before she began frequenting Halom.