Announcements

Greetings from Lithuanian Jewish Community Chairwoman Faina Kukliansky

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Dear members of the Jewish community, greetings to all on this holiday of Hanukkah!

I hope good feelings and warm and pleasant moments with loved ones will accompany you as you light the first Hanukkah candle. I wish you health and concord in your family, and that our children would grow up safe, dignified and happy and be proud of their parents and their roots.

It is a happy thing that there is ever-growing interest in the rich history of the Jews, and I probably won’t be making a mistake to say that there was never so much interest in the Jewish community as there is now, although so few Jews are left in Lithuania. The Jewish Community works actively to insure the rights and freedoms of our members and to promote Jewish interests. Unfortunately we weren’t able to achieve all our goals in 2016, but we will continue to strive after them in the coming year: monuments to those who shot Jews need to be removed, and Vilnius needs to have a monument commemorating those who rescued Jews from the Holocaust. We will continue to work on the issue of restitution of private property.

The Jewish Community is investing in the future, issuing scholarships and stipends for Jewish students and accomplished athletes. Plans for a new kindergarten have been completed, a kindergarten which will insure Jewish values are passed down to the youngest members of our community and prepare them for further education at the Jewish school.

One of the Lithuanian Jewish Community’s top priorities is to improve the living conditions of clients in our Social Programs Department. We help when emergencies and misfortune occur. This will remain our priority in 2017. We also help rescuers of Jews, whose humility and sincere gratitude encourage us to grow and improve. I would like to thank Jewish rescuer Regina for the gloves and socks she knitted.

The Community building itself has become lighter and cozier. We have new audio-visual equipment in the Community concert hall and there are always new and different exhibitions on display. It’s a great joy that there is cultural life, ferment and creativity in the community, and that performers from Lithuania, Israel, the USA, the Netherlands, Romania and other countries perform concerts here. It is also a happy occasion that we have deepened our contacts with the foreign embassies, other countries, municipal institutions and NGOs. Thanks to this cooperation legal amendments were finally adopted to make it easier for Litvaks to restore Lithuanian citizenship. We signed an agreement on cooperation with the American Jewish Committee, we are enjoying wonderful relations with other world Jewish organizations and we are expanding contacts in the West as well as in the East, with the Jewish communities in India and Japan.

Interest in religion is reviving as well. We have two rabbis working at the Community who give lessons educating young and old on various topics in Judaism.

In cooperation with international Jewish organizations and based on their recommendations, we have increased security at the Community and synagogue buildings, and are approaching western standards of security.

We have the only kosher café in Vilnius. The Bagel Shop has attracted significant attention and television crews from Canada, Germany and of course Lithuania, too, have featured the café. It has become a place where not only Jews gather, but also aficionados of Jewish cuisine and culture. Our challa-baking event was a good time for all, and US ambassador Anne Hall was enchanted by the experience. The Jewish languages project carried out with the Cultural Heritage Department attracted much attention by many residents of the Lithuanian capital and visitors from elsewhere. In greeting you all, I invite Community members to show even greater initiative and self-confidence in proposing ways to make their hopes and dreams come true, because the Community exists to benefit its members.

My holiday greetings go out as well to Israeli ambassador Amir Maimon and the chairmen of the regional communities: Gennady Kofman, Gercas Žakas, Artūras Taicas, Feliksas Puzemskis, Moisej Šapiro and Josifas Buršteinas. Thank you all for the active roles you play and for working together.

Khag Khanuka Sameakh!

Lithuanian National Radio and Television Names Marius Ivaškevičius Man of the Year

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Marius Ivaškevičius, the writer and organizer of a Holocaust commemoration march in Molėtai, Lithuania, has been named Man of the Year for 2016 by Lithuanian National Radio and Television.

Last May Ivaškevičius published an internet appeal for the public to attend a march in his hometown along the route Jews were taken to their deaths in 1941. He followed this appeal with an essay called “I’m Not Jewish,” a translation of which attracted the most visitors to any single item on the Lithuanian Jewish Community web site ever.

Ivaškevičius’s march in Molėtai attracted international attention and dominated the Lithuanian media on August 29, 2016. About 3,000 people from Lithuania and abroad marched from the town square to the mass grave site, the same route about 2,000 Jews marched to their deaths 75 years earlier.

Hebrew Classes Begin in January

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Dear Community members and friends,

The long-awaited Hebrew classes are coming back to the Community! Classes will be held Sundays and the first class is at 9:30 A.M. for beginners and 10:15 for more advanced students on January 8, 2017.Senior Hebrew language teacher of the Sholem Aleichem Gymnasium Ruth Reches will teach the classes. The course costs 2 euros per 2 academic hours. Workbooks will be made available to all students. Don’t miss out on a wonderful opportunity and please register quickly, before January 4, via email to hebrewlietuva@gmail.com

Security First

by Eli E. Hertz
December 13, 2016

In the aftermath of the 1967 Six Day War, after three Arab armies converged on Israel’s nightmarish borders, even the United Nations was forced to recognize that Israel’s pre-1967 Six-Day War borders invited repeated aggression. Thus, UN Resolution 242, which formed the conceptual foundation for a peace settlement, declares that all states in the region should be guaranteed “safe and secure borders.”

Lt. general (ret.) Tom Kelly:

“I cannot defend this land (Israel) without that terrain (West Bank) … The West Bank Mountains, and especially their five approaches, are the critical terrain. If an enemy secures those passes, Jerusalem and Israel become uncovered. Without the West Bank, Israel is only eight miles wide at its narrowest point. That makes it indefensible.” [i]

Piscator Awards Recipients Named

James C. Nicola and Marina Kellen French to receive Erwin Piscator Awards on March 30, 2017

Dear Friends,

Two days ago, on December 17, we commemorated the 123rd anniversary of Erwin Piscator’s birth. Born in 1893 in a small village near Wetzlar, Germany, Piscator quickly made headlines in 1920s Berlin with his groundbreaking theatre productions. During the artistically fertile years of the Weimar Republic, Erwin Piscator founded the political and epic theatre and earned a reputation as one of the most innovative theater impresarios and producers far beyond Germany. After Hitler’s rise to power, Piscator fled and eventually found exile in New York where he founded and ran the Dramatic Workshop at the New School for Social Research teaching a whole generation of first-class American artists, among them Harry Belafonte, Marlon Brando, Judith Malina, Tony Randall, Elaine Stritch, and Tennessee Williams. In the 1960s, Piscator again made theater history as the artistic director of the Freie Volksbühne (Free People’s Theater) in West Berlin, where he directed the world premieres of Rolf Hochhuth’s The Deputy and Peter Weiss’s The Investigation.

Al Jolson Birthday Concert

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You are invited to a concert to celebrate the 130th birthday of Litvak musician and screen star Al Jolson at 7:00 P.M. on Tuesday, December 20, 2016 at the Lithuanian Jewish Community, Pylimo street no. 4, Vilnius.

Free to the public, come and enjoy!

Radio Documentary: Jews of Zarasai Region United by Love of Nature and Tragic Fate

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At 11:05 A.M. on Sunday Lithuanian National Radio, to be rebroadcast Tuesday at 9:00 A.M.

Lithuanian National Radio and Television looks back at the forgotten past of the Jews of Lithuania.

 

“Zarasai occupies a very warm place in my heart. There I spent what were probably the most important years of my childhood,” famous US cartoonist Al Jaffee (Mad Magazine and others) says. One might say his mother was killed by her love of her native land, according to a biography of the famous caricaturist from Zarasai. Those who left the region and the children of Holocaust survivors have a palpable nostalgia for the land with its lakes, forests and easy-going and care-free life. This sense is shared by all the residents of the different towns and villages interviewed, and who are creating their own initiatives to remember this forgotten part of their history.

Zarasai, Dusetos, Salakas, Antalieptė–the life of all the Jews who lived in these towns was snuffed out in Krakynė forest. Radio Documentary will take a look at the past of all these interconnected towns and how the Jewish community there is remembered today.

Hostess Vita Ličytė

Three Cities to Commemorate Artist, Teacher Boris Schatz Simultaneously

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The Tolerance Center of the Vilna Gaon Jewish Museum is to open an exhibit of international medals decided to the memory of Boris Schatz at 5:30 P.M. on December 20. The same exhibits are to open in Sofia, Bulgaria and Jerusalem, where the artist lived and worked.

Boris Schatz (1866-1932) began his artistic career in Lithuania. Born in Varniai, he studied at the Vilnius School of Drawing, later moving to Bulgaria where he lived for a decade and taught at the Royal Academy of Art. At the age of 40 he went to Jerusalem, and in 1906 founded the Bezalel art school there, now known as the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design.

Fayerlakh Birthday Concert

Celebrating their 45th birthday, the Jewish song and dance group Fayerlakh is inviting everyone to a concert at the Vilnius Polish House of Culture (Naugarduko street no. 76, Vilnius) at 5:00 P.M. on Sunday, December 18. The concert will feature Jewish dance, Yiddish songs and a group of klezmer musicians.

The ensemble is constituted of over 40 members and the youngest Fayerlakh member is just 5 years old. The oldest is now almost 70. Although times change, Fayerlakh stands as an unextinguished flame, formed way back in 1971.

Tickets just 8 euros for Jewish Community members!
Get your tickets by internet here: http://www.tiketa.lt/jubiliejinis_koncertas_fajerlech__45_75662

Regarding the Menachemo Namai School

The Goodwill Foundation has received notice from bailiff/collector Dalius Traigys dated December 6, 2016, indicating public enterprise Menachemo Namai [House of Menachem] school (corporation code 302851682) has debt of €99,916.73 to the Vilnius city department of the State Social Insurance Fund, and calling upon the Goodwill Foundation to deposit any payments allocated for Menachemo Namai in Dalius Traigys’s account.

The Goodwill Foundation has known about the possible financial difficulties of Menachemo Namai and acted carefully and far-sightedly in having decided earlier not to allocated partial financing to Menachemo Namai projects submitted to the Goodwill Foundation. If it had been otherwise, Goodwill Foundation funds intended for projects for which the Menachemo Namai school had sought funding would have been used to the school’s creditors instead.

Attorneys Linas Makaveckas and Valentas Gailius
info@gvf.lt

Hanukkah Chess Championship

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As we near the eight days of Hanukkah, the Lithuanian Jewish Community and the Rositsan and Maccabi Elite Chess and Checkers Club invite you to a chess tournament to be held at the LJC, Pylimo street no. 4, Vilnius, at 5:00 P.M. on Sunday, December 18.

Tournament director: FIDE master Boris Rositsan
For more information, please contact:

info@metbor.lt
+3706 5543556

The Four Epochs of Professor Irena Veisaitė: Images, Portraits, Words and Theater

Cultural historian Aurimas Švedas’s book “Irena Veisaitė. Gyvenimas turėtų būti skaidrus” [Irena Veisaitė. Life Should Be Transparent] will be launched at the Vilnius Picture Gallery at 6:00 P.M. on December 15. Historian Saulius Sužiedėlis says the book contains unforgettable images of 20th century Lithuanian history, including the Jewish and Lithuanian interwar period in Kaunas, the ruthless reality of the war and the Holocaust, rescue and rebirth.

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Author Švedas, the subject of the book Irena Veisaitė herself, theater producer Audra Žukaitytė, director Gintaras Varnas and literary scholar Kęstutis Nastopka are to attend the book launch, to be moderated by Vytenė Muschick. The book details the extraordinary life of the German literature specialist, drama expert and long-time director of Lithuania’s Open Society Fund.

Poet, translator and student of culture Tomas Venclova said of the book: “This book belonging in the genre of long conversational is a prerequisite for everyone who is interested in Lithuanian history over recent decades. Irena Veisaitė is one of the most enlightened people of our land, the incarnation of tolerance and common sense. She devotes the most attention to culture, especially the theater, and the cultural opposition in the Soviet period, but very wisely, avoiding extremism and empty words, also lays out painful philosophical questions.”

Full story in Lithuanian here.

Plaque Commemorating Litvak Designer Victor David Brenner

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A ceremony to unveil a plaque commemorating Litvak and Šiauliai native Victor David Brenner will take place at 12:00 noon on Wednesday, December 14, at the Šiauliai Bank building at Tilžės street no. 149 in Šiauliai.

Victor David Brenner is best known as the designer of the Lincoln one-cent piece in the United States. which replaced the former one-cent piece featuring an Indian in 1909. He also designed the obverse of the new penny, replacing the former wreath and coat of arms with two sheaves of wheat surrounding the words “United States of America” and “ONE CENT.” The “wheat-back” reverse of the penny has since been replaced with one featuring the Lincoln memorial in the center with the same inscription around the edge in 1959. In 1982 the United States began to mint one-cent pieces with reduced copper content, replacing the earlier copper and tin denomination with a copper-plated zinc fac-simile.

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New Book by Lithuanian Writer about State of Israel

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Accomplished author, lecturer and media personality Giedrius Drukteinis has a new book out called “Izraelis – žydų valstybė” [Israel: The Jewish State] and as with his comprehensive treatment of the United States-Viet Nam war, it’s a long one, 832 pages. It was published by Sofoklis publishing house in Vilnius in 2016.

Drukteinis goes through the main events in Jewish history in chronological order, from exile to Babylon, the Middle Ages, modern emancipation, roots of anti-Semitism, aliyah, Zionism, relations with Arabs, the Jewish experience during both world wars, the foundation of the state and modern development in the current period. The chronological layout is intended to help Lithuanian readers orient themselves to the creation and history of the Jewish state, according to the publisher.

The book devotes much space to the concept of aliyah leading up to the founding of the unique State of Israel. One reviewer said most of the book is about warfare.

Makabi Soccer Team Fighting to Win

The mini soccer team of the Makabi Lithuanian Athletics Club is competing successfully in the Vilnius district tournament Select II in the Sunday League, which includes 10 teams. After foru matches Makabi are now in fourth place. The tournament continues and let’s hope after some injured players return our team makes it to the top. Good luck!

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Lesson by Rabbi Kalev Krelin at Choral Synagogue

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Dear Community members,

This is to inform you that the series of teachings about Jacob, the patriarch of Israel, is continuing. You are invited to Rabbi Kalev Krelin’s lesson called “The Metamorphosis of Jacob” where you will learn what changed after Jacob wrestled the angel, to be held at 6:30 P.M. on Thursday, December 15, 2016, at the Choral Synagogue in Vilnius located at Pylimo street no. 39.

Four Musical Views on a Jewish Theme

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You are invited to attend the launch of the compact disc called Four Musical Views on a Jewish Theme at the Lithuanian Jewish Community in Vilnius at 6:00 P.M. on December 12. The compact disc is a project by the Lithuanian Union of Musicians, Muzikos Barai magazine and the Goodwill Foundation. Participants are to include composer and president of the Lithuanian Union of Musicians Audronė Žigaitytė-Nekrošienė, pianist and music professor Leonidas Melnikas, violinist Borisas Traubas and cellist Valentinas Kaplūnas.

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The Four Musical Views on a Jewish Theme CD is a unique musical excursion into the tragic 20th-century history of the Jews. Never before had anti-Semitism and hatred of Jews reached such proportions, never before had epiphanies of evil been accompanied by such violence and suffering. Artists were unable to remain silent and their work testifies to, and sometimes screams about these shameful pages of history, condemning evil and exalting good. Four great 20th-century musicians– Maurice Ravel, Darius Milhaud, Aaron Copland and Dmitri Shostakovich—have immortalized this in their work. The tragic passages of Jewish history retold by these artistic geniuses are performed by Lithuanian artists on the compact disc, including singer Liora Grodnikaitė, violinist Boris Traub, cellist Valentinas Kaplūnas and pianist Leonid Melnik. It is an appeal to every individual and to everyone.

Muzikos Barai magazine has made this disc available to readers as a free gift. In their October issue they published an article about those who rescued Jews from the Holocaust in Lithuania.

Antanas Makštutis Concert

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You’re invited to attend a concert by Kaunas Jewish Community member Antanas Makštutis, an accomplished clarinet player. The concert is scheduled for 7:00 P.M. on December 8 at the Gariūniai Business Park’s concert hall.

The event is free but registration is required, please send an email to info@nmgeneration.com

For more information in Lithuanian, see here.