Condolences

Condolences

We mourn the loss of Yevgeniya Korotkina, a member of the Jewish Community and Social Center. Our deepest condolences to her family and friends.

May 13, 1927—December 18, 2015

Our Condolences

We are saddened to report the death of Lithuanian Jewish Community member Leonid Feldman of Vilnius. He passed away December 20. He was born on July 29, 1933. Our condolences to his loved ones.

Joel Elkes Dead at 101

Joel Elkes, whose father was Dr. Elkhanan Elkes, the reluctant chairman of the Kaunas ghetto Ältestenrat, or council of elders, died at the age of 101 on October 30 in Sarasota, Florida. Joel Elkes made major contributions to modern psychiatry. His wife Sally Lucke Elkes reported the cause of death was kidney failure.

18elkes-obit-master180
Dr. Joel Elkes helped shape
treatment for schizophrenia.
Photo: New York Times

Condolences

On November 27, 2015, Lithuanian Jewish Community Social Center member Kęstutis Bytautas passed away. He was born on July 11, 1958.

Our deepest condolences to his loved ones for his loss.

Condolences

On December 6, 2015, Adolfas Poškus, a member of the Klaipėda Jewish Community and the Lithuanian Jewish Community Social Center, passed away. He was born May 14, 1939. The Community send our deepest condolences to his survivors.

A Death in the Community

On December 1, 2015, Rima Vaisman, a member of our community and a member of the Social Center, passed away. She was born on February 9, 1925. Our deepest condolences to her friends and family.

A Loss in the Family

We are saddened to learn of the death of Boris Mishkin on November 6 of this year. He was born on November 14, 1929. Our deepest sympathies go to his family and friends.

Hundreds Gather at Paris Synagogue under Tight Security to Pray for Terror Victims

PARIS (JTA)—Some 200 people gathered under heavy guard at a Paris synagogue to remember the victims of the terrorist attacks in the French capital on Friday night.

Led by chief rabbi of France Haim Korsia, leaders of French Jewry and Israel’s ambassador to France were among those who assembled at the Synagogue de la Victoire Sunday evening.

“Our people, who have been tested more than others, know the healing power of solidarity and unity in the face of the pain of families torn apart, broken couples and orphaned children,” Michel Gugenheim, chief rabbi of Paris, said about the132 fatalities and more than 350 wounded in multiple coordinated attacks.

Israeli Embassy Sends Condolences

Embassy of Israel
Vilnius

The Embassy of the State of Israel is very saddened to hear about the passing of Abram Lešč. We would like to express our heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of Abram Lešč.

Yehuda Gidron
Deputy Chief of Mission

A Loss in the Family

In profoundest sorrow and with our deepest condolences to his survivors, we regret to announce that Abramas Leščius passed away on November 12. The Lithuanian Jewish Community as a whole feels the painful loss of this sincere, honest and intelligent man who served as gabbai of the Vilnius Choral Synagogue minyan for many years.

He was born on April 18, 1932. He will be buried according to Jewish tradition. The burial ceremony is to take place at 11:00 A.M. on November 13 at the Vilnius Jewish Cemetery, located at Sudervės road No. 28. A bus will transport those who want to bid him farewell from the Lithuanian Jewish Community at Pylimo street No. 4 at 10:30 A.M.

Abramas Leščius agreed to share passages from his life on the lzb.lt webpage just six months ago.

Condolences

It is with great sadness that we inform you of the passing of our dear friend and committed Council Representative, Uri Chanoch, z”l.
 
The funeral will be held today, Thursday, September 3rd, at the cemetery in Kfar Shmaryahu at 6PM
Uri served as a Council Representative of WJRO, and as a Board member of the Good Will Foundation in Lithuania.
 
Uri, a survivor of the Kovno Ghetto, and of Dachau, worked tirelessly as an advocate for survivors.  He dedicated his time to a long list of organizations, and fought for the restitution of private-property for Lithuanian survivors through his work with WJRO and the Good Will Foundation.
 Below is a letter written by Julius Berman, President of the Claims Conference, illustrating Uir’s story and dedication. 
May his memory be a blessing. We extend our deepest condolences to his family.
 
Abraham Biderman, Co-Chair
Gideon Taylor, Chair of Operations
Nachliel Dison, Acting Director General
mp

In memoriam Shevka (Sheftl) Melamed (April 10, 1926-August 31, 2015)

The last Jew living in Biržai (Birzh), Lithuania, Shevka (Sheftl) Leiba Melamed died Monday, August 31, 2015. He was 89. His death brings to an end over 400 years of Jewish life in the Biržai region. The community there was annihilated during the Holocaust, but by some miracle Leiba Melamed, then still an adolescent, managed to flee to the Soviet Union with his brother Shalom, conscripted into the army, and survived. A little over a month later his family–his father Peisakh, mother Paye and his little brother Hirsh, just turned 7–had been murdered at Pakamponys forest next to Astravas, part of the city of Biržai on its northern outskirts.

The Melamed brothers were sent deep into Russia. Leiba worked on a collective farm. He later attended a Lithuanian arts and crafts school in Kuybyshev, Russia, and later worked at an airplane factory. In 1945 he returned to Biržai but found neither his home nor his friends. He did meet his brother Shalom in Biržai and they both went to live with his brother’s best friend Leonas Jukonis. Later Leiba moved to Klaipėda where he was employed in rebuilding the city. After some time he returned to Biržai and worked in a bakery. Here he met the love of his life, Genovaitė, started a family and had two daughters, Leta and Nelė. He had four grandchildren: Daina, Asta, Petras, Kristina and Dalia.

Condolences

The Lithuanian Jewish Community mourns the loss of one of the founders of the WIZO women’s organization and active community member Fenia Zibuc (January 3, 1921-July 28, 2015).

Our deepest condolences to her surviving son Izaok Zibuc, daughter Marina Vildžiūnienė, her grandchildren and all her other relatives and those who loved her.

Condolences

The Lithuanian Jewish Community mourns the passing of Rachel Margolis, born in Vilnius, a partisan, biologist and author of the book Partisan from Vilna.

She was born on December 28, 1928. As a young Jewish girl she was sent to the Vilna ghetto, were she joined the FPO, the united partisan  underground, and carried out various military missions. She was blonde and blue-eyed, and able to pass “on the Aryan side” as she put it. She also worked at Herman Kruk’s ghetto library on Strashun Street (now Zemaitijos street) where the FPO sometimes held target practice in the cellar.

She was friends with Hirsh Glik, the young poet who penned the words which would become the Partisan Hymn, Sog Niet Keynmol, still sung when Holocaust survivors gather in Israel and throughout the world. Margolis was the first to hear the poem and put it to musical accompaniment.

Her entire family was murdered during the Holocaust, but she married a fellow partisan and started her own family. She is survived by several daughters in Israel. In the post-war period she worked for many years teaching biology at Vilnius University and was the main force in the decyphering and publishing of the Sakowicz diary, an eye-witness testimony of the mass
murder operations at Ponar outside Vilnius. After making aliyah to Israel she used to return to Vilnius during the summers and volunteered her time constructing exhibits at the Green House Holocaust exhibit of the Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum and leading tours through the Vilna ghetto.

A Death in the Family April 9, 2015

Levinson-2013

With profound sadness the Lithuanian Jewish Community mourns the loss on Thursday of one its founding members, Josep Levinson (1917-2015). Levinson was a pioneer in Holocaust research after World War II and located Jewish mass murder sites. He also led efforts to mark and commemorate such sites. His memory lives on in the his books “The Shoah: The Holocaust in Lithuania” and “The Book of Sorrow” he compiled and edited, monuments to the lost Lithuanian Jewish Community. The book contains information about and photographs of almost every Jewish mass murder site in Lithuania.

 Josif Levinson grew up in the shtetl Vishéy (Lithuanian Veisiejai) in the Dzūkija ethnographic region of Lithuania. He was graduated from Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas with a degree in engineering. In 1941 his father and relatives were murdered in the village of Katkiškė near Lazdéy (Lithuanian Lazdijai). He fought the Nazis as a serviceman of the 16th Lithuanian Division during World War II and was seriously injured.  He was a founding figure of Vilnius’s Green House–the Holocaust exhibit of the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum–and was one of the primary historians in the field of Lithuanian Holocaust studies.

We mourn our great loss and offer our condolences to the immediate family of the esteemed scholar and tireless advocate of memory and justice.

Joseph Levinson, 98, Dies in Vilnius

JOSEPH LEVINSON (1917-2015)

Native of Vishéy (Veisiejai), Lithuania. Decorated hero of the Red Army’s war against Nazi Germany. Specialist engineer over half a century.

Fearless Litvak truthteller about the Holocaust in Lithuania who assembled the documents that outline the accurate history (as well as the intellectual history of “Double Genocide” revisionism).

Condolences

nuotrauka

Our deepest condolences to Jewish (Litvak) Community of Lithuania chair,
attorney Faina Kukliansky, and to her extended family, upon the death of
her beloved mother, Mrs. Klara Toides-Kuklianskienė.
Mrs. Toides-Kuklianskienė was born in Šiauliai, Lithuania in 1930, and
lived and worked in Vilnius. She spent the last decades of her
life in Israel.

Jewish (Litvak) Community of Lithuania,
Vilnius Jewish Community,
Religious Jewish Community of Lithuania,
Religious Jewish Community of Vilnius,
The Good Will Foundation

Lithuanian Jewish community send condolences to Paris

Lithuanian Jewish community send condolences to Paris

Lithuanian Jewish community strongly condemned the ruthless terrorist attack on the office of a French magazine in Paris and the killing and injuring of a number of its staff and reporters. We send our condolences to the bereaved families of the victims of this tragedy.

Lithuanian Jews send their condolences to the Jewish community in France and to the French people who suffered a murderous terror attack in the last few days.

Condolences

Lithuanian Jewish (Litvak) Community extends its deepest condolences to Nachliel Dison on the passing of his dear mother.

Nachliel Dison is an Acting Director General of the World Jewish Restitution Organization (WJRO), member of the Board of the Lithuanian Jewish Heritage Foundation. He has visited Lithuania many times together with his wife Elisheva, whose grandfather lived in Lithuania. N. Dison has greatly contributed to successful solutions of Jewish restitution issues in Lithuania, both in his personal capacity and as the head of the WJRO.  

In this hour of great sorrow, we sincerely wish all the strength to Nachliel Dison and his family.

Min Hashamayim Tenuchamu