Echoes of Memory Photo Exhibit by Irena Giedraitienė Opens

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The ceremonial opening of an exhibition of photo albums and photography by photography artist Irena Giedraitienė called “Echoes of Memory” was held at the Lithuanian Jewish Community on January 14. The exhibit features images of survivors of ghettos and concentration camps in Lithuania and abroad, and of rescuers of Jews.

Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky introduced the artist and her work to the international audience at the event. Israeli embassy deputy chief of mission Yehuda Gidron commented the faces in the portraits on exhibit not only captured moments in time and the personalities and characters of the people, but also showed some of them smiling, conveying optimism and hope. Tobias Jafetas, a representative of the Union of Former Concentration Camp and Ghetto Prisoners, thanked the artist for her work commemorating Holocaust survivors in photos which will inform future generations. Other speakers spoke about the artist’s work and life as well.

Israeli PM Calls for Overhaul of Relationship with EU

by Raphael Ahren
Times of Israel
January 14, 2016

Netanyahu slams Sweden’s “immoral” criticism, EU’s “illegal” West Bank construction

Angry PM urges a “resetting” of ties with Europe and pans “absurd” labeling of settlement goods; tells journalists Swedish FM’s remarks are “outrageous, stupid”

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Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at a toast for the New Year with representatives of the foreign press in Jerusalem on January 14, 2016 (Photo: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)

Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday called for a “reset” in relations with the European Union, accusing it of unfairly singling out Israel.

In addition to attacking the EU for its decision to label settlement goods, Netanyahu for the first time publicly accused the EU of building “illegal constructions” in the West Bank in an alleged bid to create “political realities” there.

Panevėžys Youth Learn about Israel

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Liana Jagniatinskytė of the Israeli embassy in Vilnius told an audience at the Margarita Rimkevičaitė School of Technology about Israel on January 13, 2016. She spoke to a full auditorium on Israel’s history, latest scientific achievements and innovation. Among other things, attendees learned Israeli medicine is considered the best in the world, and thousands of patients from around the world flock to Israel annually for treatment. The audience eagerly listened to how the State of Israel arose and thrived in the desert sands to become an exporter of agricultural goods with three growing seasons in what seems like the harshest and most unlikely of environments. The audience appeared most interested in learning about the Israeli military, where both boys and girls aged 18 serve. Jagniatinskytė also touched upon political issues and current events in her presentation, and spoke about the threat of terrorism. Students and members of the Panevėžys Jewish Community who helped organize this event in concert with the Israel embassy asked questions at the end of the presentation. School director Tautvydas Anilionis ended the event by presenting souvenirs to Israeli embassy representatives and said these sorts of meetings are very necessary in educating the young people of Panevėžys.

Lithuanian Jewish Cookbook Wins Award in South Africa

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Lietuvos rytas, Lithuania’s largest daily newspaper, reported the English translation of Nida Degutienė’s book “Izraelio skoniai: šventės ir kasdiena” has been awarded the title of best Jewish cookbook in South Africa for 2015. The translation was published as “A Taste of Israel: From Classic Litvak to Modern Israel” by Struik Lifestyle, a division of Penguin Random House South Africa, in 2015. The Lithuanian book was published by the author in 2014.

The newspaper didn’t specify who issued the award, but said the cookbook would compete as a South African entry at World Cookbook Awards 2015 ceremony to be held May 28 in Yantai, China.

Nida Degutienė is the wife of former Lithuanian ambassador to Israel Darius Degutis. She presented her cookbook at the Lithuanian Jewish Community on Friday, April 24, 2015, as the final speech at a celebration of the 67th anniversary of Israeli independence.

Kaunas Jewish Community Invites You to a Concert

Location: Great Hall, Vytautas Magnus University, Gimnazijos street No. 7
Time: 3:00 P.M., January 17, 2016

The Kaunas Jewish Community and the Sugihara Foundation “Diplomats for Life” have the pleasure of requesting your attendance at a concert. The concert dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the birth of Vladas Varčikas will feature his students, including:

professor Petras Kunca (violin),Vilija Vitkutė Pranskienė (violin), Kristijonas Venslovas (violin), Daiva Valentaitė (alto), Andrius Pleškūnas (alto), Benas Ulevičius (vocals, guitar),

France’s Hollande: ‘Intolerable’ for Jews to Hide Yarmulkes

Following Marseille machete attack, president says citizens should not be forced to hide for fear of assault because of their religion.

French president François Hollande rejected as “intolerable” Wednesday the idea that fear of attack would prompt French Jews to “hide.”

“It is intolerable that in our country citizens should feel so upset and under assault because of their religious choice that they would conclude that they have to hide,” Hollande said following Monday’s attack on a kipa-wearing teacher in the southern city of Marseille. The French president’s comments came two days after a machete-wielding teen claiming to have been inspired by the Islamic State attacked a Jewish teacher, wounding him.

The knifing of Benjamin Amsellem prompted Zvi Ammar, head of Marseille’s Israeli Consistory, to warn Jews against wearing the traditional skullcap–known as a yarmulke or kipa–in public, sparking a debate over the issue.

“Remove the kipa during this troubled time until better days,” Ammar said.

Shimon Peres Hospitalized

Former prime minister and president of Israel Shimon Peres was hospitalized Thursday and diagnosed with an irregular heartbeat. Times of Israel reported he was recuperating well after possibly having experienced a small heart attack, according to sources close to the veteran Israeli politician.

Europol Meeting on Counter-Terrorism Held on January 11, 2016

Kol Europe, the news organ of the CEJI (Contribution Juive pour une Europe Inclusive), reports on a Europol meeting of the Foreign Terrorist Fighters Working Groups of the Global Counter-Terrorism Forum (GCTF) and the Global Coalition to Counter ISIL. The goal of the meeting was to focus on measures and actions to take to apprehend foreign terrorist fighters. The event gathered over 200 participants from 45 legations.

For more information, see here and here.

French Jewish Leader Found Dead in Apartment

Police Probe Anti-Semitic Motives

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Alain Ghozland was discovered dead in his home in Creteil on Tuesday morning. Photo: facebook

French police are investigating the death of a 73-year-old Jewish leader found dead in his apartment in a suburb of Paris.

Police are probing the possibility of “anti-Semitic aggression” behind the apparent murder of Alain Ghozland, a spokesperson for French Chief Rabbi Haim Korsia told the Algemeiner on Tuesday.

Originally from Algeria, Ghozland was a politician and city councilman in the heavily Jewish suburb of Creteil. His body was discovered Tuesday morning by his brother who came to look for him after he failed to show up for prayers at synagogue Monday.

Swedish Officials Not Welcome, Deputy Israeli Foreign Minister Says During Swedish Visit

Jerusalem vents fury after Swedish foreign minister Wallstrom calls for a probe into “extrajudicial killings” of Palestinian attackers. Wallstrom told last year PM and FM would not meet her if she came.

Officials from Stockholm are currently unwelcome in Israel, deputy foreign minister Tzipi Hotovely said Wednesday, a day after Sweden’s foreign minister, Margot Wallstrom, called for an investigation to determine whether Israel has been conducting extrajudicial executions of Palestinians during the current wave of violence.

“Israel is closing its gates to official visits from Sweden,” Hotovely said during a briefing for future Israeli diplomats currently taking the cadets’ course.

“For over two years, relations with Sweden have been at some level of disconnect,” she said. “That is, we have refused visits by the Swedish foreign minister in Israel. At the clearest level, the State of Israel is sending a very stark message to Sweden that says that [when] you encourage terror [in Israel], you encourage Islamic State to act in all parts of Europe: in Brussels, in Paris.

Pre-War Cookbook Becomes Best Seller

Did you know Fania Lewando operated an extremely popular vegetarian restaurant between the two world wars in Vilnius, a city which had few vegetarians? Diners included Marc Chagall and Itzik Manger, the Yiddish writer, who also left their impressions in the restaurant’s guest book.

The restaurant owner also had a cooking school and kept her healthy and tasty vegetarian recipes in her personal recipe book. It was long thought that book was lost following her death, but it unexpectedly resurfaced at an antiquarian book sale and became an international best seller. Now it has appeared in Lithuanian as well.

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Lithuania Marks January 13th Tragedy

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Lithuania is solemnly marking the date 25 years ago when Soviet tanks ran over and killed peaceful protestors gathered around the Vilnius Television Tower to support Lithuanian independence from the Soviet Union. Soviet forces also attacked and seized Lithuanian Radio and Television headquarters on Kalinausko street in Vilnius.

Lithuanian Prime Minister Meets American Jewish Committee Delegation

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Lithuanian prime minister Algirdas Butkevičius and first deputy chancellor of the Government Rimantas Vaitkus have met with members of the American Jewish Committee. In the meeting, Lithuania’s efforts to restore historical justice and preserve the Jewish cultural heritage in the country were underlined, close cooperation between the Government and the Lithuanian as well as international Jewish communities was noted, and opinions and insights into international developments were shared.

“Members of the Committee, thank you for your visit in Lithuania at this significant period for our country, with the approaching commemoration of the events of January 13 and the 25th anniversary of statehood. At present we pay tribute to those killed for independence, the heroes of our country”, Butkevičius said.

Lithuanian President Meets with American Jewish Committee Leaders

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Photo by Robertas Dačkus, courtesy Lithuanian President’s Office

President Dalia Grybauskaitė met Tuesday with leaders of the American Jewish Committee–one of the largest and most influential NGOs in the United States which has always supported the freedom of Lithuania.

During the meeting, AJC leaders gave the president a copy of a letter written to then-president George Bush in 1991, calling for not delaying recognition of independent Lithuania and the other Baltic countries. This organization also supported Lithuania’s aspiration to become a NATO member.

Today the American Jewish Committee focuses on energy security and contributes to forming U.S. energy policies. Therefore the meeting discussed Lithuania’s experience in securing energy independence and key challenges to European energy. The President stressed that exports of U.S. energy resources to Europe were important to ensure competition in the EU market, reduce Gazprom’s influence on European countries and prevent Russian energy blackmail.

Lithuanian Jewish Community Webpage Adds Academic Section to Mark 25 Years of Lithuanian Independence

Many scholars and academics took part in the early days of the Lithuanian Jewish Community during the period when Lithuania was reestablishing national independence. They formed their own Union of Scholars. This organization is no longer active. The Community would like to revive the Union of Scholars in the name of its noble founders who did so much for Lithuania and the Jewish Community, including historian and sociology professor Izraelis Lempertas; physics professor Adolfas Bolotinas; philologist, lexicographer and Lithuanian language reformer Chaceklis Lemchenas; and many others. The time has come to continue the Union’s work. We, members of the Lithuanian Jewish Community, are not just citizens of the Republic of Lithuania and consumers, we are creators. Scholarship and research is of utmost importance to us. We can set learning against the ignorance of anti-Semites. A new generation of productive scholars has matured in the Jewish Community. Although learning knows no communal boundaries, academic studies provide us with more self-confidence and significance, and therefore we will support in multiple ways scholarship and research in all fields. We begin our new Learning section with an introduction to the psychological and other effects of the Holocaust. Mazl tov!

Academic Insight into the Holocaust Experience

Academic Insight into the Holocaust Experience

Academic Insight into the Holocaust Experience

by Ruth Reches

A well-rounded understanding of the psychological and other effects of the Holocaust is relevant both in the academic and social spheres. It is imperative that we grasp the extent of the Holocaust and understand it fully in order to avoid such a disastrous phenomenon in the future. There are many academic sources which portray and fully examine the Holocaust from the moral, philosophical, economic, political and other points of view. Psychological research on the Shoahm however, has only just begun. Without such research an understanding of the extent of the Holocaust is incomplete and the evaluation of its meaning incorrect.

Catastrophes and especially their psychological impacts always capture the attention of psychologists. There is a wide variety of research focusing on the psychological effects of, for instance, natural disasters or military conflicts. A common feature in researching these catastrophes is the fact that scholars concentrate on temporally more proximate consequences. Usually such research is carried out right after the event takes place or in the course of a few years. Long-term psychological effects are under-researched but it is this particular area which is of key importance: it allows us to evaluate the fundamental outcomes which do not fade easily.

American Jewish Committee Delegation Arrives in Lithuania

Today a delegation from the American Jewish Committee arrived in Lithuania. The AJC is a well-known global organization supporting and defending Jews with offices in the USA and around the world which works in partnership with Jewish communities in Europe and elsewhere. AJC activities are dedicated to the welfare of the Jewish people and the defense of human rights and democratic values. Twenty-five years ago when Lithuania again became independent the AJC lent their support to the activities of Lithuanian Jews and continues to support the Lithuanian Jewish Community and to make sure our rights are respected. The purpose of the delegation’s visit is to meet Lithuanian leaders and discuss geopolitical shifts of mutual concern, the effect of Russian military actions in Ukraine on the region and Eastern Europe as a whole. Discussions are also planned on bilateral relations between Lithuania and the State of Israel and Lithuania and the USA, the activities of the Goodwill Fund, issues of importance to the LJC and the LJC’s relations with the AJC.

“The AJC strove to contribute to the process of restitution of Lithuanian Jewish property, and this served Lithuania’s reputation in the world, it was beneficial not just to Jews but to Lithuania as a democratic state respecting human rights,” LJC chairwoman Faina Kukliansky said. “Many other important changes are connected with restitution. Many different social and cultural projects are being carried out currently in connection with the Jewish community, Holocaust history and the present. A number of Lithuania’s political issues are being solved with the AJC which operates actively in post-Communist states supporting Jews in the fight against anti-Semitism and the rights of Jews around the globe.”

Following Lithuanian restitution for lost Jewish property, a public organization called “The Goodwill Fund for Disbursing Compensation for Property of Jewish Religious Communities” was formed. It was established at the end of 2011 after the law on compensation was adopted on the initiative of the Government of the Republic of Lithuania. This fund was created by the Lithuanian Jewish Heritage Fund in cooperation with the Lithuanian Jewish Community and the World Jewish Restitution Organization. Under the law by the year 2023 the Lithuanian state budget is to pay out 128 million litas to the Fund in compensation which is to be used to finance Lithuanian Jewish religious, cultural, health-care, athletic, educational and academic projects in Lithuania. Information about the Fund’s activities is public.

European Jewish World Steps into a New Era

EJT celebrates two months of work and achievements

This autumn we successfully launched the European Jewish Times–an independent online platform which provides fresh and interesting stories to European Jewry. We wanted to thank you for the amazing cooperation during these months! EJT constantly receives your press releases, updates and feedback which help us to evolve and create the best possible content for you at all times. Currently Jewish communities are facing several new challenges, however, and we should all stand together in confronting them.

Recently European Jewish communities have watched with worry an unprecedented rise in anti-Semitic public discourse as well as actual physical threats to communities. Since global media avoid real coverage of this issue, we decided to launch The JWatch Project, a new platform aimed at giving a voice to fellow Jews who are under attack.

As part of the JWatch Project, our channels are open for your live reports of anti-Semitic incidents from anywhere in Europe which we will report immediately for the benefit of our many followers and readers in an effort to expose the scope of this troubling phenomenon and to put a stop to it.

In addition, we are preparing for a turning point in Jewish leadership at the end of January when the European Jewish Congress (EJC) will re-elect its president. We look forward to the upcoming events and will report them to you live. We hope for a change following this event.

http://www.ejtimes.org/

American Jewish Committee Praises Historians for Rejecting Anti-Israel Initiative

The resolution accused Israel of restricting Palestinian academic activities in Gaza and the West Bank.

NEW YORK–The American Jewish Committee praised the American Historical Association for rejecting a resolution against Israel Sunday.

The resolution accused Israel of restricting Palestinian academic activities in Gaza and the West Bank and was rejected by a vote of 111 to 50 at the AHA’s 130th annual meeting in Atlanta.

Grandson of Vilna Rabbis Awarded Prestigious Science Award

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JTA reports a son and grandson of Vilna rabbis has been named the winner of a prestigious science award for his work in mathematics.

Solomon Wolf Golomb, a University of Southern California professor, will receive the Benjamin Franklin Medal given out by the Franklin Institute for his work on the leading edges of science and engineering. Golomb is to receive the Franklin Institute’s 2016 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Electrical Engineering for his work in space communications and the design of digital spread spectrum signals–transmissions which provide security, noise suppression and precise locations for applications such as cryptography, missile guidance, defense, space and cellular communications, radar, sonar and GPS. The award will be presented at the Philadelphia-based institute at a ceremony in April of 2016.

The Franklin Medal was the most prestigious of the awards presented by the Franklin Institute since 1824. With other awards, it was merged into the Benjamin Franklin Medal in 1998. With this award, Golomb will join the ranks of previous Franklin Medal recipients and distinguished laureates, which include Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, Stephen Hawking, Elizabeth Blackburn and Andrew Viterbi PhD ’62, the alumnus for whom the USC engineering school is named.