Lithuanian PM to Post: Vilnius one of Israel’s ‘strongest partners’ in EU

Lithuanian PM to Post: Vilnius one of Israel’s ‘strongest partners’ in EU

Lithuania has been, and remains, Israel’s “voice” in the international arena, the Baltic state’s prime minister, Algirdas Butkevicius, told The Jerusalem Post Wednesday on the final day of a two-day visit.

Lithuania is nearing the end of its two-year stint on the UN Security Council, and Butkevicius said that during this period, the “security of Israel” was one of Vilnius’s main priorities.

Lithuania supported Israel on a number of key votes in the Security Council and the UN over the past year, including abstaining – rather than voting for the Palestinians, as did fellow EU states France and Luxembourg – when the Palestinian Authority failed to gain the support of nine states needed to pass a Security Council resolution dictating a full Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines.

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Shana Tova greetings

As another year comes to a close, we look back at the many challenges and successes of our Jewish communities. Following the terrorist attacks against Jews, we faced tragedy and fear in Paris and Copenhagen. In January, we stood in remembrance and reflection at the gates of Auschwitz-Birkenau, together with Holocaust survivors. We found unity and triumph in our battles against the BDS movement that vilifies Israel, very often with the aim of spreading anti-Semitic prejudiceA. We also witnessed unspeakable brutalities in many regions of the Middle East, and we felt that it was important to speak out against the slaughter of Christians and others in Syria and Iraq.

This has been a year of setback and growth for the Jewish people, and we at the World Jewish Congress have been there every step of the journey.

Now we look forward to a new year which will no doubt bring new tests and trials. However, we also know that our people will reach the attainment and achievement of our continued goals and aspirations.

May 5776 be a year of hope and progress in which we come together as one Jewish people.

On a personal note, I wish you and your family health, happiness, prosperity, and joy – Shana Tovah u’metukah.

Regards,

Robert

wjc

Robert Singer

Chief Executive Officer

World Jewish Congress

Tel:  +1 212 755 5770

Fax: +1 212 755 5883

www.worldjewishcongress.org

Invitation to the conference onference on Anti-Semitism, Radicalisation and Violent Extremism

Lithuanian NGO Programme operator Human Rights Monitoring Institute is organizing a conference on Anti-Semitism, Radicalisation and Violent Extremism. The event will take place on 30 September, 2015 in Vilnius.

Preliminary  programme

The participants of the event will include experts of human rights, practitioners working in the field of inclusion, de-radicalisation, prevention of extremism, as well as representatives of international organisations and NGOs.

Please fill in REGISTRATION FORM, which is open until September 15th and we will inform you with updated programme.

Lithuanian PM: Israel Not Worried by Vilnius Sports Palace Renovation Project

Lithuanian PM: Israel Not Worried by Vilnius Sports Palace Renovation Project

VILNIUS, September 9, BNS – Israel has no objections to a project to renovate the Vilnius Concert and Sports Palace in central Vilnius located beside graves from the old Jewish cemetery, Lithuanian prime minister Algirdas Butkevičius says.

The issue was high on the agenda of Tuesday’s meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

“No, he gave no critical remarks whatsoever – the prime minister said he had recently received the information and was fully familiar with it. I said we wanted to get this done and would not make any decisions or start any tasks before prior agreement with the Jewish Community of Lithuania or the international organization for preservation of Jewish cemeteries that had come to Lithuania. He was clear – this is very good,” Butkevičius told BNS in a telephone interview from Jerusalem Tuesday evening.

Lithuanian PM Calls Israel a Strategic Regional Partner

VILNIUS, September 8, BNS – Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevičius says Israel is a strategic regional partner. He made the remarks Tuesday in Israel and expressed hope for a future strengthening of the partnership.

Meeting with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, Butkevičius called the opening of an Israeli embassy in Vilnius earlier this year a historic landmark in bilateral relations.

“Israel is our strategic regional partner and one of the most important partners for Lithuania worldwide. I am convinced the partnership between our countries will grow in the future,” the Lithuanian PM said in a press release.

Netanyahu Recalls Roots at Meeting with Lithuanian PM Butkevičius

Netanyahu Recalls Roots at Meeting with Lithuanian PM Butkevičius

VILNIUS, September 9, BNS – The Jewish community in Vilnius achieved remarkable things, but also experienced the horrors of the Holocaust which can never be forgotten, Israeli pre minister Binyamin Netanyahu said in Jerualsem Tuesday while meeting his Lithuanian counterpart Algirdas Butkevičius.

The head of the Israeli government said his grandfather came from Lithuania.

“My own family hails from Lithuania. My grandfather was born in Lithuania. The Jewish community in Lithuania and especially around Vilnius had remarkable achievements, spectacular intellectual achievements, but of course we also experienced the horrors of the Holocaust,” Netanyahu said in a comment published on the Israeli government website.

Rosh Ha Shana 2015

Rosh Ha Shana 2015

Greetings on Rosh Hashanah!

During the holiday we invite you to attend our holiday events!

The events begin at 12:00 noon on September 13, 2015

12:00 Official greeting speech by Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky (in the White Hall)

12:30 “Art Workshop”: Rosh Hashanah activities for children from the Dubi and Dubi Mishpaha Clubs (Dubi Club room)

12:30 “Art Workshop”: Rosh Hashanah activities for Ilan and Knafaim Club members (Ilan Club room)

12:30 Holiday “Who, what, where?” game for adults. Game led by Irina Slutsker (Jascha Heifetz Hall)

12:30 Israeli dance with Karina Semionova (White Hall)

2:30 Lecture by Lara Lempert “Days of Trembling: Reading the Torah as a Means of Social Engineering” (Jascha Heifetz Hall)

2:30 Rosh Hashanah art workshop for grownups with artist Raimondas Savickas and presentation of creative projects for 2015-2016 (Student Union premises)

7:00 P.M. Rosh Hashanah holiday at the Choral Synagogue (Pylimo street no. 39, Vilnius). Presentation of calendar for the Jewish year 5776. Concert by violinist B. Kirzneris, violinist V. Mikeliūnas and A. Gotesman on percussion: “Sounds of the Vilnius Synagogue.”

LEARN AND PRACTICE PLAYING CHESS

LEARN AND PRACTICE PLAYING CHESS

The Lithuanian Jewish Community, the elite chess and checkers club Rositsan and Maccabi invite young and old to  LEARN AND PRACTICE PLAYING CHESS.

Chess masters and experienced trainers will conduct the lessons. There will be tournaments and simultané, where one player takes on a group of opponents. Lessons to be held twice per week. Entry is free.

The first lesson and meeting will take place at 6:00 P.M. Wednesday, September 18, 2015 in the Jascha Heifetz Hall at Pylimo No. 4 in Vilnius.

Please register with FIDE master Boris Rositsan by telephone at 8 655 43556 or by email at INFO@METBOR.LT. Registration is open until September 16, 2015.

THE VILNA YIDDISH READING CIRCLE STARTS

17 TH  YEAR OF
THE VILNA YIDDISH READING CIRCLE
STARTS NEXT SUNDAY, SEPT. 13, 2015 AT 1 PM SHARP
at the Jewish Cultural and Information Center in the Old Town
Mėsinių 3A/5, Vilnius
EVERYBODY WELCOME!

The Jewish Cultural and Information Center, a partnership project of the Jewish Community of Lithuania and the Vilnius Municipality, is proud to host the 17th annual Vilna Yiddish Reading Circle this season. The inaugural session will be held this coming Sunday, 13 September 2015, at 1 PM (1300) sharp, and further sessions will follow thereafter each Sunday at the same time. The instructor, Professor Dovid Katz (www.dovidkatz.net), has been volunteering to lead the circle since its inception in September 1999 for those in the Jewish community (and equally, those from all other communities in Vilnius!) who wish to develop their knowledge of Yiddish language, literature and culture.

Initiatives to Preserve the Jewish Cultural Heritage

Recently there have been a number of initiatives aimed at preserving and publicizing Jewish heritage in Lithuania. The YIVO Vilna Project begun last year has the goal of preserving and digitizing pre-war archives in Vilnius and New York, a project on the creation of a Jewish Cultural Heritage Way in Lithuania is underway, the tolerance campaign Bagel Shop is being implemented, an ambitious project called “The Lost Shtetl” is being implemented in Šeduva, the public organization Maceva has concluded an agreement with the municipality of Kaunas on renovating the Old Jewish Cemetery there, the Vilnius municipality has begun restoration of the synagogue on Gėlių street and many other initiatives have been put forward.

Full text in Lithuanian: www.eeagrants.lt

Information from the Kaunas Jewish Community

Information from the Kaunas Jewish Community

As Jewish New year approaches, to take place September 14 and 15 this year, it’s traditional to visit the graves of relatives. The tragic events of World War II, the Holocaust, means that there is usually more than one mass Jewish grave in every Lithuanian city and town. On September 3 members of the Kaunas Jewish Community visited mass murder sites in Petrašiūnai and at teh Seventh Fort, where Jews were murdered in August of 1941.

On August 30, 1941, 23 children, 72 women and 30 men were murdered at Petrašiūnai because they were Jews. More than 4,000 Jews were murdered at the Seventh Fort and on August 18, 1941, alone more than 500 Jewish intellectuals imprisoned in the Kaunas ghetto were murdered in an attempt to kill the elite and most educated first.

When You Save One Person, You Save a World

When You Save One Person, You Save a World

A conference organized by the Congregation of the Sisters of the Apparition of God was held August 30, 2015, in Panevėžys, Lithuania. Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky gave the welcome speech and presented the organizers with a certificate of gratitude and flowers. The chairwoman spoke warmly of those who rescued Jews during the Holocaust and underlined the role played by Marija Rusteikaitė, who officially rescued 15 Jews during the war and also saved several others by sending to other people. For her heroism, the state of Israel awarded Marija Rusteikaitė the medal and certificate of Righteous Gentile posthumously.

Danutė Selčinskaja, the director of the department of Rescue and Commemoration of Jews at the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum in Vilnius, delivered a paper devoted to Marija Rusteikaitė. One of those Marija Rusteikaitė rescued was in the audience, Sulamita Lev, who in turn spoke about the hardships and history of her family. Danutė Selčinskaja also presented a museum exhibit panel with photographs and material on the history of Sulamita Lev’s rescue, and commented on details contained in the exhibit.

On August 7, 2015, members of the Panevėžys City Jewish Community visited the Riga ghetto. The Riga ghetto was established in October of 1941 by order of Nazi politician Hugo Wittrock. They placed the ghetto in the most Jewish neighborhood of Riga called the Moscow Suburb by locals. All Riga Jews living outside the territory were ordered to leave their homes immediately and move into the ghetto, 9,000 square meters surrounded by fences.

About 30,000 Jews in total were forced to live under atrocious conditions in the Riga ghetto. Approximately 12 people had to share a room with five beds.

A ghetto prisoner gave the group from Panevėžys a short tour of the ghetto during which he recounted how they murdered Riga ghetto Jews continuously from November of 1941 till June of 1944. On November 28, 1941, the Nazis ordered the men separated from the women, including children.

Israeli Ambassador to Lithuania Visits Panevėžys

Israeli Ambassador to Lithuania Visits Panevėžys

Israeli ambassador to Lithuania Amir Maimon visited Panevėžys on August 6. The purpose of his visit was to expand cooperation and encourage the growth of trade between Israel and Lithuania, to meet with Panevėžys businesspeople and to meet with the Jewish community. The ambassador visited city hall where he met with the mayor Rytis Račkauskas.

“We live in the middle of Lithuania, in a favorable geographic location, halfway between the capitals of Lithuania and Latvia. We are a compact city favorable for business growth. We have large enterprises such as AB Amilna, the Panevėžys Construction Conglomerate and Panevėžio keliai, we have received foreign investment and we are pleased by the Norwegian companies which have been established here.

“We can be proud of the free economic zone operating here, this year the enterprise Devold should be established here, and two other potential investors are considering doing business here. We strive to make Panevėžys attractive for investors, so we have invited representatives of Israel. I would like to note that ten years ago a protocol was signed with the city of Ramla [in Israel], but sadly this process has come to a halt. One wishes one of the Israeli cities was among the ranks of our partners,” mayor Račkauskas said.

A Death

The Goodwill Fund and the Lithuanian Jewish Community in great sadness report that member of the executive board of the fund Uri Chanoch has died. He died September 1 at his home in Israel. The sympathies of all members of the fund go to the family of Uri Chanoch in their and our time of loss. Our dear friend and irreplaceable colleague has left us.

Uri Chanoch was born in Kaunas in 1928. He survived the Kaunas ghetto and then Dachau, but lost his grandparents, parents and sister during the Holocaust. Having been through the war, persecution and terror of extermination, Chanoch devoted his life to fight for the welfare of other Holocaust survivors and was deeply involved in the restitution process in Lithuania and abroad.

Legendary Rescuer of Jews Commemorated in Kaunas

The Japanese vice-consul in Kaunas in 1940 issued a plethora of transit visas for transiting Japan which enabled Jews to escape the horrors of war abroad.

It’s notable that Sugihara, even after the consulate was closed, continued to issue “visas for life” from the Hotel Metropol and even up to the last moment as his train left the station in Kaunas. the final visas he issued were passed through the windows of that train.

The exact number of Jews saved is not known. According to Holocaust researchers, the transit visas issued by the Japanese vice-consul saved the lives of about 6,000 Jews.

The Sugihara Fund: Diplomats for Life organization housed in the former Japanese consulate in Kaunas which is now also a museum and the home of the Asian Studies Center of Vytautas Magnus University, is inviting members of the public to attend events organized by the Japanese embassy to Lithuania to mark the 75th anniversary of Chiune Sugihara’s brave act.

For full text in Lithuanian, please see lrytas.lt

European Jewish Culture Day in Rokiškis, Lithuania

European Jewish Culture Day in Rokiškis, Lithuania

On September 6 an information sign was unveiled on Sinagogų street in Rokiškis, Lithuania to mark European Jewish Culture Day. The sign provides information on the Rokiškis Litvak community and the 3 synagogues which once stood here.

A significant gathering of locals interested in the history of their hometown attended the event.

Rokiškis regional administration mayor Antanas Vagonis and Rokiškis Local History Museum director Nijolė Šniokienė unveiled the sign.

The informational sign was prepared as part of the project “Commemoration of the Site of the Rokiškis Synagogues” financed by the Cultural Heritage Protection Department under the Lithuanian Ministry of Culture.

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News from South African Jewry

Dear Community Member

A report in yesterday’s Sunday Times (6 September)  concerning statements made by Obed Bapela, a senior member of the ANC’s national executive committee, is generating much concern and outrage in our community. According to the report the ruling party is considering implementing far-reaching changes to its current policy, as well as existing South African law, affecting the relationship between South Africa and Israel, which will impact negatively on South African Jewry.

The world is reeling from the current tragic events surrounding the desperate attempts by Syrians searching for safety and yet Bapela ignores this in his obsession to demonise Israel and South African Jewry. Certainly, the proposed changes to our law and foreign policy, as outlined by Obed Bapela, are outrageous and unacceptable. It is of concern that policies so overtly targeted against Israel and discriminatory against our Jewish community are allegedly being considered by the ruling party at all. That being said, it needs to be borne in mind that within the ANC, there exists a wide range of views on the Israel-Palestine issue and what South Africa’s approach to it should be. Mr Bapela is well known for being an especially radical anti-Israel voice within the party, and the sentiments expressed by him are nothing new. The real issue is whether his views are now set to become mainstream ANC policy.

Lithuanian Post Office Honors Sugihara and Zwartendijk on 75th Anniversary of “Visas for Life”

KAUNAS—The Postal Service of Lithuania today launched two handsomecommemorative envelopes in memory of two celebrated European consuls in Kaunas who helped thousands of Jews obtain visas that enabled them to leave Lithuania during the final year before the Nazi invasion and the Holocaust came to the country. The two, Chiune Sugihara (1900−1986) of Japan and Jan Zwartendijk (1896−1976) of the Netherlands risked their careers, and more,  to disobey instructions and the letter of the law to save those who came to them for help. These were primarily citizens of prewar Poland who found themselves in Lithuania in the summer of 1940, when the country was being absorbed into the USSR, and the consulates and embassies in Kaunas were under pressure to close down altogether.

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