The Bubnys Event at the 2015 Jewish Community Auschwitz Commemoration

by Julius Norwilla

This year much of the world commemorates the seventieth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz in 1945. The day of its liberation, January 27th, is International Holocaust Remembrance Day. To mark the day this year, on the 26th of January, the Jewish Community of Lithuania organized three events, as reported in Defending History.

The final event of the day was the book launch for The Šiauliai Ghetto featuring as sole announced speaker its author, Dr. Arūnas Bubnys, director of the Genocide and Resistance Research Department of the Genocide and Resistance Research Center of Lithuania; for a critical view of the Genocide Center, as it is known for short, see Defending History’s page and news section on the institution.

There were about eighty people in the community’s elegant Yasha Heifetz Hall, mostly people from today’s Vilnius Jewish community. Among them were a number who have a very personal relationship towards the Šiauliai Ghetto: their family roots are in this city and its region, known in Yiddish and Jewish culture as Shavl. Many have lost most of their families in the Holocaust.

Read defendinghistory.com

After the Ceremony to Commemorate International Holocaust Day at Auschwitz

After the Ceremony to Commemorate International Holocaust Day at Auschwitz

Commentary by Faina Kukliansky, chair of the Lithuanian Jewish Community

Auschwitz in the winter, during International Holocaust Day, was as moving as the Holocaust survivors who met here. My thoughts swirled around the people who are still alive. In Lithuania the only still living survivor is Meyshe Preis, who through some sort of miracle survived the Auschwitz, Stutthoff and Dachau concentration camps. His poor health didn’t allow him to attend the commemoration of Auschwitz victims on January 27. Kings, queens and heads of state did attend. I want the people of Lithuania, her politicians and high-ranking civil servants, and especially her decision makers, to understood that a trip to Auschwitz is not the same thing as travelling to Brussels for the usual meeting.

Seventy years ago the Jew were liberated, but they were persecuted en masse from 1939. Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskaitė, foreign minister Linas Linkevičius and the chair of the Lithuanian Jewish Community travelled to the ceremony and were deeply affected by it. I believe their attitude is that of the state regarding Holocaust survivors, whose children and grandchildren now form the basis of our community. I will interject here that representing the community doesn’t mean that some high institutions choose a certain Jew for the post according to merit. That’s how it was for many years. If there’s a Jewish community which elects its chairperson democratically, then the chairperson must represent the community and Lithuania as well, if the community is loyal to the state and sees itself as a part of the country.

Unique Jewish archive from interwar Vilnius to be reassembled in digital library

A unique Vilnius Jewish archive, which was scattered during the Holocaust, will be revived in a virtual library in a few years.
In January, the Lithuanian Central State Archive started preserving the documents collected by the Jewish scientific YIVO institute that operated in Vilnius between the two world wars to be able to later digitize them and upload on a special database on the Jewish life in Eastern Europe.

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STATEMENT BY THE JEWISH (LITVAK) COMMUNITY

It is not surprising that experienced journalists and politicians as well as leaders of well-known Jewish institutions, who are following Ms. Kukliansky‘s activities devoted to expose Nazi criminals as well as to fight Neo-Nazism, were left in a complete state of confusion after reading Mr. Zuroff ‘s so called protest .

 Perhaps it is much easier to simply demonize some small country‘s even smaller institution, unjustly accuse chair of local Jewish community and exalt her deceased predecessor than to engage in any kind scientific research or a civilized discussion.

Mr. Zuroff, as it shows in his letters (here and here) of January 28 addressed to Ms. Kukliansky, was extremely quick to judge the cooperation between Jewish Community and Genocide Center. While the Jewish Community and Genocide Center certainly do not agree on some issues, the recent cooperation between the two institutions has brought some positive results:

70th Anniversary Commemoration of the Liberation of Auschwitz

70th Anniversary Commemoration of the Liberation of Auschwitz

Dear Friends,

I have just arrived in Israel from Krakow where we commemorated the 70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz.

As I am sure many of you will have seen this historic event was extremely symbolic and significant and it received unprecedented media coverage worldwide. The eyes of the world, this week, were on Auschwitz.

WJC, in partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation, brought 101 survivors of Auschwitz, from 21 countries, together with members of their families, to participate in this auspicious event. Their presence — surely the last time such a large number will be able to gather there — made this commemoration particularly meaningful.

Aleksandras Bosas: Nine Poems

Editor’s note: These nine Lithuanian poems by Aleksandras Bosas (1951—2014) were chosen by Milan Chersonski, translated by Ieva Pukelytė-Mikutienė and edited by Stanley H. Barkan, director of Cross-Cultural Communications Press. Sincerest thanks to them all.

During his last days, Aleksandras Bosas, in addition to writing poems protesting the falsification of the Holocaust in his native land, participated in one demonstration in Ukmergė against a city-square monument that honors a local Holocaust perpetrator as “national hero” and another in Kaunas protesting the glorification of the 1941 “Lithuanian Activist Front” murderers of Jewish civilians across the land.

More at defendinghistory.com

Litvak Victim Marks 70 Year Anniversary of Liberation of Auschwitz by Red Army and of Dachau by American Army

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Meyshe Preis, prisoner of three concentration camps

Lithuanian Jewish Community member Meyshe Preis (or Moisiejus Preisas, as his Lithuanian passport calls him) was imprisoned at three concentration camps: sent from the Kovna ghetto to Stuffhof, then to Auschwitz, then to Dachau. He’s alive and living in Sventsyan (Švenčionys), Lithuania, and still speaks about the horrors he survived in the ghetto and at the concentration and death camps. His apartment, where he now lives alone since the death of his beloved wife, has a wall dedicated to memorabilia from hell, including photographs and a small bowl he took with him to all the camps until his liberation by American troops from a forced march of prisoners from Dachau into the neighboring mountains in May of 1945. His wall museum, collected over many years, includes newspaper articles and written memoirs as well as photos. Currently the LJC Social Center is helping Meyshe Preis out around the house and with the simple chores of life.

A blueprint to combat anti-Semitism in Europe

A blueprint to combat anti-Semitism in Europe

On January 27th the world will come together to observe International Holocaust Remembrance Day, marking 70 years since the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Yet 70 years since end of the most horrific chapter in Europe’s history, anti-Semitism has once again surged to levels unprecedented since the end of the Holocaust, with virtually no part of Europe free from this oldest and most enduring form of hatred.

Whether it is the kosher supermarket attack in Paris this January, the shooting in the Brussels Jewish Museum last year, or frequent assaults against Jews and vandalism of synagogues and Jewish stores, there is an increasingly palpable sense of fear and insecurity among many Jewish communities in Europe.

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Still fighting over Auschwitz, 70 years on

Vladimir Putin’s absence from events marking the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camp shows how Europe is still bitterly divided over the legacy of the Holocaust.

The Kremlin has confirmed Mr Putin will not attend Tuesday’s ceremony at the camp in Poland on Tuesday, unlike many world leaders, including the presidents of France, Germany and Poland.

The official reason is that the Russian president did not receive a formal invitation.

The organisers of the ceremonies said no personal invitations were sent to any leader, but the Kremlin evidently feels snubbed, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying the letter was “not something that should be responded to”.

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Lithuanian Jewish Community Winter Children’s Camp at Šventoji, Lithuania

Lithuanian Jewish Community Winter Children’s Camp at Šventoji, Lithuania

Eighty children aged from 7 to 18 from Vilnius, Kaunas, Klaipėda and Šiauliai came together for the LJC winter camp at the end of December. The camp held at the Šventoji, Lithuania recreational and health resort Energetikas lasted six days. The children were treated to an intensive program of activities prepared by the camp leaders as well as having an opportunity to enjoy the seaside and one another.

 Dorin Rosenkova, the camp leader, was a participant at such camps not so long ago but is now the director responsible for all children. She said everyone was satisfied with this camp.

‘Double Genocide’ has become the deadliest form of denial

The 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz approaches amid a disturbing new cover-up of Holocaust history. Across Eastern Europe, the notion of a “Double Genocide” – the idea that there were two equal holocausts, Soviet and Nazi – has been pushed by governments and nationalist elites in the media and arts.

The concept suggests that Jews were communists, and participated in the communist crimes against their countries – which must equally count as “genocide”.

Therefore, the Holocaust should be reconceived as one of two equal catastrophes, one of them allegedly involving major Jewish culpability.

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UN General Assembly Special Gathering on Anti-Semitism

UN General Assembly Special Gathering on Anti-Semitism

These past week has been a difficult one for the Jewish community of France and around the world, where we came to mourn the murder of 4 French Jews in the horrific terror attack on a Paris kosher supermarket.

 As The Israeli-Jewish Congress, one of our primary goals is to act as a bridge, to strengthen relations between the State of Israel and the Diaspora, especially the Jewish communities of Europe. This has never been more urgent than today, with increasing terror attacks and rising anti-Semitism across Europe.

Thursday, January 22nd, at 09:00 am (NY time) IJC will participate in the historic Special Session of the UN General Assembly that will address Global Anti-Semitism. The session, to be held under the auspices of the UN General Assembly, has been called for by 37 countries, including Israel, United States, Canada, Australia and all members of the EU. IJC will press for immediate action in Europe, not merely words, to address the ever-growing scourge of anti-Semitism in Europe. At the top of our agenda, we will request that Europe appoint a Special Commissioner to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism (as per the initiative of the Belgian Jewish Community) and for a European-wide definition of anti-Semitism, as well as a range of other initiatives, including legislation against hate speech and Holocaust denial (attached updated IJC Blueprint to be presented during the session).

Please see link to all the info about this special session: http://www.un.org/pga/220115_informal-meeting-anti-semitism

The entire program will be webcast live: http://webtv.un.org/live-now/watch/general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-general-assembly-to-address-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide/1705520925001.

The above link also includes timetable of events and some of the official speaker info. Countries participating will include Israel, U.S., Canada, Australia and all EU Member States, plus some others. In total 37 states are expected to participate.

L.Linkevičius thanks Israel’s outgoing Ambassador for her contribution towards strengthening bilateral relations

L.Linkevičius thanks Israel’s outgoing Ambassador for her contribution towards strengthening bilateral relations

On 15 January, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Linas Linkevičius met with Israel’s outgoing Ambassador to Lithuania Hagit Ben-Yaakov. The meeting discussed close bilateral relations and cooperation within international organizations.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister thanked the Israeli diplomatic representative, who resides in Riga, for a very active and constructive cooperation in developing bilateral relations with Lithuania, and for maintaining constant focus on the Jewish Community of Lithuania.

During the conversation, Lithuania’s Foreign Minister thanked the Ambassador for her personal contribution towards strengthening Lithuania-Israel relations and adopting the decision by the Government of Israel to establish its Embassy in Vilnius.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister highlighted excellent bilateral and political cooperation, especially in the field of culture, and for successful development of relations in the fields of research and life sciences. According to the head of Lithuania’s diplomacy, it is meaningful to continue to boost economic partnership, including through promoting bilateral trade and attracting more Israeli investments.

The Embassy of Israel will be opened at the end of this January in Vilnius. Amir Maimon was appointed as the Ambassador of Israel in Vilnius. Prior to this appointment, A.Maimon served as the Director of the East European Division of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

More at urm.lt

Paris Terror Attack Victim’s Grieving Widow: ‘They Have Taken My Other Half’ (VIDEO)

Paris Terror Attack Victim’s Grieving Widow: ‘They Have Taken My Other Half’ (VIDEO)

Valerie Braham, who lost her husband, Philippe, in Friday’s terror siege at a Paris kosher market, told Israel’s Ch. 2 News on Sunday that her first inkling of the carnage taking place was when her cellphone text message to him went unanswered, moments after she learned of the attack.

“I started to worry, I sent him a message and I felt that something was wrong,” she recounted.

After taking the couple’s children to school, Philippe Braham, 40, headed over to the HyperCacher, arriving around the same time as Amedy Coulibaly, the Islamist terrorist who seized the market in a bid to assist the escape of Cherif and Said Kouachi, the brothers who were cornered by police in a simultaneous siege northeast of Paris, after they fled the scene of the massacre they carried out at the headquarters of Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday.

Valerie Braham explained that her husband had gone to the market to collect a few items for their Friday night meal.

“’Lehitraot’ – see you this evening,” were her last words to him.

A short time later, word quickly spread through the Jewish community of a hostage incident at the HyperCacher. As the minutes passed, her stomach knotted.

“At about 1:20, I was at the school to pick up my kids, and I heard about it, and I said, ‘Oh, I know that Philip had to do some shopping for me,’” she recounted.

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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.

Hundreds of thousands gather in Paris to denounce terror, honor victims

Hundreds of thousands gather in Paris to denounce terror, honor victims

A million anticipated to gather at 4 p.m. event in Republic Square; Jews killed in supermarket siege to be buried in Israel; Hollande calls Paris ‘capital of the world’

Over a million are expected to gather in Paris this afternoon for a rally in support of the victims of recent terrorist attacks in the French capital, who include four Jews murdered by an Islamist gunman in a kosher market Friday. Stay tuned to The Times of Israel liveblog for breaking developments

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Why Judaism Needs Journalism

There’s a tendency in the Jewish world to look for big solutions to big problems. One of those problems is the disheartening fact that most Jews today are simply not that interested in Judaism.

This problem isn’t made up — it’s real. We live in a world where the options are so abundant that Judaism is seen as a choice, not an obligation. This is radically different from the world I grew up in, where every Jew in the Jewish neighborhoods of Casablanca would go to synagogue on Shabbat and follow the major rituals. Judaism wasn’t a choice — it was a way of life.

Here in America, in the land where we overdose on choices, Judaism has to compete for people’s time, and, more often than not, it loses. Why would someone go to a prayer house on Saturday mornings when they can take a beautiful hike in the canyon or have coffee with an old friend or go to a gym or yoga class? If the great American question is, “What will make me happiest?” is it that surprising that Judaism so often loses?

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