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(August 11, 2008 -
Jerusalem) Yad Vashem is increasingly concerned by the
atmosphere of antisemitism and Holocaust revisionism in
Lithuania.
For nearly a year,
Lithuanian authorities have been carrying out investigations
into Jewish Holocaust survivors for their wartime activities
as partisans in Lithuania. Among those being persecuted is Dr.
Yitzhak Arad, a Holocaust historian and former Chairman of the
Yad Vashem Directorate.
Despite various
protest actions taken by Yad Vashem and other bodies, the
persecutions of Jewish partisans continues in Lithuania, as do
antisemitic incidents, such as the spray painting of many
swastikas and antisemitic graffiti on the Jewish
organizations’ building yesterday in Vilnius (photo attached).
In a letter dated
August 10, Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev wrote to
Lithuanian Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas: “Sadly, to date,
the public outcry has yet to yield a fair and reasonable
Lithuanian response. If anything, it seems that the harmful
phenomenon of historical revisionism and distortion, of which
the investigation of the Jewish partisans is a prime example,
may actually be increasing in your country.
In light of this
severe and continuing problem, Yad Vashem calls upon you to
intervene directly and restore Lithuania’s integrity as an
enlightened and democratic nation by ending the misguided
investigations. Only by dealing openly and forthrightly with
the full and complex truth about the past will your nation
succeed in building for itself a secure and stable future,” he
wrote.
Yad Vashem believes
that a key way to combat the Holocaust revisionist trend is
through education and by providing comprehensive, credible
information to all those who seek it.
“Yad Vashem will
continue to welcome and teach Lithuanian educators about the
events, ramifications and legacy of the Holocaust, thus
reflecting and communicating our core commitment to the truth.
We shall continue to support these teachers’ admirable
attempts to strengthen true democracy in your country and hope
that they remain steadfast within an increasingly inhibiting
atmosphere that they can now sense around them,” Shalev wrote.
In tandem to the
letter to Prime Minister Kirkilas, Shalev also wrote to
Historical Commission Chair Emanuelis Zingeris again to urge
him to publicly voice his protest against the situation.
In addition to
actions taken with other organizations, in September 2007 Yad
Vashem suspended its participation in the Historical
Commission, and in February 2008 Yad Vashem Chairman Avner
Shalev presented a letter of protest to Lithuanian Foreign
Minister Petras Vaitiekunas during his visit to Yad Vashem.
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