Your Excellency,
On February 28th of this year,
Yad Vashem was pleased to host the delegation that visited
us under your leadership. As you certainly recall, the visit
included candid discussions regarding subjects of common
interest. We came to these discussions in good faith and
with a sense of mutual respect.
We were therefore surprised and
disappointed to learn of a most unfavorable and
objectionable development that has been reported to us from
Kiev.
I refer, sadly, to a press
conference in which a member of your delegation took part,
and during which glaring and offensive inaccuracies
regarding our institution and its supposed positions were
belligerently expressed. I object strenuously both to the
misleading statements ascribed to Yad Vashem, as well as to
the circumstances in which a guest whom we had welcomed
cordially and genuinely now seeks, without any prior notice,
to publicly misrepresent us.
As no preliminary agenda for our
meeting was requested or presented to us in advance, we
prepared no specific professional materials for your
delegation. However, we were open to spontaneous discussion
of various matters that were raised, including that of the
wartime activity of the Nachtigal Battalion, commanded by
Roman Shukheyvich.
At that time, I emphasized that
Yad Vashem’s approach has always been to base
historiographical processes, even when controversial and
charged, upon sound scientific methods and practices,
including thorough and unhurried examination of authentic
documents. As always, Yad Vashem will not compromise its
renowned academic integrity in the face of internal or
regional ideological debates anywhere in the world. Academic
research, conducted and published around the world, points
to the support of, and intensive and widespread
collaboration with, the German Nazi occupation of Poland and
Ukraine, by Nachtigal and its commander at the time, Roman
Shukeyvich.
Furthermore, I most explicitly
stated that Yad Vashem’s Archives is not organized according
to personal files, but rather organizes its close to 75
million pages of documentation according to archival
collections, based on provenance. Among these documents is
material from various sources related to Nachtigal’s
activities during World War II. During our meeting, my
colleagues and I expressed our willingness to collate the
material and to provide you with copies. We saw this meeting
as the beginning of our dialogue, as originally envisioned
by President Yuschenko, and not as the end.
We look forward to further
contact with you and your colleagues in the spirit of
respect and cooperation that has, until now, characterized
our relationship.