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Soccer agent and writer save memory of Holocaust in Lithuanian town

Relatives of Holocaust victims walk in a memorial march in the Lithuanian town of Moletai, Aug. 29, 2016.

Relatives of Holocaust victims walk in a memorial march in the Lithuanian town of Moletai, Aug. 29, 2016.

When Israeli soccer agent Tzvi Kritzer decided to build a monument in the Lithuanian town of Moletai (Malat in Yiddish), where most of his family was murdered during the Holocaust, and to bring the relatives of the victims to the town for a memorial march, he was told to expect 20 to 30 people.

A year later, on August 29, 2016, more than 3,000 people, including the president of Lithuania, arrived in Moletai for the largest memorial ceremony in the country’s history to honor Jews murdered during the Holocaust.

The relatives of the victims from Israel, Canada, the US and elsewhere walked a little over a mile from the local synagogue, where Jews were kept during the Holocaust for three days without food and water, to the location of the massacre.

At the memorial ceremony marking the opening of the new monument, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite placed a stone on the monument and said that the “Holocaust is the tragedy of all of Lithuania because hundreds of thousands of its citizens were killed.”

A total of 2,000 Jews, which constituted 80% of the population of the town of Moletai, were murdered in one day on August 29, 1941.

Any reminder of the catastrophe had remained virtually absent other than the abandoned mass grave found at the outskirts of the town until a serious effort to change the situation was made by an Israeli descendant of the Jews of Moletai and several prominent Lithuanians.

Tzvi Kritzer’s father was the only member of his large family to escape Moletai to Soviet Russia before WW II. Kritzer decided to commemorate the Jews killed in the town when he understood that “If I do nothing, their memory will just fade away.”

He hired Israeli film director Eli Gershenzon to make a documentary about the Jews of Moletai and began negotiating with the town to put up a monument at the location of the mass grave. He was ready to fund the monument on his own, but he needed authorization.

The town was not willing to help Kritzer until three months ago when prominent Lithuanian writer Marius Ivaskevicius, who was born in Moletai, published a letter called “Jews, the Curse of Lithuania.”

“Imagine: Several dozens of Moletai’s Jews will walk the same way their relatives walked 75 years ago, and 6,000 Moletaians will watch them from their homes. This is the worst thing that can happen. My town cannot or does not want to understand the importance of this event. It should be helped. So I call for everyone to join us.

“You will not need to do anything, just go — together with our Jews. The march will take place anyway, but the question is will the Jews go alone again or shall we go with them. May the 29th of August become the day of our reconciliation.”

In response to the letter, the Moletai municipality willingly turned itself into the organizational headquarters of the event. Municipal workers helped clean the gravesite, installed security cameras and put up road signs to help guide visitors.

“I think my letter really helped people understand the importance of what is going on,” Ivaskevicius said.

“I’m sure many people simply did not know about what happened in Lithuania during the war, just like I myself knew nothing about the tragedy of Moletai’s Jews until several years ago.

“And those who knew the truth — that Jews here were killed not by the Germans, but by the Lithuanians themselves — found it too difficult to accept,” Ivaskevicius told TPS during a visit to Israel last week, together with actors from a Moscow theater who brought a stage adaptation of his play, Russian Novel, to Israel.

“Lithuania is still trying to find its own way of dealing with its tragic past.”

Only some 20,000 survived of the 220,000 Jews who lived in Lithuania before WW II. As in other countries of the former Soviet Union, including Ukraine and Latvia, where the local population played an active part in the murder of Jews during the war, official propaganda often relates that the locals were victims of the Soviets and not in fact torturers themselves.

“The problem is not with the Lithuanians — they are open, generous, outgoing, tolerant and delightful,”  said Dovid Katz, an American- born historian of Lithuanian Jewry who was a professor of Yiddish at Vilnius University from 1999 to 2010 and who has documented the country’s obfuscation of the Holocaust.

“The problem is with the small but powerful circles of ultra-nationalists in government, academia, the media and the arts, who are determined to rewrite and falsify history.”

Katz said he would visit the town next week to examine whether it has dealt honestly with the history of its Jews, which he believes should mean in practice that it places the information prominently on display.

He stressed that this information should include mentioning those responsible for the murder of the Jews and that memorial signs should also be written in Yiddish, the language of the victims.




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