JTA
- 02.26.2002
The
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Book
on Lithuanian Rescuers Prompts Debate with Nationalists
VILNIUS,
Lithuania, Feb. 24 (JTA) - A recently published book listing the names
of Lithuanians who rescued Jews from the Holocaust has sparked a debate
between the State Jewish Museum and Lithuanian nationalists.
After 13
years of extensive research, the State Jewish Museum last week released
"Saving the Jews in Lithuania from 1941-1944." The book by
Viktorija Sakaite lists the names of 2,570 non-Jewish Lithuanians who
risked their lives to protect Jews during the Nazi occupation of the
Baltic nation.
When the
State Jewish Museum was re-established in 1989, it immediately appointed
a special committee to research the number of Lithuanian rescuers and
gather their daring stories.
But
Lithuanian nationalists insist the actual number of Lithuanian rescuers
is closer to 14,000.
The issue
is especially sensitive in Lithuania, which is widely believed to have
had the highest rate of collaboration with the Nazis among overrun
states. During World War II, the Nazis and their Lithuanian
collaborators murdered 94 percent of the countryīs 250,000 Jews.
But
donīt cite such statistics to Ruta Gajuauskaite, a former member of
Parliament and founder of the small Green Party in Lithuania.
She
points to "The List of Gurevicius," a 1999 book written by
Lithuanian-Canadian journalist Antanas Gurevicius. Researched over
several decades, the book cites more than 10,000 Lithuanian rescuers,
also known as "righteous Lithuanians."
Gajuauskaite
says most Jewish survivors emigrated to Israel, South Africa and North
America after the Holocaust, and this has made it difficult to locate
rescued Jews.
Gajuauskaite,
whose mother saved 12 Jewish children, treating them "like her own
daughters," calls the research by the State Jewish Museum truthful,
yet incomplete.
She
aspires to publish a substantially longer list under the Club of
Signatures, a Lithuanian nongovernmental organization that includes more
than 100 former Parliament members.
Her
request to cite the work of the State Jewish Museum in her project was
rejected by the museumīs director, Emanuelis Zingeris.
"Lithuanian
radical and national groups are trying to make a better face of
Lithuania, to make surrealist numbers of righteous people. Our small
team here will never be used to create this sugar and propaganda,"
he says.
"Lithuanians
can make these lists ourselves," Gajuauskaite counters. "All
those accusations are mostly speculative and aim to make some violence
between Lithuanians and Jewish people.
Jonas
Morkos, a non-Jewish Lithuanian journalist who has produced
documentaries on the Holocaust in Lithuania, says the debate is just one
of many since 1991, when Lithuanian independence from Soviet domination
opened the doors for historical research.
"At
first, I thought the controversy was good because it brought attention
to the subject," Morkos says.
"But
now I wonder if itīs just serving modern politics and has nothing to do
with the experience of victims. It doesnīt make a difference if itīs
4,000 or 10,000. The important thing is that such people existed, and
they are completely unknown by the public in the West."
He calls
author Sakaite "a great professional in looking for rescuers."
He adds
that Gajuauskaite and Gurevicius "are not a serious force."
The
argument over the actual number of righteous Lithuanians appears rooted
in what each side considers suitable proof.
For
example, the Jewish Museum got a lead about hundreds of Lithuanians in
the small town of Utena who saved numerous Jews. The incident is tallied
in Gureviciusī list, but it was omitted by the Jewish Museum.
"We
made the research, and itīs horribly incorrect," Zingeris says.
Chaim
Bergman, a Jewish tour guide in Kaunas, Lithuania, has ventured into the
Lithuanian countryside to unite Jewish survivors and righteous
Lithuanians.
The
nationalists add to their lists everyone who claims to have been a
rescuer, he says.
But
"proof is the problem. Itīs is very difficult to prove," he
adds.
One of
Bergmanīs findings resulted in a medal granted to a rescuer by
Israelīs Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial, which has honored 505 righteous
Lithuanians. The Lithuanian Presidentīs Office has cited more than
1,000 Lithuanian rescuers.
Meanwhile,
some 1,000 copies of the State Jewish Museumīs publication will be
distributed in Lithuanian public schools, public libraries, government
offices and national and international museums. An English version is
expected to be published this summer.
"This
book is going to be an important source to historians who work on
Holocaust issues," says Ona Bievieniene, a Jewish Museum historian.
"It will become an important education tool in Lithuania. Each
countryside teacher having this list of names can initiate local
research, seeking for survivors and relatives."
Sakaite
has been researching righteous Lithuanians since she joined the Jewish
Museum in 1992. Among the challenges facing her was to get her subjects
to discuss the past.
"Sometimes
Iīd have to spend days talking to some old man or women to make them
speak," says Sakaite. "I know Lithuanians can be modest and
closed individuals, but I never thought it would be so difficult to get
them to talk about the good they did in life."