(November 14, 2007 - Jerusalem) Chairman of the Yad Vashem
Directorate Avner Shalev thanked President Victor Yuschenko of
Ukraine during his visit to Yad Vashem today, for having
instructed the relevant professionals to reach an agreement
regarding the Bruno Schultz murals that are at Yad Vashem.
According to the agreement under discussion, Ukraine will loan
the works to Yad Vashem long-term, and Israel will acknowledge
the desire of Ukraine to register the murals as items of
cultural heritage of Ukraine.
During the course of the President’s visit, Chairman of the
Yad Vashem Council Joseph (Tommy) Lapid protested the recent
honor granted by President Yuschenko to Roman Shukhevych, a
man who was involved in the murder of Jews during the
Holocaust. "In a terrible pogrom the Nightingale Battalion of
the Ukrainian legion participated in the murder of 4,000 Jews
from Lvov between June 30-July 3, 1941. The Ukrainian
commander of the battalion at that time was Roman Shukhevych,
a Ukrainian nationalist. The units he commanded, supposedly
fighting for Ukrainian independence, comitted large scale
murder during the war. He was a war criminal."
At the conclusion of the visit, the President presented Shalev
with a rock and soil from Babi Yar, as well as with a prayer
book from a Jewish man in Berdichiv on which he had recorded
the names of his family who was murdered in the Holocaust.
Shalev presented President Yuschenko with ITS documents from
the Yad Vashem Archive relating to his father, Andrej
Juschtschenko’s time in German captivity in 1944-45. Andrej
Juschtschenko was brought to Flossenberg on December 1, 1944.
The documents Shalev presented include the personal form of
the prisoner in the Flossenberg concentration camp, in
Germany, as well as the Flossenberg registry of prisoners by
alphabet, date of arrival and list of survivors, on which
Andrej Juschtschenko appears.
Yuschenko toured the Holocaust History Museum, visited the
Holocaust Art Museum, held a wreath laying ceremony in the
Hall of Remembrance and visited the Children’s Memorial. He
expressed his identification with the victims, and emphasized
the importance of remembrance, and dialogue between nations.