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(February 27, 2008 - Jerusalem)
During the visit of Lithuanian Foreign Minister Petras
Vaitiekunas to Yad Vashem today, the Chairman of Yad Vashem,
Avner Shalev, presented a letter to the Minister protesting
Lithuania’s intention to pursue a criminal investigation into
the wartime activities of Dr. Yitzhak Arad. Dr. Arad is a
former partisan, a Holocaust historian, and former chairman of
Yad Vashem.
“Sadly, not only have the
so-called legal proceedings not been suspended and an official
apology to Dr. Arad not been forthcoming. Rather, the State of
Israel, Yad Vashem and Dr. Arad’s numerous friends and
supporters all over the world have encountered as a response
little more than meaningless explanations at best, or more
frequently - silence,” Shalev wrote. “It is clear that
initiating criminal proceedings into Dr. Arad’s involvement in
Lithuanian partisan activity during World War II is tantamount
to a call for an investigation into all partisan activity. Any
attempt to equate those actions with illegal activities,
thereby defining them as criminal, is a dangerous perversion
of the events that occurred in Lithuania during the war.”
Approximately a year ago,
Lithuania opened a criminal investigation into Dr. Arad. The
investigation became known when the Lithuanian prosecutor’s
office turned to the Israeli Justice Ministry with a request
to interrogate Dr. Arad on suspicion that he took part in the
murder of Lithuanian civilians during the Holocaust. The
Lithuanian case is based on Dr. Arad’s memoir, in which he
describes his experiences as a partisan in Nazi-occupied
Lithuania.
Shalev concluded his letter by
urging a speedy resolution to the issue: “On behalf of Yad
Vashem, and all who share our faith in humanistic and
democratic values, I emphatically call for a swift and final
conclusion to this matter. I respectfully urge you, as
Lithuania’s Foreign Minister, to do your utmost bring this
subject to a rapid end, and thus facilitate the cessation of
historical revisionism and distortion in Lithuania.”
The Holocaust in Lithuania was
unique in that most of the Jews there were murdered by local
citizens. The “Order Police” began to massacre Jews as soon as
the Soviets left in 1941, before the German occupation. Out of
a prewar population of 220,000, only a few thousand Jews
survived the war in Lithuania - representing the largest
percentage of Jews murdered in one country during the
Holocaust.
Dr. Arad is a retired Brigadier
General in the IDF, and served for 21 years as the Chairman of
Yad Vashem, until his retirement in 1993. His comprehensive
study on the Holocaust in Eastern Europe, including Lithuania,
was published three years ago. |