Vilnius (Vilna), Lithuania
by Jono David
The pre-World War II numbers are staggering:
Vilnius' Jewish population was nearly 100,000, about forty-five
percent of the city's total. The country was strewn with some two
hundred Jewish communities sustaining the lives and livelihoods of
about 240,000 people. Vilnius had 105 synagogues and prayer houses. There were six daily Jewish newspapers. Yiddish
was the language of choice. Indeed, the city was aptly named The
Jerusalem of Lithuania.
The post-war numbers are horrifying: Only 24,000
Jews survived. Or, shall it be said, that 90 percent of the Jews had
been murdered. Vilnius' Jewish population today is 5,000, a mere five
percent of what it once was. The country is home to but 6,500 Jews,
some 200 of whom are Holocaust survivors. Most of the two hundred pre-war communities were
decimated, wiped off the map entirely. There is only one Jewish
newspaper. Few people speak Yiddish anymore. Today, there remains
exactly one synagogue in Vilnius.
- History
- The Holocaust
- Preservation of History
History
Jews have lived in Lithuania since the 14th
century. They came at the invitation of the Grand Dukes Augustus II
and Augustus III, who had recognized the utility of the merchants,
artisans, and traders as an integral component in the development of
the nation. Jews also played important roles in diplomatic missions
and defense. Over the centuries, however, the Jewish community rode a
volatile rollercoaster of turmoil and peace. Throughout, the Jews of
Lithuania were resilient, managing to refine a culture steeped with
history, tradition, education, and family.
Jews were particularly entrenched in Lithuanian
society at the outset of this century, and no place was more
important than Vilnius, an Ir ha-em, or a Great Mother City. Without
question, it was the axis of the Lithuanian Jewish world. Renowned
scientists, teachers, writers, sculptors, and musicians made their
homes here. Jewish secular and religious institutions flourished,
including Der Yiddisher Visenshaftlicher Institut in the 1920s and
1930s, which published countless scientific works. Vilnius was
selected to be its headquarters. Albert
Einstein, Sigmund Freud,
and Marc Chagall were
honorary members of the board.
From the 16th century, the yeshivot developed a
particular method of teaching known to this day as the
"Lithuanian Yeshivot." In the 18th century, The Great Gaon
of Vilnius, Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman, attained guru status, esteemed
as one of the world's greatest thinkers and authorities on Torah and Talmud.
"Torat HaKodesh" synagogue |
In the 19th century, Vilnius was the center of the
Jewish Labor Movement led by the Bund, or socialist party, which
strove to secure equal civil and political rights, including better
than squalid living conditions. The party also educated the working
class in self-defense and how to resist fascism.
By the start of the 20th century, a Jewish
renaissance was rising. In addition to the scads of synagogues,
libraries, schools, theatres, museums, medical facilities, scientific
institutions, and publishing houses were established. Yiddish was
soundly the lingua franca. Moreover, it was regarded as a secular
culture and therefore an alternative to traditional Judaism.
Built in 1903, the Torat Hakodesh Synagogue
survived the war because the Nazis used the edifice as a medical
store. It's a rather grand, modern-looking synagogue capped by a
depiction of the tablets of the Ten
Commandments. "A house of prayer is a holy place for all
peoples" is inscribed in Hebrew above the door. To the right of
the bimah, the floorboards had been ripped up for some repairs. The
long, upright pew-like benches appeared worn. The dull lighting
exuded a jaded ambience (spruced up considerably by the vigor of the
thirteen over-70 male voices in the congregation). But hidden beneath
that veil of murk was a bimah of considerable decor and
ornamentation.
There is no ordained rabbi in Vilnius, but Rabbi
Shmoel Kahn comes from London every few months for about a week at a
time. Between visits, Rabbi Kahn organizes aid from Israel, usually
securing six month visits by members of Chabad,
an international movement to raise the Jewish consciousness of world
Jewry.
The first synagogue in Vilnius is said to date to
1440, and came to be known simply as The Old Synagogue. The streets
adjacent to the building quickly became the center of the Jewish
quarter; the road running directly to the synagogue was dubbed Di
Yiddishe Gas, or Jewish Street. Today, Zydu Gavte, or Jewish Street,
and Gaono, named for the Gaon, remain. There are few other reminders
of this area left save for a few derelict buildings situated on prime
real estate in the heart of the Old City. In 1663, a new stone
synagogue replaced the old wooden one and came to be called the Great
Synagogue. Its interior was said to be opulently adorned. In 1944,
the building was heavily damaged and was completely razed following
the war. The light of the community, it seemed, had been quashed with
the Great Synagogue.
The Holocaust
Map of Ghetto Area |
The streets were also the sites of two ghettos,
which were sealed on September 6, 1941. The smaller of the two lasted
only six weeks but long enough to massacre 10,000 people in a wooded
area called Paneriai, some ten kilometers from the city. In June 2015, the Israeli Antiquities Authority announced that they had, in collaboration with research teams from the U.S., Canada, and Lithuania, discovered a 100-foot long tunnel used by Jewish prisoners to escape death in the Paneriai. The researchers used mineral and oil scanning technologies to search underground for the tunnel, through which at least a dozen Jews escaped certain death by tunneling out of holding chambers with their hands, spoons, and other tools. The tunnel is located approximately 10km from Vilnius, at the Paneriai site which contains the remains of tens of thousands of Jews murdered by the Nazis.
Thousands more (perhaps 70,000 in all) were served
a similar fate. Even before the ghettos were established some 10,000
Jews had been murdered in the capital. There were 29,000 people
caught between the ghettos, the larger of which was liquidated on 23
September 1944. It was only then that the remaining 8,000 or so
survivors were herded off to death
camps in Poland and
concentration camps in Latvia and Estonia.
On May 8, 1990, shortly following Lithuania's
regained independence, the Supreme Council of Lithuania issued an
official "Statement on the Jews." It said, "[We]
unconditionally denounce the genocide on behalf of the Lithuanian
people...Crimes against the Jews in Lithuania and elsewhere could not
be justified by any means and that immortalizing the Holocaust
victims' memory was the concern of the Lithuanian State."
Preservation of History
There is perhaps no better manifestation of the
Council's commitment to its own words than the continued support of
The Jewish State Museum of Lithuania, which had been established with
the advent of perestroika at the end of 1987. Having a state status
rendered it (and the community) protected under law. State
recognition has yielded a great harvest: additional state supported
institutions have been created; Jewish history and philosophy classes
are available at the University of Vilnius; the preservation of
Jewish books and documents is taking place at the Central State
Library; there are Jewish schools; there are various clubs for young
and old, including one for ex-Ghetto and camp prisoners; and the
Jerusalem of Lithuania newspaper is published in four languages.
Jewish Museums in Vilnius have been as integral a
component of the community as any other since the first one was
opened in 1913. All share a common thread of commitment to the
preservation of a heritage by staff and researchers. The first
museum's priceless collections were virtually all destroyed during
World War II. The second museum was established in 1944 but was
short-lived, closed on June 10, 1949, at the hands of the Soviets
during their campaign against "Cosmopolitanism and
Zionism."
Sculpture to the memory of Japanese
diplomatChiune Sugihara in front of the Jewish Museum |
Today's exhibitions are divided between the
museum's main building and a smaller annex on a shaded hill a few
minutes' walk away in a house-like building known as The Green House.
The exhibits are thoughtful and varied, depicting the richness of the
Lithuanian Jewish ways of life and death. Catastrophe tells the story
of the Holocaust generally with a focus on local victims. One can
learn about the first German and Lithuanian restrictions inflicted on
the Jews as well as read pieces of a report by Karl Jager, Head of
the Security Police, who outlined the executions of thousands. Other
exhibitions include They Lived in Vabalninkas, In Memory of the Great
Synagogue, Judaica in Wood Carvings, Jewish Fighters For Lithuanian
Independence, Artists From the Ghetto, and Jewish Cemeteries - A
Tormented Page of Lithuanian History.
The Righteous
Among Nations exhibition shows the faces and tells the stories of
non-Jewish people who risked their own lives and their families'
lives with their unparalleled demonstration of humanity. Most
prominent was Chiune Sugihara,
the Japanese diplomat in Kaunas (1939-40) who went against the
directives of his government and was personally responsible for
issuing 6,000 visas for safe passage out of Lithuania. Tributes to
him can be found at The Green House (and in one of the cells at the
IX Fortas in Kaunas.)
In spite of Jewish Vilnius' vitality today it is
no longer a Jerusalem. But if history is our indicator, Vilnius will
always be The Jerusalem of Lithuania.
Sources: Jono David, "The Jerusalem of Lithuania."Jono David Media.
Reprinted
with permission.
Photos copyright Jono David.
HaChayim
HaYehudim Jewish Photo Library (Jono David Media) |