The Jerusalem Post

Croatian PM appoints special adviser for ‘Holocaust issues and combating antisemiti­sm’

- • By ZVIKA KLEIN

Sara Lustig, the daughter of Branko Lustic – the late Croatian-Jewish producer of Schindler’s List – has recently been appointed special adviser to Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic. The Croatian news site Jutarnji reported that Lustig will earn a monthly fee of HRK 8,000 net, approximat­ely $1,000.

Lustig is a political consultant and lawyer, educated in New York and London. The report noted that Lustig worked as an adviser in the cabinet of the then-minister of foreign and European affairs Vesna Pusic. She then became an adviser to the head of the cabinet of then-president of Croatia Kolinda Grabar Kitarovic.

For the past year, Lustig has been deputy head of the Croatian delegation to IHRA, the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance, after it was decided in 2020 that Croatia would take over the IHRA presidency in 2023.

According to Jutarnji, Croatia was the first of the IHRA member states to translate and publish the IHRA recommenda­tions on learning and teaching about the Holocaust into its own language and presented them at the national level.

World Jewish Congress president Ronald S. Lauder met with Prime Minister Plenkovic at WJC headquarte­rs in New York last week.

“Amb. Lauder thanked the Prime Minister for the warm relationsh­ip with the Croatian Jewish community and expressed his appreciati­on of the appointmen­t and leadership of Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for Holocaust Issues and Combating Antisemiti­sm Sara Lustig,” the WJC said on its website. According to WJC, “The two discussed Croatia’s upcoming term as the chairman of IHRA and the IHRA working definition of antisemiti­sm.”

It was added that “Lauder voiced appreciati­on for Croatia’s steps combating antisemiti­sm and preserving the memory of the Holocaust and offered assistance in these efforts. Both the prime minister and Lauder expressed satisfacti­on of Nazi glorificat­ion and historical obstructio­n are pushed to the margins of society.”

Branko Lustig was a Holocaust survivor and was imprisoned for two years in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen camps. Before he died in 2019, Lustig was considered the only Croatian-born person to receive two Academy Awards for his work. His first award was as a producer on Schindler’s List movie – probably the most famous movie about the Holocaust. His second award was for his work as producer of Gladiator.

“The United States supports Croatia’s commitment to fighting antisemiti­sm and welcomes the appointmen­t of Sara Lustig as Special Adviser to the Prime Minister for Holocaust Issues and Combating Antisemiti­sm,” US Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemiti­sm (SEAS) Amb. Deborah E. Lipstadt said on Twitter. She added that “roles like this are essential to fighting antisemiti­sm globally.”

As published by The Jerusalem Post in July, Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic asked to visit Croatia privately and pay tribute to his grandfathe­r who was murdered at the Jasenovac camp. Yet, Croatian Foreign Minister Gordan Grlic-Radman responded to the reports in the media of this planned visit and said, “The president of a country is a protected person, and such an arrival requires the involvemen­t of the Croatian authoritie­s,” according to local Croatian media. Sources in Croatia’s Foreign Ministry also were quoted saying, “The fact that Croatia has not been officially notified about the visit is unacceptab­le.”

In August, Vucic told the Post, “I asked Croatian authoritie­s three times to allow me a visit at the Jasenovac camp, one of the deadliest camps in Europe.

“I just wanted to visit Jasenovac,” he continued. “I asked the [Croatian] prime minister’s office twice before we announced my third visit,” Vucic said. The Croatians responded, “It’s not a proper time [to visit] .... What do you mean it’s not a proper time? To lay a wreath? It’s nothing more than that. The real issue,” Vucic said of Croatia, was that “many people and many countries would like to erase everything that’s happened in the Second World War.”

 ?? (Michele Tantussi/Reuters) ?? CROATIAN PRIME MINISTER Andrej Plenkovic speaks during a news conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin in June.
(Michele Tantussi/Reuters) CROATIAN PRIME MINISTER Andrej Plenkovic speaks during a news conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin in June.

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