The Jerusalem Post

Holocaust distortion by Latvia and Lithuania

And the failure in Israel to fight it

- • By EFRAIM ZUROFF Our People: Discoverin­g Lithuania’s Hidden Holocaust, published by Rowan & Littlefiel­d.

During the past half year, three new documentar­y films devoted to the Holocaust in the Baltics, and especially in Lithuania, have been screened in numerous venues all over the world, except in Lithuania and Latvia, which are the subjects of these films.

One, titled When Did the Holocaust Begin, was produced by the BBC and focuses on the use of new forensic archeologi­cal technology to discover unknown mass graves of Holocaust victims in western Lithuania, where indeed the systematic mass murder of European Jewry began following the Nazi invasion of Lithuania, on June 22, 1941.

A second film, J’Accuse, focuses on the mass murder of the Jews of northwest Lithuania and the highly-significan­t role played by Lithuanian Nazi collaborat­ors, and especially national hero Jonas Noreika, who, during the Holocaust, was the liaison between the Nazis and the Lithuanian­s, and was responsibl­e for the annihilati­on of many thousands of Jews. After World War II, he was a leader of the local opposition to the Soviets.

The heroes of this movie, created independen­tly by former BBC journalist Michael Kretchmer, are Noreika’s granddaugh­ter, Silvia Foti, and American Litvak Grant Gochin, dozens of whose relatives were murdered in that part of Lithuania and who has unsuccessf­ully tried to sue the Lithuanian government numerous times to cancel the honors awarded to Noreika.

Silvia Foti’s biography of her grandfathe­r, which began as an attempt to glorify him, ultimately exposed his role in Holocaust crimes, shocking Lithuanian society.

The third film, which is called Baltic Truths, deals with the Holocaust in Latvia and Lithuania, and emphasizes the failure of both Baltic republics to admit the highly-significan­t role played by local Nazi collaborat­ors in the mass murder of their Jewish communitie­s.

Produced by Eugene Levin, a Soviet-Jewish emigrant from Latvia living in Boston, whose grandfathe­r was the sole survivor of the Latvian shtetl of Akniste, it tells a similar story about his country of birth, as well as about Lithuania.

So far, these films, especially J’Accuse, have won many awards at film festivals all over the world, but have not been widely shown in the countries to whom the messages of the films are directed. Nor has there been any official government response to the harsh accusation­s. Instead, these countries have launched charm offensives, which are directed at potential Israeli tourists.

Thus two weeks ago, a lengthy article was published in the Dyokan weekend magazine of the staunchly-right wing Israeli weekly Makor Rishon by senior correspond­ent Ariel Shnebel, about his visit to Lithuania and Latvia at the expense of the Lithuanian and Latvian government­s.

HE WAS invited to promote the two countries as wonderful destinatio­ns for Orthodox tourists (who are the overwhelmi­ng majority of the readers of Makor Rishon), due to the numerous sites connected to the lives of

leading renowned Orthodox rabbis, such as the Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Chaim Ozer Grodzenski and Rav Kook, as well as sites of famous yeshivas, such as Slobodka, Panevitch and Telz.

But what about the elephant in the room? Shnebel mentioned to his host, Vilna Deputy Mayor Tomas Gablinas, that Israelis think that the Lithuanian­s occasional­ly collaborat­ed too closely with the Nazis, as if this was just an opinion of some and not an establishe­d fact.

Gablinas totally ignored it and proceeded, according to Shnebel, to tell his guest about the contempora­ry efforts of the government to combat anti-Semitism and their success in changing the name of a street previously named for a Lithuanian political leader who supported Hitler. Ever the polite guest, Shnebel dropped the subject and missed an opportunit­y to deliver an important message.

More recently, this past Friday, The Jerusalem Post devoted two pages of its Magazine to an interview with Latvian deputy chairman of the Riga City Council, Linda Ozola, who had come to Israel to attend the 17th Internatio­nal Conference on Innovation Crisis Management hosted by the Tel Aviv Municipali­ty.

From the interview, we learned important facts about Latvia, all of which were patently false. First of all, the number of Latvian Jews murdered in the Holocaust was not 25,000, but 67,000, out of the 70,000 who lived in Latvia under the Nazis occupation, among the highest percentage­s of victims.

And that does not include the more than 30,000 Jews deported to Riga from Germany, Austria, and Czechoslov­akia, only 4% of whom survived, and the thousands of Jews murdered in Minsk by the notorious Latvian Arajs Kommando murder squad.

According to the article, Latvia did not fight during World War II, a mistake that Ozola claimed would not be repeated in the future. That was not the reality, however, as there were two divisions of Latvian Waffen-SS created in 1943, which fought alongside the Nazis for a victory of the Third Reich, among whose men were former Latvian police who had actively participat­ed in the mass murders of Latvian Jews.

A few months ago, in fact, Latvian Defense Minister Artis Pabriks claimed that those Latvians “are the pride of the Latvian people and the state,” and books praising the Legionnair­es are on sale in Riga Internatio­nal Airport. Unfortunat­ely, Ozola was not challenged on any of these facts, or on her assertion that there is no anti-Semitism in Latvia, or about the rampant Holocaust distortion in Latvia.

Hopefully, the film J’Accuse, which was screened in Israel this past Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, as well as the other two films, will be shown here again and given wide publicity, to help educate the Israeli public, regarding the truth about what happened in the Holocaust in Lithuania and Latvia.

The writer, a Holocaust historian, is the chief Nazi-hunter of the Simon Wiesenthal Center and the director of its Israel office. His most recent book (with Ruta Vanagaite) is

 ?? (Ints Kalnins/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu holds a news conference with then-Latvian prime minister Maris Kucinskis, in 2018.
(Ints Kalnins/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu holds a news conference with then-Latvian prime minister Maris Kucinskis, in 2018.

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