The Jewish Chronicle

Lookbackwi­thoutanger

Consider books — one non-fiction, one fiction — based on exceptiona­l memories

- Reviewed by Sipora Levy Sipora Levy is a freelance reviewer

Life Should Be Transparen­t

By Aurimas Svedas and Irena Veisaite

Central European University Press, £23

Subtitled Conversati­ons about Lithuania and Europe in the Twentieth Century and Today, this volume introduces us to the life and work of Irena Veisaite, an academic, theatre critic and long-time chair of the Open Lithuania Fund board. The 13 conversati­ons between Veisaite and Lithuanian historian Aurimas Svedas are far-reaching and memorable, covering Veisaite’s rich and varied life, taking in the horrific events of the Holocaust, which brought about the end of the Lithuanian Jewish world. We also meet an array of cultural figures and experience fragments of theatre performanc­es that moved her.

Most of Veisaite’s family, including her mother, grandparen­ts and most of her parents’ generation, perished in the Shoah along with numerous friends and acquaintan­ces, Veisaite herself was rescued and looked after by two different families who risked their own lives to save her. In particular, she is indebted to her “second mother”, Stefanija Paliulyte-Ladigiene. Remarkably free of bitterness, Veisaite realised that “if I wanted to go on living, I had to learn to love and to forgive, even if that is sometimes very difficult.” She has retained a deep love for Lithuania, and especially the city of Vilnius — the “Jerusalem of Lithuania”. Having lived under Soviet rule in Lithuania, Veisaite recalls the

Soviets as “very very bad. Different from the Nazis, but not better”.

Irena Veisaite earned a doctorate in Leningrad in 1963 on the poetry of Heinrich Heine, of whom she says: “I was interested­in Heine because he was a Jewish writer with a unique fate — he became part of the German literary canon and was as beloved as he was hated.” She lectured at the teachers’ college in Vilnius from 1953 to 1997 and was also head of the Thomas Mann Cultural Centre in Nida, Lithuania. In 2012, she was awarded the Goethe Medal for her contributi­on to the cultural exchange between Germany and Lithuania.

Veisaite and Svedas have a close bond and the experience of recording Veisaite’s memories prompts them to explore in detail the nature of memory itself — “What, how and why do we remember? What is the meaning of our experience­s? How can history help us to live in the present and create the future?” At 92, Irena Veisaite is able to supply plenty of raw material for this discussion.

‘The Soviets were very bad, different from the Nazis but not better’

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 ??  ?? Irena at home in Vilnius in 2016. Below left: Irena with her daughter Alina circa 1958
Irena at home in Vilnius in 2016. Below left: Irena with her daughter Alina circa 1958

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