The Denver Post

Pope warns Lithuanian­s against any rebirth of antiSemiti­sm

- By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis warned against historic revisionis­m and any rebirth of antiSemiti­sm that fueled the Holocaust as he marked the annual remembranc­e Sunday for Lithuania’s centurieso­ld Jewish community that was nearly wiped out during World War II.

Francis began his second day in the Baltics in Lithuania’s second city, Kaunas, where an estimated 3,000 Jews survived out of a community of 37,000 during the 19411944 Nazi occupation. He ended it back in the capital, Vilnius, to pay his respects to Lithuanian­s who were deported to Siberian gulags or were tortured and killed at home during five decades of Soviet occupation.

Francis honored freedom fighters at the former KGB headquarte­rs where antiSoviet partisans were detained and executed, solemnly touring the undergroun­d chambers that have now been turned into a haunting museum of occupation atrocities.

“In this place of remembranc­e, Lord, we pray that your cry may keep us alert,” he said afterward. “That your cry, Lord, may free us from the spiritual sickness that remains a constant temptation for us as a people: forgetfuln­ess of the experience­s and sufferings of those who have gone before us.”

Francis paid equal tribute to victims of both Nazi and Soviet atrocities on the 75th anniversar­y of the final destructio­n of the ghetto in Vilnius, which had been known for centuries as the “Jerusalem of the North” for its importance to Jewish thought and politics. Each year, the Sept. 23 anniversar­y is commemorat­ed with readings of the names of Jews who were killed by Nazis or Lithuanian partisans or were deported to concentrat­ion camps.

Francis prayed silently in the former ghetto and warned against the temptation “that can dwell in every human heart” to want to be superior or dominant to others again.

He prayed for the gift of discernmen­t “to detect in time any new seeds of that pernicious attitude, any whiff of it that can taint the heart of generation­s that did not experience those times and can sometimes be taken in by such siren songs.”

His warning came as farright, xenophobic and neofascist political movements are making gains across Europe, including in Lithuania, and closer to his home in Italy.

Francis is travelling to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia to mark their 100th anniversar­ies of independen­ce and to encourage the faith in the Baltics, which saw five decades of Sovietimpo­sed religious repression and statespon sored atheism. In addition, during the Nazi occupation, Lithuania’s centurieso­ld Jewish community was nearly exterminat­ed.

Lithuania is 80 percent Catholic; Lutherans and Russian Orthodox count more followers in Latvia and Estonia, where Francis visits on Monday and Tuesday.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskai­te joined Francis at the Museum of Occupation­s and Freedom Fighters, where Francis saw the cells where antiSoviet partisans were detained and more than 1,000 were killed in a bulletpock­ed execution room in the basement. One of the undergroun­d cells has been turned into an exhibition space to tell the story of the Soviet repression of Catholic priests and bishops, one of whom was executed down the hall.

“In this place that commemorat­es the many peo ple who suffered as a result of violence and hate, and who sacrificed their lives for the sake of freedom and justice, I have prayed that Almighty God may ever bestow his gifts of reconcilia­tion and peace upon the Lithuanian people,” Francis wrote in English in the guest book at the museum.

Sitting outside in places of honor were some of the last remaining Lithuanian freedom fighters, including Juozas Jakavonis, alias “Tiger,” a 93yearold partisan fighter in uniform who said he spent three months in the former KGB detention facility during which 59 of his coinmates were executed. Jakavonis, who is now a partisan hero in Lithuania, said he was “really very touched by the appearance of the pope.”

Francis changed his trip schedule three weeks ago to allow him to acknowledg­e the slaughter of around 90 percent of Lithuania’s 250,000 Jews at the hands of Nazi occupiers and complicit Lithuanian­s. The issue of Lithuanian complicity in Nazi war crimes is sensitive here. Jewish activists accuse some Lithuanian­s of engaging in historical revisionis­m by trying to equate the exterminat­ion of Jews with the deportatio­ns and executions of other Lithuanian­s during the Soviet occupation.

Many Lithuanian­s don’t make any distinctio­ns between the Soviets who tortured and killed thousands of Lithuanian­s and the Nazis who did same with Jews.

Until recently, the Vilnius KGB museum was actually called the “Genocide Museum” but changed its name to the “Museum of Occupation­s and Freedom Fights” since it focuses on Soviet atrocities, not Nazi German ones.

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