RSS | Blogs | Iran news  7 Elul 5768, Sunday, September 7, 2008 4:01 IST |
WebJPost.com 
HomeHeadlinesIranian ThreatJewish WorldOpinionBusinessReal EstateLocal IsraelBlogsHealth & Sci-TechFrançais Classifieds
IsraelMiddle EastInternationalUS ElectionsFeaturesTravelCafe Oleh Magazine SportsArts & CultureSubscribe
Product of the week
Specials
Join Free at JDate
Where love happens! Join now!
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers a 20% discount on all online reservations
The Best Jewish Charity
Learn how Efrat saved 30,000 lives of Jewish children
Ramot Resort Hotel
Overlooking the magnificent view of the Sea of Galilee
Find love at JChuppah.com
Use your mouse to find your spouse!
Israel guide
Your guide to Israel
Green Israel
Protecting Israel's environment
The future of music
Global community of music makers discover new music
Jerusalem Gold Hotel
Your Home in Jerusalem Pay 6 Stay 7 days
JPost.com » Jewish World » Jewish News » Article

Yad Vashem protests probe of partisan


PrintSubscribe
Toolbar
Share article:
What's this?
Decrease text size Decrease text size
Increase text size Increase text size

The Yad Vashem Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority on Wednesday launched a protest with the visiting Lithuanian foreign minister over his country's criminal investigation into the wartime activities of a Holocaust partisan who later served as a chairman of Yad Vashem.

Lithuania opened the probe of Dr. Yitzhak Arad, 81, a year ago on suspicion that he took part in the murder of Lithuanian civilians during the Holocaust.

The investigation came to light when the Lithuanian prosecutor's office turned to the Justice Ministry in Jerusalem with a request to interrogate the Lithuanian-born Arad on the basis of his memoir, The Partisan, in which he describes his experiences as a partisan in Nazi-occupied Lithuania.

"It is clear that initiating criminal proceedings into Dr. Arad's involvement in Lithuanian partisan activity during World War II is tantamount to a call for an investigation into all partisan activity," Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev wrote in a letter that he presented to Lithuanian Foreign Minister Petras Vaitiekunas during the latter's visit to Yad Vashem on Wednesday.

"Any attempt to equate those actions with illegal activities, thereby defining them as criminal, is a dangerous perversion of the events that occurred in Lithuania during the war," the letter read.

The head of Yad Vashem wrote that Lithuania had provided little more than "meaningless explanations at best, or more frequently silence," into the "so-called legal proceedings" under way against Arad, adding that they smacked of historical revisionism.

Most of the Jews of Lithuania were murdered by local citizens.

The "Order Police" began to massacre Jews as soon as the Soviets left in 1941, before the German occupation began.

Out of a prewar population of 220,000, only a few thousand Jews survived the war in Lithuania - representing the largest proportion of Jews murdered in any country during the Holocaust.

"I respectfully urge you, as Lithuania's foreign minister, to do your utmost to bring this subject to a rapid end, and thus facilitate the cessation of historical revisionism and distortion in Lithuania," the letter concluded.

Arad, a retired IDF brigadier-general, was chairman of Yad Vashem for 21 years until his retirement in 1993.

His comprehensive study on the Holocaust in Eastern Europe was published three years ago.

Arad has said that the allegations against him are a vendetta for his having painstakingly listed atrocities committed by Lithuanian collaborators.

"This is a Lithuanian attempt to rewrite history," Arad said. "It is convenient for them to say today that just as there were Lithuanians who killed Jews, there were Jews who killed Lithuanians."

<%%>
PrintSubscribe
Toolbar
Share article:
What's this?
+ Recommend:
del.icio.us reddit newsvine facebook
What's this?
Canaan Online
KKL Picture of the week
EZ-Trader
Got a Question?
Have a question about something in this story? Ask it here and get answers from other users like you.

 
 
© 1995 - 2007 The Jerusalem Post. All rights reserved.
About Us | Media Kit | Exclusive Content | Advertise with Us | Subscribe | Contact Us | RSS