Sabbath Times

Sabbath Times

The Sabbath begins at 8:55 P.M. on Friday, May 2, and concludes at 10:03 P.M. on Saturday in the Vilnius region. Sabbath candles should be lit at 8:37 P.M. and completed before sunset at 8:55 P.M. May 1 is Labor Day in Lithuania, a state holiday. May 3 is Constitution Day in Poland, also a national holiday.

Israeli Film Week, Everything Free

Israeli Film Week, Everything Free

The Israeli embassy presents the fifth annual Israeli film retrospective from May 6 to 9 at the Skalvija cinema in Vilnius. All films are free and open to the public. All films are in Hebrew with Lithuanian subtitles.

Seven Blessings, 2023: 6:00 P.M., May 6

Here We Are, 2020: 6:00 P.M., May 7

Art of Waiting, 2019: 6:00 P.M., May 8

Shorts Average Story, 2016; Boy, 2023; Black Slide, 2021: 6:00 P.M., May 9

Moishele, Mayn Fraynd

Moishele, Mayn Fraynd

An evening of music dedicated to the memory of Mikhail Filyopov-Jablonskis

Fayerlakh invites you to a special event dedicated to remembering and honoring the late Mikhail Filyopov, one of the most outstanding performers of Jewish music in Lithuania, a man who dedicated his life to music, the stage and culture.

Tickets are available starting from €20.00 here.

Time: 5:00 P.M., Sunday, June 8
Place: House of Polish Culture, Naugarduko street no. 76, Vilnius

Integration and Inclusion Forum

Integration and Inclusion Forum

The Ethnic Minorities Department and the British Council are holding a two-day conference and discussion on integration and inclusion on May 22 and 23 at Novotel Hotel in Vilnius. Those wishing to attend should register by May 15 at www.inforum.lt.

The conference will host experts on minority integration and human rights, media representatives, politicians, members of Lithuania’s ethnic minority communities, foreign speakers and more.

The Integration and Inclusion Forum is part of events to celebrate Lithuania’s Ethnic Minorities Day May 21, which kicks off with an awards event at St. Catherine’s Church in Vilnius at 3:00 P.M. The awards will be given to those who have distinguished themselves through their work with Lithuania’s ethnic minorities.

Jewish Scouts Hike

Jewish Scouts Hike

Jewish scouts hiked the Neris Regional Park last week on the way to a campsite. Fording a river in the scouting manner, hikers took in beautiful forest and natural vistas, played a game they called “nature bingo” to learn more about nature and botany, sang songs and did other activities in the program.

More experienced scouts taught newer ones how to use a compass and maps, and how to determine cardinal directions in the natural environment. The scouts also cooked their own meal. The younger ones learned about semaphore flag signals and different groups tried to communicate over long distances using that system. More experienced scouts tried their hand at building shelters, tying knots and using them in the structures and setting up tents.

The program for the hike was made up largely by the older scouts at weekly meetings. Several months ago hiking skills were brought up and resulted in a teaching program for scouts where they performed various tasks and learned about prepared for hikes in the wilderness, how to wear backpacks more effectively, planning routes, navigating by compass, appropriate food needs and similar things, and then organized this recent hike.

Thank you to everyone who participated and to those who didn’t, more such events are being planned.

Special Mother’s Day Program at Ilan and Dubi Clubs Saturday

Special Mother’s Day Program at Ilan and Dubi Clubs Saturday

Instructors at the Ilan and Dubi Clubs have come up with a special program of activities for the upcoming Mother’s Day weekend. In Lithuania Mother’s day is marked on the first Sunday in May. Saturday’s club meetings will challenge children and young people to come up with their own programs for celebrating Mother’s Day in the afternoon starting at 1:00 P.M., followed by the arrival of their mothers afterwards at 3:00 P.M.

Registration is required for this meeting of the clubs and the event afterwards. Send an email to levickajasimona@gmail.com.

Times: 1:00 P.M. for club meetings, 3:00 P.M. for mothers’ arrival, Saturday, May 3
Place: Lithuanian Jewish Community, Vilnius.

Condolences

Sofija Estrina has died. She was born in 1936. She was a member of the Lithuanian Jewish Community and a client of the Saul Kagan Welfare Center. Our deepest condolences to her surviving son, family members and friends.

Condolences

Ada Gelpernaitė has passed away. She was born in 1960. She was a member of the Lithuanian Jewish Community and a client of the Saul Kagan Welfare Center. Our deepest condolences to the brother she leaves behind and her many family and friends.

Remembering the Victims at Ponar

Remembering the Victims at Ponar

Members of the Lithuanian Jewish Community, Lithuanian foreign diplomats, politicians and members of the community at large marked Yom haShoah at Ponar Thursday with a solemn ceremony, an air-raid siren, a moment of silence and speeches. Yom haShoah is one of several days on the calendar dedicated to remembering the six million victims of the Holocaust in Europe. In Israel air-raid sirens sound and all activities cease in memory of the dead on this day.

“I call myself a Lithuanian woman of Jewish ethnicity and I would like to live in my own country not in fear, and it’s not Jews who must combat anti-Semitism, it’s the state which must provide for the safety of all its citizens,” Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky said at the event. She also noted there is still no monument to the Righteous Gentiles who saved Jews from the Holocaust in Lithuania, despite seven years of discussion.

“History isn;t just lines in a textbook and facts. History includes feelings which we must pass on to our children, that they might understand what children who witnessed the murder of their parents felt. What anguish mothers experienced seeing their children murdered. These are what should be the lessons of history,” she continued. She is one of the few left in Lithuania who heard stories of the Holocaust directly from her parents and grandparents who were victims of it.

Sabbath Times

Sabbath Times

The Sabbath begins at 8:42 P.M. on Friday, April 25, and concludes at 9:47 P.M. on Saturday in the Vilnius region. Sabbath candles should be lit at 8:24 P.M. and completed before sunset at 8:42 P.M. Sunday is also World Pinhole Photography Day.

Russian-Language Play Natan Comes to Vilnius

Russian-Language Play Natan Comes to Vilnius

he Vaidila Theater will host a performance in Russian by Anatoli Beli and Mikhail Mikhail Borzykin based on the novel “Natan” by Artur Solomonov. Borzykin is the lead singer of the band Televizor from Leningrad formed back in 1984.

The Lithuanian Jewish Community is offering two free tickets to two lucky winners. Just go to the LJC facebook profile and leave a post with your name and the name of your choice to accompany you. Winners will be announce April 28 on facebook.

The cost of a ticket starts at €25.00 and can be purchased here. Call +37064586866 for more information.

Time: 7:00 P.M., Thursday, May 1
Place: Vaidila Theater, Jakšto street no. 9, Vilnius

Israeli Trio to Perform in Vilnius

Israeli Trio to Perform in Vilnius

The Faran Ensemble from Israel will perform as part of the Skambantys Pasauliai [Worlds of Song] festival. Faran make music from the ancient Near East but in a style all their own.

Tickets cost between €23.60 and €59.00 and are available here.

Time: 7:00 P.M., Monday, April 28
Place: St. Catherine’s Church, Vilniaus street no. 30, Vilnius

Yom haShoah in Ponar

Yom haShoah in Ponar

April 24 is Yom haShoah, the day to remember vicitms of the Holocaust.

In 1953 prime minister of Israel, David Ben-Gurion and president of Israel Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, signed into law Yom haShoah as an observance day. The original plan was to hold this observance day on the 14th of Nisan, which was the anniversary of the Warsaw ghetto uprising. This didn’t work, because that day preceded Passover. It was then decided to move the date to the 27th of Nisan, but not strictly. When it would fall on the Sabbath, Yom haShoah is moved a day back or forward.

The Lithuanian Jewish Community and others will mark the day at the Ponar Memorial Complex just outside Vilnius. A coach will leave from central Vilnius to bring people to and back from Ponar, but prior registration is required by sending an email to info@lzb.lt. Contact the LJC for exact departure time and location.

Time: 12:00 noon, Thursday, April 24
Place: Ponar Memorial Complex, Agrastų street no. 15A, Vilnius

Under Babylonian and Persian Rule

Under Babylonian and Persian Rule

by Yosef Eisen

Benefits of Babylonian Exile

This exile, although very traumatic, nevertheless had a great benefit to the Jewish people. There were no more corrupt kings or nobility–in Babylon the Torah scholars had complete authority. Moreover, the Babylonians were not anti-Semites per se; while they only wanted to destroy Judah as an independent political power, they harbored no ill feelings toward the Jewish religion. As such, Jews were given their own cities, where earlier exiled Jews welcomed them warmly. The Talmud tells us that G_d chose Babylon as the place of exile for several reasons: Aramaic, the language of Babylon, was very similar to Hebrew. Abraham was born in Babylon, so the Jews were not regarded as foreigners. And it was easy to make a living from the abundant date trees. All told, then, life was pleasant for the Jews once they reached Babylon.

The Jews in Babylon

Despite the relative ease of their exile, the Jews reacted in vastly different ways. Some of them, traumatized by the shock of heathens conquering Jerusalem, an occurrence they had previously deemed impossible, despaired of a future redemption, saying that G_d had severed His relationship with the Jewish people. Others settled down comfortably and planned to assimilate. Accordingly, the prophet Ezekiel addressed both of these concerns. To the first group, he shared his prophetic visions of the Heavenly Chariot and the Third Eternal Temple, telling them that G_d did not forsake them. He also revived the dry bones in the Valley of Dura, symbolizing the rejuvenation of the Jewish people. To the second group, he burst out with fiery denunciations, saying that G_d will never allow the Jewish people to assimilate. Nevertheless, many Jews did assimilate. Some Jews even rose to prominence at Nebuchadnezzar’s court. Daniel was appointed governor over the realm, while Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah also attained high positions in the government.

The Fiery Furnace

Condolences

Pope Francis I, pontifex, builder of bridges and the vicar of Rome, passed away Monday at the age of 88 from respiratory complications. He was born in 1936 in Buenos Aries, Argentina. A friend of all religions, the Lithuanian Jewish Community extends our deepest condolences to all his friends and followers around the world in and outside the Catholic Church. May his memory be a blessing to us all.

Vilnius Jewish Memorial Plans in Limbo: No Funding for Feasibility Study

Vilnius Jewish Memorial Plans in Limbo: No Funding for Feasibility Study

Photo: Palace of Sports in Vilnius, D. Umbrasas/LRT

BNS, April 22, 2025

BNS–Lithuania’s new prime minister Gintautas Paluckas said his Government is considering the previous Government’s proposal to build a Jewish memorial in and around the Vilnius Palace of Concerts and Sports, a now derelict, Soviet-era indoor arena, but this year’s budget does not include funds for a feasibility study.

“The process is ongoing. We’re evaluating, weighing options and holding discussions. So far nothing has changed, and if any decisions are made, the public will be informed,” Paluckas told Baltic News Service.

The previous government approved the idea of building a memorial on the site of the old Jewish cemetery in the Šnipiškės (Yiddish Shbipishok) neighborhood of Vilnius and inside the arena building based on recommendations from a working group.