Israel Suspends Dialogue with the EU

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Vilnius, November 12, BNS–The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said the country won’t participate in several planned meetings with EU officials after the European Commission announced Wednesday a decision to label products imported from Israeli settlements in the occupied territories. The ministry announced Israel had suspended dialogue with the EU at several venues where meetings had been scheduled for the coming weeks in response to the EU decision. Israel earlier strongly condemned the EU measure as politically motivated, but the suspension of talks represents the first concrete step taken in response to product labeling.

The European Union reported earlier the decision to adopt special labeling rules for products from Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories was made for legal reasons regarding product country of origin requirements. “This is a technical issue, not a political position,” European Commission deputy chairman Valdis Dombrovskis told reporters earlier, when the highest executive body of the EU initially approved the labeling scheme. “The EU does not support any boycott of or sanctions against Israel,” he said then, adding the new measures were connected with consumer policy in the Union. “The Commission is presenting recommendations to EU members and economic operators in order to ensure the uniform application of labeling rules for products from the Israeli settlements,” Dombrovskis said. He said the EU decision “is not a new legal act or a new policy” and that it elucidated certain issues connected with the interpretation and effective implementation of existing EU laws.

BNS

Europe Israel Public Affairs Special Update: EU Labeling Guidelines


AP Photo/Jim Hollander

As you will be aware, and after much fanfare, the EU published its guidelines on labelling of products in the West Bank and Golan Heights.

Here at EIPA we think that in the midst of a continuing wave of indiscriminate terror attacks against Israel’s civilian population, the decision to publish these guidelines makes zero political sense from a set of EU institutions that want to be seen as an honest broker in the Peace Process.

The EU’s Foreign Policy Chief can try and dress this move up as consumer protection, a technical trade detail or as a non-binding set of guidelines, but to the vast majority of Israelis it will be viewed very simply: as a slap in the face and an overt political move to punish Israel.

European Commission Adopts Labeling of Israeli Goods from Occupied Territories

After long deliberation, the European Commission has adopted rules requiring products from Israel’s occupied territories be labeled as such on EU store shelves.

Proponents of the measure argued it was needed for harmonization of the EU’s non-recognition of Israel’s right to occupy the territories and that it was a compromise to avoid a complete boycott of Israeli goods and preserve preferential treatment of Israeli products in EU markets under an agreement signed in 1995. They said it would also give EU consumers more freedom of choice in their purchasing decisions.

Opponents have called it an anti-Israel initiative veiled as a pro-consumer initiative, an attack on Israeli statehood which comes at a critical time, as Israel faces renewed Palestinian violence. Some have compared the singling out of Israeli goods to laws requiring Jews to wear yellow Stars of David during the Holocaust.

Celebrate International Tolerance Day with a Film at Tolerance Center

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The Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum, the Germany Embassy and the Goethe Institut in Lithuania warmly invite you to celebrate International Tolerance Day this November 16 by attending a screening of Hanna’s Journey (2013), a film by Julia von Heinz, at 5:30 P.M., Monday, November 16 at the Tolerance Center at Naugarduko street no. 10/2 in Vilnius.

The film runs for 100 minutes. The film is in English, German and Hebrew, to be shown with Lithuanian subtitles. Entry is free to the general public.

from IMDB: “A German girl travels to Israel to help people with disabilities, where she learns about the role of her grandparents in WWII and meets a man who wants to move to Berlin.”

Kristallnacht through the Years

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Francine Klagsbrun
Special To The Jewish Week

Watching “Antique Roadshow” on PBS the other night, I was intrigued by one of the items on display. It was a doll someone had inherited, which the show’s expert evaluated at several thousand dollars in today’s market. It had been manufactured, he said, in the early 1900s by Kammer & Reinhardt, a well-known German doll-making company, in business from 1886 to 1932. It was the cutoff date that caught my attention—could this have been a Jewish company that closed down as the Nazis rose to power? The company’s logo on the doll’s back confirmed my suspicion. It showed the initials K and R separated by a Star of David. That star set my mind racing. Did the company’s owners end up wearing the proud symbol of their firm as the oppressive yellow star that marked Europe’s Jews during their darkest days?

This week we commemorated Kristallnacht, the Night of the Broken Glass, when, between November 9 and 10, 1938, Nazi thugs smashed thousands of windows in Jewish storefronts and houses all over Germany and Austria. It struck me as I contemplated, yet again, the horror of those days, how instant had been my reaction to the 1932 closing date of the German doll company, immediately assuming because of that date that the company was Jewish-owned. Those of us who were alive during the Holocaust years, even as children, will always make such associations, always filter 20th-century events through the lens of that century’s Jewish catastrophe.

And what of our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren? It’s been said many times that as Holocaust survivors pass on, we have a greater responsibility than ever to keep their stories alive. But as the 21st century unfolds with its own stories of atrocities and desperate refugees, we also have to make sure that, while deeply sympathetic to suffering everywhere, succeeding generations of Jews understand the uniqueness of the Holocaust and its impact on all of Jewish life.

Mini-Limmud is Coming

Dear friends,

You’re invited to the Mini-Limmud educational conference on Judaism December 11-13 at the Vilnius Grand Resort hotel.

Mini-Limmud is and includes:

● Three days of meeting and talking with friends and the like-minded;

● The best speakers from the Baltics, Israel, Russia and elsewhere;

● A special program for children;

● An unforgettable Hanukkah evening with special performers.

Interview with Chiune Sugihara’s Son Nobuki Sugihara

The Lithuanian version of the Economist IQ publication has published an interview with Nobuki Sugihara, the son of the famous war-time Japanese diplomat who rescued Jews from the Holocaust in Kaunas against instructions from his ministry. The youngest Sugihara son was in Lithuania partly to attend the premiere of a new film about his father called Persona Non Grata: The Chiune Sugihara Story.

Ieva Rekštytė asked him “What impression did you come away with after the premiere at the movie theater?”

Nobuki Sugihara responded: “The film was beautiful visually, the actors were good, but in no way are all the historical facts in it true. You have to realize that this is entertainment, after all, and not a film intended to expand knowledge. For example, my father wasn’t so soft and sentimental as he’s made out to have been. Further, his supposed lover Irinia plays a major part in his life in the film, but this is the first time I’ve ever heard of her. The impression is the film was created in a hurry, not even as a cinematic production, but as a television serial. I think the Japanese audience (to whom, most likely, the film is oriented) will like it, but it’s unlikely the international viewer will take an interest.

Full interview in Lithuanian here.

Lithuanian Media Say Israel Provided Bomb Intel on Sinai Flight

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photo courtesy of www.lrytas.lt

The Lithuanian newspaper Lietuvos rytas published an article on their website www.lrytas.lt Tuesday, November 10 titled “Air Disaster Investigation Demonstrates Israeli Intelligence Muscles” in which they claimed US and British reports of a bomb on the Russian Metro Jet airliner which crashed in the Sinai came from Israeli intelligence.

The article says Israeli intel intercepted telephone conversations between members of the Islamic State organization and shared that information with American and British agencies.

“Little was hitherto known of the capabilities of Israeli intelligence. But the current situation shows the secret services of this state are able to intercept conversations and other communication outside the country’s borders,” the main Lithuanian daily newspaper claimed.

The article went on to claim Egyptian authorities had changed their tune and now believe the aircraft crashed as a result of a bomb on board, and that Russian prime minister Dmitri Medvedev was also now allegedly entertaining the same thought as one of the possibilities in the crash which claimed 224 lives.

Full story in Lithuanian here.

Litvak Youth Protest Honoring of General Vėtra in Vilnius

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Lithuanian Jewish young people held a small protest against the commemoration of Jonas Noreika/General Vėtra on the wall of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences building. THey hung banners with images from the ghetto where Litvak Lithuanian citizens were sent by order of Noreika.

The organizers of the protest said they are trying to bring attention to how commemoration of Noreika is shameful to the European city of Vilnius.

“I and other young people are not trying to anger or offend anyone with our initiative, we simply want to inform people, passers-by, of the controversial memorial plaque to Noreika which has been much discussed lately. I believe history must be presented objectively so that our generation and future generations who haven’t and hopefully will not experience personally what war means will understand the mistakes of the past and learn from them, European Jewish Student Union board member Amit Belaitė said.

Condolences

The Lithuanian Jewish Community is deeply saddened to learn Israel’s fifth president, Yitzhak Navon, has passed away. He will be remembered as an intellectual, a wise leader and an inspiration by many Jews around the world. Israel has lost a great son. We send our deepest condolences to the entire Navon family.

Israeli Media: Šaras Refuses to Leave Žalgiris to Train for Maccabi

The Tel Aviv Maccabi basketball club, fishing for a new trainer, has cast a line into the Lithuanian basketball market. The Israeli media are reporting the post of senior trainer for Maccabi was offered to Šarūnas Jasikevičius, but the 39-year-old assistant to Gintaras Krapikas wasn’t intrigued by the offer and decided to stay on with the Kaunas Žalgiris team.

There were also reports in the Israeli media that Jonas Kazlauskas recommended Šaras for the post of senior trainer at Maccabi.

Full story in Lithuanian here.

BNS: Jewish Community Calls Noreika Report “Contradictory”

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VILNIUS, November 9, BNS–Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky has called an assessment of actions by Lithuanian officer Jonas Noreika during World War II released by the Center for the Study of the Genocide and Resistance of the Residents of Lithuania “contradictory.”

At the end of October the center announced Noreika hadn’t taken part in the mass murder of Jews in Lithuania during World War II, but that the Nazi occupational regime had involved him in the ordering of affairs connected with the isolation of Jews.

“It appears to us, the Lithuanian Jewish Community, that this assessment of the actions of Jonas Noreika is very contradictory,” the statement Faina Kukliansky issued said. She said: “the imprisoning Jews in ghettos, or any other kind of ‘isolation,’ or ‘ordering of affairs connected with the isolation of the Jews,’ is nothing other than the extermination of Jews.”

Yitzhak Navon, Fifth President of Israel, Has Died

Dear members of the community,

Yitzhak Navon, who served as the 5th President of the State of Israel from 1978 to 1983, passed away on Saturday, November 7, 2015 at the age of 94. His funeral took place on Sunday, November 08, 2015 on Mt. Herzl in Jerusalem.

Through the years Navon combined public activity, political activity and writing, which centered mostly on preserving the cultural heritage of Sephardic and Mizrachi Jewry. In 1978 he was elected to serve as the fifth President of the State of Israel. He served in office until 1983.

During his Presidency, he strove to act as a bridge between Israel’s ethnic groups, religious and secular, Sephardim and Ashkenazim, left and right, Jews and Arabs and to allay high tensions following the evacuation of Jewish settlements in the Sinai Peninsula pursuant to the peace agreement with Egypt.

US House of Representatives Urges Europe to Safeguard Jewish Communities

US House of Representatives Urges Europe to Safeguard Jewish Communities

(JTA) — A House resolution calls on the United States to urge European governments to act to keep their Jewish communities safe.

The resolution, introduced by rep. Chris Smith, Republican from New Jersey, passed unanimously Tuesday. Smith is the chairman of the Helsinki Commission, a congressional body which monitors compliance with human rights overseas.

The resolution, which had 89 co-sponsors, calls on the U.S. administration to encourage European governments, law enforcement agencies and intergovernmental organizations to formally recognize and partner with Jewish community groups to strengthen crisis prevention, preparedness, mitigation and responses related to anti-Semitic attacks.

Lithuanian Jewish Community Responds to Report on Jonas Noreika

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The Lithuanian Jewish Community responds to a report presented by the Center for the Study of the Genocide and Resistance of the Residents of Lithuania about the activity of Jonas Noreika in Nazi-occupied Lithuania during World War II. The report is available in Lithuanian on their website:

http://genocid.lt/UserFiles/File/Pazymos/201510_noreika_pazyma01.pdf

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Lithuanian Jewish Community
Pylimo street no. 4, LT-01117 Vilnius, tel.: (8~5) 261 30 03, fax: (8~5) 2127915, email: info@lzb.lt

November 6, 2015

To: Teresa Birutė Burauskaitė, director
Center for the Study of the Genocide and Resistance of the Residents of Lithuania
Didžioji street no. 17/1, LT-01128 Vilnius

Lithuania Wants Chiune Sugihara Included on UNESCO Memory of the World Register

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Mr. Hajime Furuta, governor of Gifu Prefecture, center, discusses Sugihara initiative.
photo courtesy Lithuanian Foreign Ministry.

Lithuanian foreign minister Linas Linkevičius met the governor of Gifu Prefecture Hajime Furuta in Vilnius October 30 where Mr. Furuta presented an application made by Japan to have documents connected with the activity of Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara included in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.

“Lithuania is prepared to contribute to this wonderful initiative and our country and Japan are looking at ways to work together on this,” foreign minister Linkevičius said.

The mayor of Yaotsu, the town in Gifu Prefecture where Sugihara was born and raised, Shingo Akatsuka, who initiated the UNESCO application, accompanied governor Furuta to Lithuania. His town hosts a memorial museum with much space devoted to Kaunas, where Sugihara operated, and Lithuania.

The Lithuanian foreign minister said: “Chiune Sugihara represents one of the most important cultural and historical connections between Lithuania and Japan.”

Orthodox Rabbi Calls Ban on Female Rabbis Political and Unfortunate

RCA resolution on female ordination ‘political and unfortunate,’ says Riskin.

“I believe the resolution they made wasn’t halachic as much as it was political,” the rabbi said.

Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, the chief rabbi of Efrat and one of the most prominent leaders of modern Orthodoxy, has criticized a recent resolution adopted by the Rabbinical Council of America that banned its member rabbis from giving any form of ordination to women or hiring women in a role of religious or spiritual leadership.

The RCA resolution said its members may not “ordain women into the rabbinate, regardless of the title used,” or “hire, or ratify the hiring of, a woman into a rabbinic position at an Orthodox institution.”

It appeared to be mostly aimed at institutions associated with the liberal-Orthodox movement loosely defined as Open Orthodoxy, including Yeshivat Maharat in Riverdale, New York, founded by Rabbi Avi Weiss, which gives ordination to women to serve as spiritual guides and to give rulings in Jewish law, or Halacha.

Riskin, along with other rabbis in Israel, is himself an RCA member and oversees the Susi Bradfield Women’s Institute for Halachic Leadership (WIHL) at Midreshet Lindenbaum in Jerusalem, which gives women a qualification that amounts to ordination, although it is not labeled as such.

Two Steps Forward, One Back

Two Steps Forward, One Back
by Geoff Vasil

Readers of the Lithuanian Jewish Community website might have been surprised yesterday by a news item appearing there in which Jonas Noreika was absolved, seemingly, of complicity in the Holocaust. Noreika is one of those names which lives on in infamy among scholars of the Lithuanian Holocaust but proffered as an anti-Soviet hero by Lithuanian nationalists. The intent of the LJC, of course, was merely to report the Lithuanian news to Jews here and abroad, and not to white-wash Noreika in any way. The news item would not have been surprising even a few years ago, but now it comes as a shock exactly because Lithuanian society has moved forward so rapidly in coming to terms with the horrible loss to the country known as the Holocaust.

In summary, a Lithuanian state institution, the Center for Research on the Genocide and Resistance of the Residents of Lithuania, charged with sorting out history, issued a politicized report claiming Noreika was only involved in isolating Jews during World War II, not murdering them. The report came in response to a joint call by well known figures in Lithuania, including Tomas Venclova, to remove a plaque honoring Noreika from the wall of the library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in Vilnius, a move which the LJC has long championed.

The document released this week cautions Noreika’s actions “cannot be judged categorically.”

Lithuanian Culture Minister Visits Israel

VILNIUS, November 05, BNS–Lithuanian culture minister Šarūnas Birutis is on a visit to Tel Aviv and Jerusalem where he is scheduled to meet representatives of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, cultural organizations and immigrants from Lithuania.

The minister will also visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial museum.

The Lithuanian Culture Ministry of Culture said in a statement Thursday Lithuania and Israel share important concerns such as the preservation of common history and culture, protection of the Jewish cultural heritage in Lithuania and maintaining contact with Lithuanian immigrants in Israel and their descendants.

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Lithuanian Military Officer Jonas Noreika Not Guilty of Holocaust Crimes

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Controversial Lithuanian military officer Jonas Noreika didn’t participate in the mass murder of Jews in Lithuania during World War II, but the Nazi occupational regime did involve him in matters connected with the isolation of Jews, according to the Center for Research on the Genocide and Resistance of the Residents of Lithuania.

The center drafted this report following a demand by a group of public figures for a plaque bearing Noreika’s name to be removed from the library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences, claiming he collaborated with the Nazis during the German occupation of Lithuania. The plaque commemorates Noreika as an anti-Soviet fighter.

The center’s report was released to the public but addressed to the Government chancellor, the mayor of Vilnius and the Academy of Sciences chief librarian. It reads in part: “during the German occupation Jonas Noreika did not participate in operations for the mass extermination of Jews in the districts of Telšiai and Šiauliai.”

The document cautions Noreika’s actions “cannot be judged categorically.”