Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theater to Perform up to Eleven “Marriages of Figaro” in Israel

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Ona Kolobovaitė photo © 2015 by M. Aleksa

The Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theater has gone on tour in Israel and will perform Mozart’s opera “Marriage of Figaro” at the Israeli Opera Theater in Tel Aviv from November 4 to 15.

Eleven performances are planned. Two teams of singers are scheduled to be used and the opera’s choir, orchestra, costumes and decorations have also been sent from Vilnius to Tel Aviv. This is one of the biggest tours in recent times for the Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theater.

Conductor Martynas Staškus will conduct the opera with director’s assistant Jūratė Sodytė helping adapt the work for the stage.

Lecture Series Invitation

J. Greisman, “Curses, the Evil Eye and Porcha (Instilling Fear) in Judaism”

12 noon, Sunday, November 8, 2015

Lecture to be held in Lithuanian in the Jascha Heifetz Hall, third floor, Lithuanian Jewish Community, Pylimo street No. 4, Vilnius

Concert to Honor Lithuanian Holocaust Rescuers Held in Munich

The Order of Malta and the Jewish communities of Lithuania and Munich, Germany held a concert and reception in the Hercules Hall at the Munich Rezidens palace, with proceeds and donations collected during the concert going to support still-living rescuers of Jews.

Lithuanian ambassador to Germany Deividas Matulionis attended the event on November 2 and delivered a message from Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskaitė, the patroness of the event.

LJC Chair Speaks at Benefit Concert in Munich

Lithuanian Jewish Community chairwoman Faina Kukliansky delivered the following short address at a concert held in Munich Monday:

Dear honored guests,

It is my pleasure to be here and on behalf of the Lithuanian Jewish community to express my utmost respect and gratitude to our honored partner, the Order of Malta, and to all of you for paying the tribute to the Lithuanian Righteous of Nations, some of the all-time greatest ambassadors of humanity.

Over 90 percent of the once-flourishing, vibrant and influential Lithuanian Jewish or Litvak Community was destroyed during the Holocaust by the Nazis and their local collaborators. This means that out of approximately 210,000 Lithuanian Jews, an estimated 195,000 fell as victims of the Holocaust, and not without the help of local citizens, despite having more than 600 years of shared history.

A significant number of courageous and kind-hearted Lithuanian people, however, found inner strength when it was needed most to take a stand against evil at all costs, despite having very limited resources and facing an immense threat to the lives of their families and their own.

Their heroic act of saving their innocent Jewish neighbors during the grimmest of times, often involving much self sacrifice, demonstrated great human compassion; the hearts of the Jewish rescuers became shelters of hope for the hopeless, their eyes saw light in time of darkness. The life-saving decisions they made and the actions they took set the true example of morality for every of us to follow to this day.

The Lithuanian Jewish community is alive today thanks to the compassion and courage of the Righteous among Nations. I thank you all for remembering them together today and for recognizing their noble cause as well as their colossal contribution to our history.

80-Year-Old Woman among 3 Stabbed in Rishon Lezion Terror Attack

Three people were wounded Monday afternoon in a stabbing attack by a Palestinian in the central city of Rishon Lezion, a southern suburb of Tel Aviv.

Two people—a man in his 40s and a woman in her 80s—were in serious condition, the Magen David Adom rescue service said. The third victim, 26, was lightly hurt.

The attacker, identified by authorities as a 19-year-old Palestinian man from Hebron, stabbed the 40-year-old man from behind on a bus on Tarmab Street, got off the bus and ran to the adjacent Herzl Street, where he stabbed the elderly woman and the young man.

Full story here.

Erdogan Victory Could Mean More Turkey-Israel Crises

Turkish president Erdogan’s resounding election victory came as bad news for Israel, which has suffered the brunt of his insults and schemes.

Erdogan’s ruling Islamist AK Party now has a free hand to continue their crackdown against local media which criticize the Government, and against others deemed enemies of the state.

Erdogan, a Sunni Muslim who supports the Muslim Brotherhood–including Hamas–in the region, could become even more aggressive in pursuing his regional ambitions.

Read full story here.

Condolences

The Lithuanian Jewish Community express our deepest condolences to the family and friends of the victims of flight 9268 on Kogalymavia Airlines and to all the Russian people. We are with you in our hearts and minds.

Actress Helen Mirren on Cultural Boycott of Israel: The Craziest Idea

British actress Helen Mirren spoke out against the cultural boycott of Israel on Wednesday as she was honored at the 29th Israel Film Festival in Los Angeles, California.

Talking to the press before the ceremony, the Academy Award winner described the campaign to boycott Israeli through cutting off cultural ties as “a really bad idea.”

“The people who are the most inspiring in Israel tend to be from the cultural community. The writers, the directors, the poets, the musicians, they are truly extraordinary people doing amazing work, peace giving work, working towards peace all the time,” she said. “To cut them off is the craziest idea, I don’t agree with it at all.”

Pope Says Denying Israel’s Right to Exist Anti-Semitism

The World Jewish Congress website reports Pope Francis, the head of the Catholic Church, has issued a strong condemnation of anti-Semitism as he met with over a hundred leaders of the WJC Wednesday. During a private audience in the morning with WJC president Ronald S. Lauder, Francis made it clear that outright attacks against Israel’s existence is a form of anti-Semitism.

“To attack Jews is anti-Semitism, but an outright attack on the State of Israel is also anti-Semitism. There may be political disagreements between governments and on political issues, but the State of Israel has every right to exist in safety and prosperity,” Pope Francis told Lauder and the delegation.

Jews and Catholics today marked the anniversary of the 1965 declaration Nostra Aetate, which condemned anti-Semitism and improved and completely transformed relations between Jews and Catholics.

LJC Chairwoman on Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaitė’s Visit to Israel

I was included in the delegation which went together with Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskaitė to Israel. As the chairwoman of the Lithuanian Jewish Community I participated in everything and I can say the visit was historic. Despite the tension in the air because of the terrorist attacks by Palestinians, the leaders of Israel found the time to meet with the Lithuanian president on her working visit and to discuss the most urgent issues in regional security and bilateral cooperation. The Lithuanian president also discussed measures for strengthening Israeli and Lithuanian ties with Israeli president Reuven Rivlin, who emphasized his Litvak roots. The two leaders also spoke about the situation of the Jewish community and the commemoration of Holocaust victims in Lithuania. The Lithuanian president said Jews had contributed very much to the establishment of the Lithuanian state and that the two countries could combine forces in creating their future and prosperity. I remember moving moments when Litvaks in Israel met the president with tears in their eyes and how they spoke about the most beautiful times of their lives in Lithuania. These were times of youth, of the struggle for Jewish identity and for freedom. For them, Lithuania is the land of their forefathers from the time of Vytautas the Great, the land they call home and which they often recall even now.

Before her meeting with the president of Israel, the Lithuanian head of state visited the Yad Vashem museum to commemorate Holocaust victims and planted an olive tree in the Garden of the Righteous among Nations there. In her meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Lithuanian president said could help Lithuania directly with security. “Israel is prepared to help Lithuania directly in the sphere of security: by training our military personnel, in the area of cyber-security and can even organize courses for our personal protection.”

Fifty Years after Vatican II

Vatican City, October 28, (BNS-AP-AFP)–On Wednesday the Catholic Church marked the 50th anniversary of the historical Nostra Aetate [“In Our Time”] declaration which called for interfaith dialogue with a host of non-Christian religions and led to an historical change in Catholic-Jewish relations.

St. Peter’s Square Wednesday hosted an audience with the pope to remember this groundbreaking move made on October 28, 1965, when Paul VI was pope and the Church condemned anti-Semitism.

During his usual general audience, pope Francis spoke about the importance of Nostra Aetate and said it had transformed Catholic-Jewish relations from “doubt and opposition to cooperation and goodwill. … From enemies and strangers we have become friends and brothers.”

Rothschild Foundation Holds International Conference on Jewish Cemetery Protection in Vilnius

The Rothschild Foundation (Hanadiv) Europe held a conference to discuss Jewish cemetery heritage protection issues in Vilnius from October 25 to 28.

The conference, “A Cross-Disciplinary Seminar on European Jewish Cemeteries: Theory, Policy, Management and Dissemination,” with professionals from different European counties working in the field of Jewish Cemeteries including, scholars, genealogists, Jewish communities and federations, religious leaders, NGOs and policy makers, was designed to bring together a group of experts with 3 core aims:

• To review achievements since the conference on Jewish Immovable Heritage in Krakow 2013. The conference will provide a chance to conduct an appraisal of what has been done in the field until now. Organizations shared their most important projects, including new trends such as the development of technological tools to assist in the discovery and research of cemeteries.

• To explore important issues through a series of roundtable and panel conversations on the central questions and topics affecting the field.

• To encourage future collaboration between participating organizations, exploring how they can work together, encourage cross-border opportunities and consider further strategic cooperation.

Israeli Military Expert: So-Called al Quds Intifada is Power Struggle between Palestinians

Retired lieutenant colonel Jonathan D. Halevi, senior researcher on the Middle East and radical Islam at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, has published an article on the current wave of violence in Israel called “The Hidden Hand behind the Palestinian Terror Wave” on the JCPA’s Institute for Contemporary Affairs website.

The Hidden Hand behind the Palestinian Terror Wave
Institute for Contemporary Affairs
Founded jointly with the Wechsler Family Foundation
Vol. 15, No. 33
October 25, 2015

• Gaza has in effect become an independent Palestinian state, and this Hamas-ruled state is making a pitch, by means of the “Al-Quds Intifada,” to annex the West Bank as well. For Hamas, this is only one phase in the phased plan to implement an ethnic cleansing of the Jews from the Land of Israel.

EU Plans to Label Goods from Israel’s Occupied Territories

Gerald M. Steinberg, professor of political science at Bar Ilan University and president of NGO Monitor, a group which reports on anti-Israeli NGOs and the BDS (Boycott, Divest, Sanction) movement world-wide, has published an editorial in the Times of Israel on EU plans to require special labels on “colonial goods” produced in the occupied territories for import to the EU under the EU-Israel Association Agreement signed in 1995 granting preferential customs rates.

The op/ed came in response to an interview with EU ambassador to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen in the same newspaper in early October in which he said he failed to understand why Jerusalem was making such a “big fuss” about the EU’s plan to label Israeli products from the West Bank.

Steinberg said: “If nothing else, European officials at least get credit for consistency. For decades, in war and peace, terror and calm, they have not flagged in the belief that they can engineer their vision of peace for Israel. Having failed in so many previous attempts, the European move is another step in the effort to impose its preferred policies, via the labeling of products from the post-1967 ‘occupied territories’ in order to create economic pressure on Israel.”

Victims of 1941 “Great Action” Remembered at Kaunas Ninth Fort

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Every year on the last Sunday in October members of the Kaunas Jewish Community and others gather to remember the victims of the so-called Great Action at the Ninth Fort in Kaunas. The largest mass murder operation to kill Jews in the Kaunas ghetto was carried out from October 28 into October 29 in 1941. Approximately ten thousand people were murdered during the single operation, including about 4,300 children.

Ninth Fort Museum director Jūratė Zakaitė spoke first at the ceremony, followed by Kaunas Jewish Community chairman Gercas Žakas. Žakas as well as Kaunas deputy mayor Vasiliy Popov, deputy Israeli ambassador to Lithuania Yehuda Gidron and Russian embassy attaché Svetlana Lepayeva spoke about how we must never forget the atrocities committed and must talk about the subject with young people, including humanity’s apparent inability to learn from its mistakes and parallels with racist crimes today. Kaunas Jewish Community member Julijana Zarchi, a Holocaust survivor and Soviet deportee, shared her experiences and insights.

Britain’s Former Chief Rabbi Tackles the Roots of Islamist Terror in New Book

An ominous shadow has swept across the Middle East and North Africa, leaving chaos and carnage in its wake. Mad men armed with Kalashnikovs and depraved convictions commit unspeakable acts—all safe in the knowledge that they are doing God’s work.

How the civilized world counters the Islamic State and its associates is the subject of lord Jonathan Sacks’s timely new book, “Not In God’s Name.”

The former chief rabbi of Britain sees the battle against ISIS and similar groups as the defining conflict of the 21st century.

The frontline might be Syria and Iraq, but the battle is being fought everywhere and targets everyone—especially Jews.

Pro-Israel Article by French Philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy Disappears from Facebook

Pro-Israel Article by French Philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy Disappears from Facebook

Amid a flurry of criticism directed at social networking giant Facebook over its policing, or lack thereof, of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic hate, a staunchly pro-Israel article by a renowned personality has mysteriously been wiped from the network’s pages.

The article, entitled Things We Need to Stop Hearing About the ‘Stabbing Intifada,’ was penned by famed French philosopher and activist Bernard-Henri Lévy and published exclusively by The Algemeiner on Wednesday.

Read more

Israeli PM, Ambassador Refute 10 Deadly Lies about Israel

Israel went on the defensive last Wednesday, pushing back against what officials, including prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have called the “10 biggest lies” being spread about the Jewish state and its actions amid the recent spate of Israeli-Palestinian violence.

In addition to the prime minister, who listed the 10 lies to the 37th World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem on Tuesday, Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer also laid them out, virtually identically, in a piece appearing on the same day in Politico.

The first two lies address the Temple Mount, a site around which Israel believes the current escalation in Arab attacks against Israeli Jews originated. Those lies are that Israel is either trying to change the agreements set up between Israel, Jordan and Palestinians to administer the site to allow Jews the right to pray there—many Israeli activists and some politicians say Jews should have the right to worship anywhere on the Temple Mount, which is where many Jews believe the Jewish temple once stood—or that Israel is trying to destroy the Al-Aqsa Mosque.