We Often Hear the Word “Charity,” But How Often Do We Think to Thank Those Who Help Us?

We Often Hear the Word “Charity,” But How Often Do We Think to Thank Those Who Help Us?

The Joint Distribution Committee, or Joint, renewed aid to the regional Jewish communities and Jews in trouble in Lithuania and the other Baltic states following independence.

This year, to mark the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Jewish American charity, the Panevėžys (Ponevezh) Jewish Community undertook a project which culminated in a public event on November 6, 2014. The goal of the project was to showcase the Joint’s charitable work in Panevėžys and Lithuania.

The event began on the sunny morning of November 6 at the city’s G. Petkevičaitė-Bitė Public Library. A large audience of esteemed guests took part in the conference staged by the Panevėžys Jewish Community. Community chair Gennadu Kofman opened the conference with a speech about the Joint’s unique and historical activities during and after World War II.

In Memoriam

MEILACH STALEVICH

(1923—2014)

by Dovid Katz (www.dovidkatz.net)

The Jewish Community of Lithuania has just lost one of its most powerful and authentic Litvak personalities, and one of the very last Vilna-born prewar Jews in Vilnius, Meilach Stalevich, who was born on June 28th 1923. The funeral: Wednesday November 12th, at 2 PM at the Vilnius Jewish cemetery.

Born on June 28th 1923 in the city (then Wilno, Poland; forever in Yiddish: Vílne), Meilach grew up on Kíyever gás (now: Kauno gatvė), opposite the Mishmères-Khéylim (Mishmeres Cholim) hospital which had a kloyz (prayer-house) where his grandfather Avigdor was the gábe (gabbai). Afterwards his family lived in a flat rented to them by a friendly Catholic priest on the grounds of nearby All Saints Church (Visų šventųjų; in local Yiddish: Kolanshómes [from: kol haneshómes ‘all souls’]). Meilach studied at the Yiddish secular Reál-gimnàzye on Rudnítsker gas (today’s Rūdninkų). He is a highly decorated hero of the war against Hitler (the only Jew in a Red Army unit of Cossacks). Most of his relatives were murdered at Ponár (Paneriai). He had received a letter in 1944 (after Vilna fell, but while he was still fighting at the front) that nobody of his family survived.

Century-Old Jewish Mural Was Hidden For Decades In Vermont

Century-Old Jewish Mural Was Hidden For Decades In Vermont

Apr, 29 2014 — (All Things Considered) —
There was a time in Eastern Europe when the landscape was dotted with wooden synagogues, some dating to the 1600s. Inside, the walls and ceilings were covered with intricate painted designs. Almost all of these structures were destroyed during the Holocaust, and with them, a folk art. But in Burlington, Vt., a synagogue mural has been uncovered where it lay hidden for a quarter century.

Aaron Goldberg grew up in Burlington. His family was among the Jewish immigrants, most of them from Lithuania, who settled in a section of the city known as Little Jerusalem in the late 1800s. Goldberg first saw the mural in the 1970s when he was in middle school and accompanied his mother to a carpet store.

More at northcountry

Double genocide – contemporary revisionism

The founders of The Seventy Years Declaration on the Anniversary of the Final Solution Wannsee Conference are urging Australian individuals and organisations to support their movement against Holocaust revisionism.

They have recently launched the ‘Defending Truth in History’ campaign with a brand new website:www.seventyyearsdeclaration.org.

Against the backdrop of rising ultra-nationalism and anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe, the campaign aims to fight an insidious form of Holocaust revisionism – double genocide. This notion, which equates the Nazi genocide with Stalinist atrocities and calls for joint memorialisation of the two tragedies, is gaining popularity across Europe, and even in America.

More at jwire.com

Toronto’s new mayor, a member of the United Church, is Jewish

Renee Ghert-Zand is a reporter and feature writer for The Times of Israel.

There have been three Jewish mayors in Toronto’s history, and now it seems there will be a fourth—at least according to halacha, or Jewish law.

Archival records obtained by The Times of Israel indicate that Mayor-elect John Tory has a maternal Jewish grandmother. According to the Jewish law of matrilineal descent, this makes Tory himself Jewish.

During a pre-election debate hosted last month by the Centre for Jewish and Israel Affairs and the United Jewish Appeal, mayoral candidate Doug Ford caused a stir by rattling off a list of all the Jews in his life (his doctor, his accountant, his lawyer, etc.) as a means of defending his brother, scandal plagued Mayor Rob Ford, against accusations of anti-Semitism. Ford even mentioned for the first time publicly that his evangelical Christian wife is actually Jewish on her mother’s side.

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International Tolerance Day

The Tolerance Centre of the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum, together with other institutions, this year will celebrate International Tolerance Day, which was included on the UNESCO list of international days of commemoration in 1995 (16 November). The other institutions that will take part in the commemorative events are the Embassy of Poland in Vilnius, Migration Board of Vilnius County Police Headquarters, and the Polish Institute in Vilnius.

The exhibition“Jan Karski. Man of Freedom” will be opened on the 13th of November, 2014, at 5.00 p.m. in the Tolerance Center (Naugarduko Str. 10/2, Vilnius). Zygmunt Stępiński, deputy director of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews (POLIN), and Lena Dąbkowska-Cichocka, POLIN representative on the strategic development questions, will take part in the opening ceremony. The finalists of Citizen of the Republic of Lithuania, a competition for school students attending comprehensive schools in Vilnius district will also be awarded during this event. After the official part, we invite you to the concert of the Reszów Klezmer Band as a celebration of tolerance.

Please be so kind and print out the attached invitation before coming to our event.

kvietimas_Karski

The Terrorist Attacks in Jerusalem:

The Terrorist Attacks in Jerusalem:

5 November 2014

The Situation in Jerusalem:

One Israeli man was killed and 14 injured, some seriously, in Jerusalem today (Wednesday, 5 November) when a Palestinian deliberately rammed his commercial van into two separate crowds of Israelis near a light-rail train station and then attacked passers-by with a metal pole.

A nearly identical attack took place exactly two weeks ago (Wednesday, 22 October) when a Palestinian steered his car into a light-rail station killing an Israeli-American baby and a woman originally from Ecuador and injuring eight.

On Wednesday, 29 October, a Palestinian terrorist attacked Yehuda Glick, an American-born Israeli, as he was departing from a conference in central Jerusalem. The terrorist shot Rabbi Glick multiple times and he remains in critical condition.

Today’s Rioting on the Temple Mount: 

The 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

This coming January 27, will mark the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz by Soviet troops. As some of you know, my father was deported three times to Auschwitz. The first time, on June 22, 1943, he was on a transport from his hometown of Bedzin with his first wife – the widow of a close friend of his whom he had married after his friend had died – and her daughter. This particular transport was taken on regular train wagons rather than cattle cars, and my father, a superb swimmer, managed to escape by diving out through a window as the train crossed a bridge over the Vistula River. Hit by three German bullets, my father managed to return to the Bedzin Ghetto where he was reunited with his father.

Less than six weeks later, during the liquidation of the Bedzin Ghetto, my father avoided deportation to Auschwitz once more by escaping to the nearby town of Zawiercie. In late August 1943, however, he arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau as part of a transport from Zawiercie. In late December 1943 or early January 1944, he was transferred to a labor camp near Bedzin, Lagisha, from which he escaped shortly thereafter. He was hidden for over six weeks by a Polish friend in Bedzin, but was recaptured by the Germans sometime in April 1944 as he was on his way to get forged identity papers that he hoped would enable him to reach Hungary. Returned to Auschwitz, he was imprisoned for more than six months in the notorious Block 11, the so-called Death Block, where the Germans attempted in vain to get him to rebeal the identity of the firend who had hidden him. In November 1944, he was sent from Auschwitz to Langensalza, a sub-camp of Buchenwald in Thuringia; from there to Dora-Mittelbau; and from there in early April 1945 to Bergen-Belsen where he was liberated by British troops on April 15.

New Monument Unveiled to Commemorate Rescuer of Jews Polina Tarasewicz

New Monument Unveiled to Commemorate Rescuer of Jews Polina Tarasewicz

A new commemorative stone erected in honor of Righteous Gentile Polina Tarasewicz (born 1905, murdered 1943) was consecrated at the cemetery in Parudaminis village in the Marijampolis aldermanship in the Vilnius region on October 30, 2014. Anatoliy Kasinski, formerly Kazriel Bernan, provided testimony on how Polina Tarasewicz took in and hid him, his brother and his mother at Predtechenka village (now known as Biržiškės) in the Vilnius region. A local turned Tarasewicz in and Nazis and local collaborators set up an ambush at night.

Tarasewicz had time to tell Anatoliy to run to the forest, which is the reason he survived. The murderers took Tarasewicz and the survivor’s mother and brother to a wooded area and shot them, then they burned down her house and farm. The next day Tarasewicz’s relatives secretly dug up her body and reburied her next to her mother’s grave at the Parudaminis cemetery. At an awards ceremony at the Lithuanian Government House on April 28 of 2014, Polina Tarasewicz along with 20 other people who saved Jews during World War II at risk to their lives and those of their families were honored.

Sweden recognition of Palestinian State at this time merely adds fuel to already enflamed Middle East, says European Jewish Congress

Sweden recognition of Palestinian State at this time merely adds fuel to already enflamed Middle East, says European Jewish Congress

(Brussels, Thursday, October 30, 2014) – The European Jewish Congress has called the Swedish Government’s decision to officially recognize a Palestinian state a display of poorly timed judgment.

“Only last night an Israeli was gunned down in an attempt at cold blooded murder, following on from the intentional murder by ploughing into a crowd of people in Jerusalem, killing two, including a three month old baby, all of which follows Palestinian leaders calling on their people to do anything possible to ‘protect’ Jerusalem,” EJC President Dr. Moshe Kantor said. “And rather than condemn the incitement to murder and seek ways to calm the situation, Sweden is merely adding fuel to an already enflamed Middle East and taking unilateral actions which the European Union committed its member states not to undertake.”

“This recognition also means recognizing a state which is at least in part controlled by the terrorist group Hamas, which is dedicated to the destruction of the State of Israel. Furthermore, with the current chaos and mass murder in places like Syria and Iraq, it appears bizarre that a foreign government would take such significant action completely unrelated to seeking ways to protect the tens if not hundreds of thousands of civilians whose lives are at immediate risk.”

“Today the government takes the decision to recognize the state of Palestine,” Swedish foreign minister Margot Wallstrom said in a statement on Thursday. “It is an important step that confirms the Palestinians’ right to self-determination,” she said, adding that “we hope that this will show the way for others.”

“This move is also illegitimate because it stands in opposition to commitments made by the European Union that neither side should take unilateral steps, and here is a member state doing exactly that,” Kantor continued. “For over 20 years the international community has consistently used the stick against Israel with all manner of threats and the carrot for the Palestinians, giving them prizes even while they continue to refuse to negotiate, telling them that recalcitrance is a strategy worth pursuing.”

“Perhaps there should be a major reassessment by the international community to assist the two sides get back to the negotiating table rather than taking actions which just pull the sides further apart.”

 European Jewish Congress (EJC)

Tel : +3225408159

Fax : +3225408169

Web : www.eurojewcong.org

Invitation to the film screening

Dear Friends, You are kindly invited to a film

THE LESSONS OF SURVIVAL. CONVERSATIONS WITH SIMON WIESENTHAL

screening to be held in Vilnius Jewish Public Library (Gedimino pr. 24, Vilnius) on October 28 at 5 PM.

The program also includes meeting the film creator INNA ROGATCHI

Invited speakres:

Prof. Irena Veisaitė and Mr. Darius Degutis – the Ambassador of the Republic of Lithuania to Israel in 2009-2014.

The film THE LESSONS OF SURVIVAL. CONVERSATIONS WITH SIMON WIESENTHAL was released at the end of 2013, and was successfully shown at important European public events. Its European premiere was at the European Parliament in January 2014 commemorating the International Holocaust and Remembrance Day. In March 2014, the film was shown at a special screening and discussion event at the Lithuanian Seimas (parliament).

In April 2014, The Israeli National News, in a profile written by Rochel Sylvetsky, described the film in the following way:

“Inna Rogatchi’s new film Lessons of Survival is the riveting film documentary on her never-before publicized conversations with the larger-than-life Nazi hunter as well as her own research into fascinating stories and facts about the Holocaust. Inna Rogatchi, too, is larger-than-life, and the noble role filled by the Rogatchi family in so many spheres is an example that is difficult to emulate”.

RSVP by e-mail to info@vilnius-jewish-public-library.com or by calling (8 5) 219 77 48

 Sincerely,

Žilvinas Beliauskas

Head of the Vilnius Jewish Public Library

http://vilnius-jewish-public-library.com/

The Shabbat Project: Making History

The Shabbat Project: Making History

As the sun dips below the horizon on October 24, an estimated one million people worldwide will be participating in this extraordinary initiative.

Paula Abdul and The Big Bang Theory’s Mayim Bialik have joined Nobel Prize laureates, international sports stars, a US vice-presidential candidate and Jews of every nationality, ethnicity and level of observance who, in less than a week, will be uniting in 340 cities across the globe for what might just be the most extraordinary Shabbat in Jewish history…

In Melbourne, a sociology professor from Monash University has undertaken an in-depth study of the city’s Jewish community to focus efforts, while scores of committees and subcommittees are ensuring the initiative reaches every last Jew in the state of Victoria. An estimated 50% of the 60,000-strong community are expected to take part.

More at aish.com

Czech movie “All My Loved Ones”

Following the tradition of  the Czech film-evenings at the Tolerance Center of the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum, the Embassy of the Czech Republic and the Tolerance Center are cordially inviting you to a projection of a Czech movie “All My Loved Ones”

( “Všichni moji blízcí”,  Czech Republic, 1999, 91 min., with EN subtitles)
taking place on Wednesday, October 29, 2014, at 5.30 p.m.
at  Tolerance Center of the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum, Naugarduko g. 10/2, Vilnius.

„All My Loved Ones“ is a poetic story about unbelievable Sir Nicolas Winton‘s act of kindness – saving 644 Jewish children from death. The movie will be introduced by H. E. Bohumil Mazánek, Ambassador of the Czech Republic to the Republic of Lithuania. 

World Jewish Congress mourns passing of Zionist leader Kalman Sultanik z’’l

NEW YORK – The World Jewish Congress (WJC) mourns the passing of the legendary Zionist leader Kalman Sultanik z’’l, who for decades served in the leadership of the WJC, notably as a vice-president from 1977. Sultanik died in New York over the weekend aged 97.

Sultanik was a member of the World Zionist Executive for many years representing the World Confederation of United Zionists. For four decades he served on the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, and was chairman of the American Section of the World Zionist Organization. He was also a member of the US Holocaust Memorial Council and president of the Federation of Polish Jews.

Kalman Sultanik was born in Miechów, Poland in 1917. Before World War II, he was a Jewish community and Zionist activist. During the war, he took part in the underground resistance movement against the Nazi invaders. He was deported to the concentration camp in Płaszów, before being transferred to a camp in Dresden. From there, he was sent on the death march to Terezin (Theresienstadt), where he was liberated in 1945.

A Neo-Nazi Beauty Pageant — Nefarious Glorification of Anti-Semitism at its Worst

Menachem Rosensaft

One of the most insidious, and perhaps ultimately one of the most dangerous, manifestations of neo-Nazi resurgence may well be its steady subversive infiltration of contemporary popular and consumer culture.

Rabidly bigoted — anti-Semitic, anti-Roma, generally xenophobic — modern day neo-Nazi parties and movements such as Jobbik in Hungary and Golden Dawn in Greece are relatively easy to identify and fight through political, judicial and legislative means. They are the violent heirs of the Nazi Brown Shirts, the S.A., who terrorized non-fascist Germans throughout much of the 1920’s and early 1930’s as part of Hitler’s rise to eventual absolute power.

Lithuanian Jewish Community Calendar for 5775 (2014-2015) Celebrates Litvak Doctors  

Lithuanian Jewish Community Calendar for 5775 (2014-2015) Celebrates Litvak Doctors  

Aut. Geoff Vasil

For a number of years now the Lithuanian Jewish Community (LJC) and the Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) have produced Jewish calendars distributed free to community members and friends during the Jewish New Year season. Each edition of the calendar features a central theme. This year, 5775, the theme chosen was Lithuanian Jewish contributions to medicine. The choice was not random.

Over the past five or ten years a number of Lithuanian cultural figures have rediscovered the fact that a beloved literary character was based on a real Jewish man who lived and worked in Vilna. Korney Chukovsky’s stories centered around the figure of Dr. Aibolit (Russian, pronounced áy-balít for ‘Ay, it hurts!’), called Daktaras Aiskauda in Lithuanian (Aiskauda also means ‘Ay, it hurts!’ in Lithuanian), and were roughly modeled on the character of his friend Tsemakh Shabad (1864-1935), the renowned Vilna children’s doctor and all-around humanitarian and cultural leader.

Sukkot lunar eclipse is an omen, some say

Sukkot lunar eclipse is an omen, some say

Is some sort of cataclysm on its way? Should we even bother putting up sukkahs?

John Hagee, the San Antonio pastor who wrote the book “Four Blood Moons: Something is About to Change,” would have us believe so.

Hagee predicts that because of a cycle of four lunar eclipses called a tetrad — two this year and next on Passover and Sukkot — that something big is about to happen, like the Rapture.

The eclipse will be seen throughout much of the world on Oct. 7 and 8 — the latter the eve of Sukkot. It will be visible throughout much of the United States on Oct. 8, but only in New Zealand on the actual holiday.

During a lunar eclipse, the moon moves directly behind the earth and into its shadow.

 

Read more

CHAG SUKKOT SAMEACH !

CHAG SUKKOT SAMEACH !

 
On this festival Jewish households build a sukkah (pl. sukkot), a booth-like structure, where all meals are eaten, and people (usually the menfolk but not solely) even sleep there. The flimsy roof consists of leaves or branches, widely enough spaced so that one can see the stars at night, but close enough to provide shade during the day. It is considered “hidur mitzvah” – glorifying the mitzvah – if the sukkah is beautifully decorated, so of course this provides much entertainment, not to mention arts-and-crafts time, for the children to beautify their sukkah.
The sukkah is a commemoration of the flimsy huts that the Children of Israel dwelt in during their 40 years of wandering in the desert, with only the ענן הכבוד, the Cloud of Glory, to protect them by day and the עמוד האש, the Pillar of Fire, by night.