Major Increase in Wealthy French Jews Seeking to Move Assets to U.S., Flee Anti-Semitism in France

An attorney at a top New York law firm representing high-net-worth clients told The Algemeiner on Sunday that he has seen a dramatic increase in inquiries from wealthy French Jews who are looking to relocate to New York and invest locally due to violent antisemitism on the continent.

“Until recently there wasn’t a huge interest in French Jewish families emigrating or making a big move of their assets somewhere,” noted Marlen Kruzhkov, ofGusrae Kaplan.

Latest statistics report that the 500,000 – strong French Jewish community has passed the former Soviet Union states as the largest source of Jewish emigrants to Israel.

Since the beginning of 2014 and especially since Israel’s recent Operation Protective Edge against Hamas rocket fire out of Gaza, “from two to three people a year, I’ve gotten calls from two to three dozen people in the last three months,” Kruzhkov said.

Kruzhkov’s clients average net worth is in the $50 to $70 million range, according to a report in the New York Observer. While he’s worked with French-speaking Jews for close to a decade, he pointed out that even some of his non-Jewish clients are aghast at what they see happening in France.

Rūta Vanagaitė: Lithuania is still competing with the Holocaust

Rūta Vanagaitė’s project “The Paneriai Lullaby”, which lets you interact with Jewish culture for a day, is one of the most successful projects financed by the European Commission (EC).

This year it once again received EC support. Rūta Vanagaitė, the initiator and implementer of the concept, told us what it was that most influenced the success of this project.

You said that you know that in your family there were people who, probably without any choice in the matter, collaborated in the tragic destruction of the Jews in Lithuania. You stated also that you have a choice and so started this project. How did the thought come about for this project and what inspired the initial idea?

I always do only what interests me. I don’t know Jewish Vilnius. I used to live in a house that once belonged to Jews. Where are they now? In Paneriai? I knew practically nothing about the Litvak culture or traditions of Vilnius. I am ashamed to say, I was asked by an artist once taking part in the LIFE festival to show him Paneriai and I couldn’t find it. And so the idea of creating this project came about, one that would expand my own knowledge and be of interest to my friends, my children and their friends.

More at delfi.lt

Invitation to Shabbes celebration in Vilnius Choral Synagogue!

Invitation to Shabbes celebration in Vilnius Choral Synagogue!

Lithuanian Union of Jewish Students are happy to invite you to Shabbes celebration in Vilnius Choral Synagogue!
Time: this Friday 12th of September. 19:00(please try not to be late)
Location: Choral synagogue (Pylimo street 39)
Program:
1. Meeting with our charismatic and wonderful Kantor who will tell us more about the synagogue, traditions and will try to answer all of  your questions.
2. Unique possibility to see Shabbes celebration hear the prayer and maybe even join!
3. Will start registration to the future events and you’ll here more about them(f.e. event in the parliament where you’ll have to register in advance)
4. After everything we will have Shabbes dinner (inside the synagogue!) where we will have possibility to meet each other closer or meet absolutely new people.

Please register:
Amit.belaite@gmail.com or Tel.: 869227326

P.s. If you have your kipah bring it with yourself. Please don’t take pictures during the event

Defending History turns five today

Five Years

Five years have elapsed since this journal was founded as Holocaust in theBaltics on 6 Sept. 2009, in memory of Professor Meir Shub (1924-2009). Outside coverage includes David Hirsch in Engage and Jonathan Freedland in theGuardian (2009); Avi Friedman in Mishpacha, Ricky Ben-David in the Jerusalem Post, and Mark Ames in The Nation (2010); Wendy Robbins on BBC World Service (2010); Cindy Mindell in the Jewish Ledger (2011); Danny Ben-Moshe in his film Rewriting History (2012); Bernard Dichek in Jerusalem Report (2013); Richard Bloom in his filmDefending Holocaust History (2014).

More at defendinghistory.com

Four facts that will change the way you look at Yiddish

Four facts that will change the way you look at Yiddish

Yiddish is most definitely not a dead/dying language.

First and foremost, let’s debunk the biggest myth about Yiddish: that the language died along with the six million of the Holocaust. Although the Holocaust devastated traditional Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi society and hollowed out the shtetls and cities in which the language was spoken, Hitler did not succeed in removing Europe’s home-grown Jewish language from the earth. Yiddish survives, and not just in the form of colourful words that made their way into Hebrew and English, but as the full, natively-spoken language of hundreds of thousands of people, most notably Hasidic Jews in the USA and Israel (but also in many other Hasidic corners of the world, such as London’s Stamford Hill). As the native language of hundreds of thousands of souls within the Jewish world’s fastest-growing communities, Yiddish is very much alive and well. Eminent linguist Dovid Katz writes that Yiddish is ‘100% safe for centuries to come’ as a ‘virile written and spoken language’ in Hasidic communities, based on current sociolinguistic and demographic trends.

So, reports of the death of Yiddish have been greatly exaggerated. And as a great Yiddish writer reminds us, for two thousand years, Hebrew was called a dead language too.

2) Yiddish is not just broken German. Yiddish is not just broken Hebrew.

Program of events dedicated to commemorate the nationally designated day of genocide of the Jewish people of Lithuania

Program of events dedicated to commemorate the nationally designated day of genocide of the Jewish people of Lithuania

A special series of events dedicated to commemorate the nationally designated day of genocide of the Jewish people of Lithuania, with events set to commemorating also the liquidation of the Kaunas (Kovno) and Šiauliai (Shavl) ghettos as well as other important dates in Lithuanian Jewish history.

Wednesday 17 September

5.30 PM Diplomats of the Condemned  – event to commemorate  Jan Zwartendijk and Chiune Sugihara, honourable diplomats, who, endangering their careers and even life, saved Jews during WWII.
Enseble Orphic Trio from United Kingdom (Orpheus Papafilippou – violin, William Routledge – cello and Rimantas Vingras – piano), Music by Joseph Achron, Tōru Takemitsu and Dmitrij Shostakovich.

Organizators of the event – the Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum together with London „Santara-Šviesa“  club.

Entrance by invitation only

 Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum Tolerance center, Naugarduko str.  10/2, Vilnius

Thursday 18 September

VILNE, VILNO, VILNA: The Three (Actually Four) Jewish Names for Vilnius

by Dovid Katz

ווילנער אַנטיקל⸗זאַכן

ט″ז

ווילנא, ווילנע, ווילנה (וילנה) — אַלע דריי אינאיינעם ביי אַ ווילנער איינבינדער אין די הענט…

די דריי (פאַקטיש פיר) נעמען פון דער שטאָט ביי ווילנער יידן גופא

       כידוע טרעפט מען אויף די שער⸗בלעטער פון ווילנער אויסגאַבעס דעם נאָמען פון דער שטאָט אַ געשריבענע אויף דרייערליי אופנים, ואלו הן:

       (א) ווילנא: אין שיער⸗ניט אַלע טראַדיציאָנעלע אויסגאַבעס, פון סאַמע אָנהייב פון ווילנער יידישן דרוק⸗וועזן סוף אַכצעטן יאָרהונדערט, ביזקל די ראָמס אין זייערע אַלע גלגולים, און ביי טייל אַנדערע יידישע פאַרלעגער אין שטאָט אין דער צווישן⸗מלחמהדיקער צייט; און פון זינט דעם חורבן, אין צאָלרייכע פאָטאָמעכאַנישע איבערדרוקן פון ווילנער ש″סן און אַנדערע יקר⸗המציאותן.

WJC Announcement

WJC Announcement

As you know, the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) has decided to establish a Commission of Inquiry (COI) to investigate Israel’s operations in the recent Gaza confrontation, to the consternation of our global Jewish community. The UNHRC has chosen Professor William Schabas to head the COI, known for his negative attitudes and biased pronouncements concerning Israel. We are attaching a backgrounder on the UNHRC and William Schabas which we believe will be very useful to you in your role as community leaders when you educate your members and constituents as to this counter-productive step taken by the UNHRC that demonstrates its ongoing anti-Israel bias. This COI was called for in a recent UNHRC resolution that condemned Israel for its actions in Gaza and made absolutely no mention of Hamas. We believe that this one-sided resolution will no doubt result in a prejudiced outcome that will only serve to once again single out Israel for blame. We are sending you the attached document that states our current position.
 
Kindly circulate this material to your membership since it is crucial that community leadership be fully apprised as to developments concerning Israel in the United Nations. The WJC will keep you informed as we continue to advocate for the fair treatment of Israel in the United Nations.
 
This is to advise you that this notice is not a call for any action on your part but mainly for you to know that we are monitoring the situation and will report to you further.
 

In pictures: A black and white tour of old Tel Aviv   

In pictures: A black and white tour of old Tel Aviv  

Amit Cotler, Shai Rajoan

Blogger Shai Rajoan, 25, has made it his mission to preserve Israeli metropolis in pictures and has a lot to say about the way we treat our own history.

Shema Yisrael, 1972

09013

The Great Synagogue on 110 Allenby Street, corner of 23 Ahad Ha’am Street, immediately after its construction was completed(Photo: The G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)

See more at ynetnews.com

 

Lev Tahor community ‘forced out’ of Guatemalan village

AFP, Ynet

Orthodox Jews from US, Israel, UK, Russia say they’ve been threatened with lynching if they don’t leave San Juan La Laguna, while indigenous population accuses Jews of ‘wanting to impose their religion.’

A community of 230 Orthodox Jews from several countries, reportedly belonging to the Lev Tahor sect, began leaving the Guatemalan Indian village where they have lived for six years on Thursday after claims and counterclaims of discrimination and threats.

Their exit from San Juan La Laguna, on the banks of Lake Atitlan and 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the capital Guatemala City, follows a meeting Wednesday in which Jewish and indigenous representatives failed to reach an agreement.

Read Ynet.com

We are all proud Israelis!

As part of my job as the eastern director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center I often do media interviews. Given that we are an official non-governmental organization (NGO) at the United Nations and our physical location is down the block from the UN, we get many requests from foreign news agencies. So when I received a call from a German radio station I didn’t think twice about inviting them to our Museum of Tolerance.

When the woman arrived we chatted for a bit and I found out that they represent the German equivalent of NPR in Germany and our conversation would reach over 25 million listeners. The topic was the UN and Israel so I felt fairly confident that I could handle the interview. We sat down in our conference room as she did her sound check. All was ready and here came the first question. “How do you feel the UN has treated YOU” she queried.

I have rarely been left speechless in life, let alone in an interview but there I was stammering “How they’ve treated me?” I quickly asked, “To whom are you referring… me, the Wiesenthal Center, American Jewry?”. She clarified and said “you, the Israelis.” Well there it was, in the span of a few seconds I became an official undocumented representative of the State of Israel. The rest of the interview went fine but I was left a bit shaken.

I came to the realization that the world does not differentiate between being an Israeli and being a Jew. That is why we have seen this recent tsunami of global anti-Semitism. The world looks at all Jews as ambassadors of Israel and therefore responsible for all that occurs there. I immediately started to focus on that new identity that I was given and was overcome with intense sense of pride.

The global community has finally come to terms with the undisputable fact that the Jews have a nation-state of their own. Indeed, every Jew has a connection to Israel, a place to call home. The many years that we spent as a nomadic people, wandering the earth, being expelled from more countries than on a “Risk board”, is over. This should be the silver lining that we take away from recent events. As we go through the deep pain of the war with Hamas terrorists and the growing epidemic of global anti-Semitism, let us focus on the fact that the world finally looks at us, the Jewish people, as a unified strong nation. We will always have each other, and yes, we are all proud Israelis!

 More: We are all proud Israelis! | Steven Burg | The Blogs | The Times of Israel  

 

Foreign Ministry welcomes an open-ended ceasefire in the Gaza Strip

Foreign Ministry welcomes an open-ended ceasefire in the Gaza Strip

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania welcomes an agreement on an open-ended ceasefire in the Gaza Strip announced on 26 August. Hopefully, all parties involved will abide by the terms of the agreement that will give impetus to further political process as the only way to achieving lasting peace.

The open-ended ceasefire agreement should lead to an immediate halt to rocket attacks and other attacks by Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza against Israel. The Palestinian Authority should exercise its full government responsibilities in Gaza and establish its effective governance. Israel should lift Gaza closure regime, which would lead to the fundamental improvement in the living conditions for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as well as to the economic development of Gaza.

The Foreign Ministry commends the efforts by the Egyptian government to broker this deal. Lithuania is ready to support the possible international mechanism endorsed by the UN Security Council.

 urm.lt

Rare photos of pre-Holocaust Jewish life to go online

Rare photos of pre-Holocaust Jewish life to go online

HAARETZ.com

U.S. Holocaust Museum and International Center of Photography in New York announce joint creation of digital database.

A vast U.S. archive of photographs of pre-Holocaust Eastern European Jewish life is being made available to the public and researchers.

The International Center of Photography in New York and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday announced the joint creation of a digital database to facilitate access to photographer Roman Vishniac’s archive.

Volunteers Tackle Cobwebs and Dust at Vilna Ghetto Library

Volunteers Tackle Cobwebs and Dust at Vilna Ghetto Library

by Geoff Vasil

photos by Milda Jakulytė-Vasil

Volunteers in Vilnius none the worse for the wear after an afternoon spent in the cobwebs and gloom of the old ghetto library

 As Litvaks resident and formerly resident in Vilna well know, the Vilna ghetto had its own library.

 Located on what was then Strashun and now Žemaitijos street in the Vilna Old Town, the library, called the Mefítsey Haskóle (or Mefitsey Haskolo in Ashkenazic Hebrew), existed prior to the establishment of the ghetto near the historic Jewish quarter, from about 1921. The street name seems to have been a source of confusion because of the “real” Strashun library located within the Great Synagogue, whose collections were largely bequeathed by a Mr. Strashun.

 Most of what we know went on in the Vilna ghetto that doesn’t come from the very few survivors, we know from the scrupulous diary kept by the Vilna ghetto librarian, the Polish refugee Herman Kruk. Kruk’s diary is longer than DeFoe’s “Journal of the Plague Year” and just as gruesome, if not more so, since the agent of the great death was not the plague, but our fellow man. 

Who Will Stand Up for the Christians?

Who Will Stand Up for the Christians?

New York Times, USA  20 August 2014

By RONALD S. LAUDER

WHY is the world silent while Christians are being slaughtered in the Middle East and Africa?

In Europe and in the United States, we have witnessed demonstrations over the tragic deaths of Palestinians who have been used as human shields by Hamas, the terrorist organization that controls Gaza. The United Nations has held inquiries and focuses its anger on Israel for defending itself against that same terrorist organization. But the barbarous slaughter of thousands upon thousands of Christians is met with relative indifference.

The Middle East and parts of central Africa are losing entire Christian communities that have lived in peace for centuries. The terrorist group Boko Haram has kidnapped and killed hundreds of Christians this year — ravaging the predominantly Christian town of Gwoza, in Borno State in northeastern Nigeria, two weeks ago. Half a million Christian Arabs have been driven out of Syria during the three-plus years of civil war there. Christians have been persecuted and killed in countries from Lebanon to Sudan.

Collapse No Longer Threatens Vilnius Synagogue

Collapse No Longer Threatens Vilnius Synagogue

Cultural Heritage Department to the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Lithuania

 Work is being done to stop the collapse of the Vilnius Synagogue (Gėlių street No. 6, Vilnius).

 Until the work was started, the house of prayer was in a dangerous condition. The roof has holes and so the building is being affected strongly by the environment. Because of this some of the flooring and the internal cupola collapsed, the wooden roof construction was rotting and the mortar in the walls was decaying.

 In order to avoid an accident and solve the dangerous situation, supports were put in place to hold up the wooden flooring and wooden rafters supporting the roof to keep it from caving into the building. Also, a wall of silicate brick and metal constructions which were obscuring the facade of the synagogue as well eroding the mortar in the original brick walls and thus endangering the entire building are being removed.

 The Cultural Heritage Department has allocated over 50,000 litas [approximately 14,431 euros] from its Heritage Conservation Program for 2014 to carry out these tasks. The Vilnius Jewish Religious Community has allocated a further 5,000 litas. Architect Irena Staniūnienė drafted the plan to save the building.

What Riga Ghetto Survivors Had to Say About Herberts Cukurs, Now “Hero” of a 2014 Show in Latvia

by Aleksandrs Feigmanis (Riga)

Herberts Cukurs (1900-1965) had been an officer and a famous aviator during the years of the interwar Latvian Republic (1918-1940). After Nazi Germany’s 1941 occupation of Latvia, he became a significant figure in the infamous Arājs Kommando (or Sonderkommando Arajs), a notorious killing unit during the Latvian Holocaust. The Arājs group consisted of about 1,200 people, mostly local Latvians. It was established at the beginning of July 1941 within the German security services.

The Arājs Kommando carried out the killing of at least 30,000 Jews in numerous cities and towns in Latvia. The toll included the family of my grandfather in Vilani (in Yiddish Vilon), which occurred at dawn on August 4, 1941. The victims were his parents, and his sisters and their husbands and young children.

That Cukurs is back in the news here now has to do with a new musical to premiere soon across Latvia for which a Youtube promo clip of Herberts Cukurs has elicited such comments as “wonderful, nice music, nice voice!” and more. This naturally makes a mockery of the memory of victims of the Holocaust.

More at defendinghistory.com