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In the Jerusalem of the North, the Jewish story is forgotten
This is in many ways a chilling reminder that race hatred and denial by ignoring is still taking place in Lithuania and some other states. Fascinating piece by Jonathan Steele for the Guardian.
Follow the English signs to this elegant baroque city's Museum of Genocide Victims and you reach a massive building resembling a respectable prewar bank. Every granite block on the facade's lower section now bears an engraved Lithuanian name, plus a year of birth and, judging from the dates, a premature death.
During almost 50 years of Soviet occupation this was where Stalin's secret police, the NKVD, and its successor until 1990, the KGB, held sway. The high-ceiling rooms tell a terrible story of executions and deportations to Siberia. A recording of a steam train chuffs softly beside photos of prisoners wrapped in felt jackets and children sitting bleakly outside wooden huts. Corpses caught by a ghoulish camera lie in the woods.
But as I moved from room to dismal room, I had a growing sense something was missing. Vilnius was once known as the Jerusalem of the North. What about the Jews? Did their fate not merit remembrance? In a corridor I eventually found a placard with a brief, though telling, mention. It gave estimates for the victims of Lithuania's Soviet occupation and of the Nazi one as well. The number summarily shot, or who died in prison and during deportation in the Soviet period, reached 74,500. During three years of Nazi rule from June 1941, those killed amounted to 240,000, "including about 200,000 Jews".



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