Reopening Lithuania's old
wounds
By TIM WHEWELL
BBC Radio 4, "Crossing Continents"
Monday, 21 July 2008
VILNIUS — A judicial inquiry
into the wartime activities of Jewish anti-Nazi resistance fighters in
Lithuania has led to accusations that the small Baltic state is trying
to distort the history of World War II.
The
row follows investigations by the country's prosecutor into whether the
former partisans — Holocaust® survivors now in their 80s —
themselves committed war crimes.
Israel has denounced the inquiry as
scandalous and refused to allow one of the main potential witnesses to be
questioned. Britain's foremost World War II historian, Sir Martin
Gilbert,* told the BBC
he was "deeply shocked" by the investigation, which he called
"perverse".
The
Simon Wiesenthal Center, which works to track down Nazi war criminals,
claims it is part of an attempt to establish a "false symmetry" between
atrocities committed against Jews and atrocities allegedly committed by
them.
And
the dispute has now led to a tense meeting between the Lithuanian prime
minister Gediminas Kirkilas and American Jewish leaders.
Former Holocaust® head sought for
questioning
At
least four former fighters have now been questioned or are being sought
for questioning. All deny any wrongdoing, and so far the main evidence
appears to be memoirs written by former [Communist] partisans
themselves.
The
row began to develop last September when the Lithuanian prosecutor for
war crimes and crimes against humanity asked to talk to Israeli
historian Yitzhak Arad about his experiences as a
16-year-old boy, after he had escaped from a Nazi-run ghetto in
Lithuania and joined the Soviet-led resistance force in the forest.
Dr.
Arad, 81, is former head of Israel's Holocaust Memorial Authority, Yad
Vashem.
He was
not informed what provoked the inquiry, but the prosecutor, Rimvydas
Valentukevicius, told the BBC he was investigating the
killing of at least one civilian in a raid by partisans on Girdenai, a village in
eastern Lithuania in 1944.
In his
book, The Partisan, first published in English in 1979, Dr.
Arad described how his brigade was ordered to mount a "punitive action"
against villagers who, he wrote, were armed by the Germans and had shot
partisans attempting to requisition food.
Dr.
Arad described how houses were burned. But he denies involvement in the
killing of any civilians.
Willing to appear
before media, but not the law
He has
said he is willing to be interviewed by Lithuanian journalists, but not
by the police. "I don't trust them," he said. "The case has no basis.
It is trying to falsify events. And I don't want to be part of this
play."
Dr.
Arad, like other former partisans, insists that joining the Soviet-led
resistance force was effectively his only means of staying alive in
Nazi-occupied Lithuania.
Historians
say that about 95% of the country's Jews — 200,000 people — were killed
by the Germans and their Lithuanian collaborators. This is probably the
highest proportion in Europe.
Under
Lithuanian law, any citizen can initiate an inquiry into wartime
crimes, and Dr. Arad believes the inquiry into his record is revenge
for expert evidence he gave at the trial in the United States of a
former Lithuanian Nazi collaborator accused of involvement in the
killing of Jews.
"I
think they use my case as a general intention to rewrite history," he
said, "to show that Jews are not the only victims."
Lithuania's
deputy foreign minister Jaroslavas Neverovicas told the BBC
that Dr Arad was wanted as a witness, not a suspect.
Commission established to whitewash
Communist crimes
But
the case has undone painstaking work by the government a few years ago
to establish an international commission of historians tasked with
examining the [alleged] crimes of both the Nazi and Soviet regimes in
Lithuania, and attempting to draw up a definitive version of highly
controversial events.
One
aim was to reconcile differing assessments, inside and outside
Lithuania, of the extent of Lithuanian involvement in the
Holocaust®.
Dr.
Arad, seen as a key Israeli scholar, was originally persuaded to join
the commission only after the personal intervention of Lithuania's
president. But he has now withdrawn, at least until the case is
dropped, as has Britain's representative, Sir Martin Gilbert.
"The commission was one of the best
things that happened in post-Soviet Lithuania," the deputy foreign
minister, Mr. Neverovicas, said. "It's unfortunate that such an episode
appeared. But when the accusation happened, our prosecutor's office
could not sit still, it had to investigate."
The
government-appointed head of the commission, however, believes that its
work has been deliberately sabotaged by nationalist forces who want to
lead Lithuania away from the European mainstream.
Jews renew blood-libel accusation
Conservative
member of parliament Emmanuelis Zingeris, Lithuania's leading Jewish
politician, who was one of those at the forefront of the country's
campaign to break away from the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, said:
"Someone
has tried to dismantle this carefully-built bridge between Lithuania,
Israel, America and world historical opinion. And it's a real tragedy
... a highly counterproductive move against Lithuanian liberal values,
against all our shared values with NATO and EU countries."
For
the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the world's main Nazi-hunting
organization, the investigation of Jewish partisans is part of a wider
attempt by Lithuania to improve its international image by rewriting
the history of World War II.
"The
participation of so many Lithuanian volunteers in the mass murder of
Jews is a very sensitive subject," says Efraim Zuroff of the center's
Jerusalem office. "However if it emerges that there were Jews who
committed crimes against Lithuanians, that would blunt the shame that
Lithuanians feel in response to their World War II crimes."
"The
Holocaust® obfuscation, distortion and deflection going on in
Lithuania should be a very serious cause of concern in the EU and
NATO," he added.
'More serious than Holocaust®
denial'
"I
think what is happening in Lithuania and elsewhere throughout Eastern
Europe is far more serious than the phenomenon of Holocaust denial
which has never penetrated mainstream European society."
Dr.
Zuroff describes independent Lithuania's record in prosecuting Nazi war
criminals as a "miserable failure". Since 1991, it has prosecuted three
Nazi collaborators — and 24 people accused of crimes against humanity
or genocide under the Soviet regime.
The
country has its own judicial definition of the word "genocide", wider
than that used by the United Nations.
It
includes attempts to wipe out particular social as well as ethnic
groups, and can therefore potentially be used to prosecute Soviet
crimes as well as Nazi ones.
Many
non-Jewish Lithuanians argue they were subject to a form of genocide
because the Soviet Union attempted to destroy the nation's intellectual
elite through mass deportations to Siberia, the fight against
anti-Soviet guerrillas, and other forms of persecution.
As for
Nazi collaborators, the government says most were prosecuted in Soviet
times, whereas the task of finding Soviet collaborators could only
begin after independence.
Prime minister bows to Jewish
pressure
Deputy
foreign minister Neverovicas says Lithuania is being even-handed in
investigating both totalitarian regimes and is right to be spearheading
efforts in the European Parliament to make Western Europeans more aware
of Soviet crimes.
But
his government is clearly embarrassed by the still-widening
investigation of the partisans. This spring prosecutors questioned 86-year-old Fania Brantsovskaya,
who still lives in Lithuania, about the role her partisan brigade
played in an alleged massacre of 38 civilians in the village of
Kaniukai in southeastern Lithuania in January 1944.
Mrs.
Brantsovskaya insists she was not present during the raid and has now
also been told that she is not a suspect.
Nevertheless
the prime minister Mr. Kirkilas was so concerned about the possible impact of the
case on Lithuania's relations with America's influential Jewish
community that he invited her to tea before his trip to New York.
Lithuania
insists, however, that the judiciary works independently of the
government, and the inquiry continues.
Crossing Continents: The battle for memory was
broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday, 17 July at 1102 BST.