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Simon Wiesenthal Center Urges Lithuanian Community: “Don’t Build Monument To Honor Nazi Collaborator”


Chicago, Illinois – This coming Saturday, on May 4th, the Lithuanian World Center, the Lithuanian-American community, and the local Lithuanian Consulate plan to unveil a monument to honorthe memory of Adolfas Ramanauskas (“Vanagas”), a hero of the post-World War II Lithuanian anti-Soviet resistance.


The Simon Wiesenthal Center strongly opposes the erection of the monument due to Ramauskas’ support during the Holocaust for the anti-Semitic Lithuanian Activist Front, and his role as the leaderof a gang of local vigilantes which persecuted the Jewish community of Druskininkiai during the initial weeks following the Nazi invasion of Lithuania in June 1941. In fact, Ramanauskas himselfmentioned these activities in his own memoirs.


As early as October 2017, the Wiesenthal Center’s chief Nazi-hunter Holocaust historian Dr. Efraim Zuroff met personally with the members of the Seimas (Lithuanian Parliament) committee whichdecided to devote 2018 to honoring Ramanauskas, and explained to them why such a step was morally untenable and offensive to the memory of the Holocaust victims in Lithuania.


Though there is no proof that he himself directly murdered anyone, it is the Center’s position that his leadership during this period of persecution should automatically disqualify him from beingdeclared a national hero.


The Center urges that in addition to canceling the plans to honor Ramanauskas-Vanagas, the community should follow the path of Silvia Foti. Silvia, the granddaughter of Jonas Noreika, known asGeneral Storm during WWII, was writing a book about her grandfather when her research uncovered the truth that her grandfather was a Holocaust perpetrator. She immediately created a petitionurging the Government of Lithuania to tell the truth about her grandfather and to recognize the country’s culpability regarding the Holocaust.


Given what is happening now in Vilnius with the Noreika monument, and Silvia Foti's international petition, and given that the town council of New Britain, Conn. overwhelmingly rejected the sameRamanauskas-Vanagas monument last year, it would be completely misguided to erect a monument, especially one which seriously distorts the accurate historical narrative of the Holocaust. Lastly,today, being Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, it is especially repugnant as we memorialize the six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust by the Nazis and their collaborators.

For more information, please contact Alison Pure-Slovin – (708) 714-0749, join the Center on Facebook, www.facebook.com/simonwiesenthalcenter, or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sentdirect to your Twitter feed.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights organizations with over 400,000 member families in the United States. It is an NGO at international agenciesincluding the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the OAS, the Council of Europe and the Latin American Parliament (Parlatino).


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