Author: Visit.kaunas.lt
Source: Visit.kaunas.lt
#WeRemember: Holocaust Remembrance Sites in Kaunas There are quite a few places to visit and remember in Kaunas connected to the Holocaust and the Jewish history in the city.
This year, traditional memorial services and events are not to be held due to the worldwide pandemics. Nevertheless, it’s always a good time to remember and contemplate; and pay tribute to the victims by visiting the historical sites – even if only virtually.
Reklāma
For historical reasons, there are quite a few places to visit and remember in Kaunas connected to the Holocaust and the Jewish history in the city. These include memorials and locations of suffering, also places inspiring hope and spreading light.
KAUNAS GHETTO
In 2018, Vytenis Jakas, a Kaunas-based artist and founder of the famous Yard Gallery (more below), presented an idea of artistic intervention to add some positive emotional connotations to the former ghetto territory, as well as emphasise the meaning of the Lithuanian point of view to the importance of Jewish cultural and historical legacy. He decorated a building by the former ghetto gate with pieces of mirror.
SEVENTH FORT
This fort is the only one within the Kaunas fortress network (Tzar ordered to build it in the 19th century) that never witnessed any military action. During the Nazi occupation, it was the first concentration camp on Lithuanian soil. More than 5 000 Jews were killed here. Today, the fort is home to a nongovernmental education institution. In 2016, a new memorial for Holocaust victims was erected here.
NINTH FORT
The gigantic monument by Alfonsas Vincentas Ambraziūnas, Gediminas Baravykas and Vytautas Vielius, erected some 30 years ago, is one of the most awe-inspiring landmarks of Kaunas – and a reminder of all the blood that was spilt here. Before WW2, the Ninth Fort of the Kaunas Fortress was used as a jail. Later, thousands of Jews were killed here, coming from local vicinities and transported in from other countries occupied by Nazi Germany. There is also a museum presenting the painful chapters of this period of history open here.
ALEKSOTAS JEWISH CEMETERY
Squeezed between the Aleksotas slope and “Kauno grūdai” factory, this is the only active Jewish cemetery in Kaunas today. Remains were transferred here from the Ghetto cemetery in Vilijampolė in 1978.
JAN ZWARTENDIJK MEMORIAL
In 1940, a businessman Jan Zwanterdijk was appointed the honorary consul of the Netherlands, and the consulate began operating from the office of PHILIPS company. In the summer of 1940, he wrote up over 2400 de facto visas to Curaçao and saved thousands of Jewish refugees by helping them escape the country. He asked the Japanese Consul Chiune Sugihara to sign Japanese transit visas to people he had, and this is where the Sugihara chapter of the story begins (see below). The Righteous Among the Nations was posthumously bestowed on Zwartendijk in 1997. In 2018, Zwartendijk’s children and Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands opened a memorial in front of the former consulate. The author of the light installation funded by public and private institutions in Lithuania and the Netherlands is a Dutch artist Giny Vos.
SUGIHARA HOUSE
The modernist villa in Žaliakalnis attracts thousands of Japanese and Israeli visitors every year. This is where the Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara resided and issued life visas for Jewish refugees, and together with Dutch diplomat Jan Zwartendijk, he saved thousands of lives. Today, the house is a small museum that tells the story of Sugihara.
As the Japanese Consulate was closed due to the first Soviet occupation, Sugihara moved to the Metropolis Hotel and continued to sign life visas. The hotel continues to operate today; in 2019, a statue representing the deed of Sugihara (author Martynas Gaubas) was opened in front of it.
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