Lithuania's parliament has begun discussing a bill calling for the reconstruction of the Vilnius Jewish quarter, a major center of European Jewish life before the 1941-44 Nazi occupation.
Published:
27 July 2000 y., Thursday
The proposal aims to restore some ghetto buildings that fell into disrepair over the past 60 years and completely rebuild others.
The project, including rebuilding the entire Great Synagogue dynamited by the Nazis, would require foreign donations. Drafters of the bill refused to estimate final costs, saying only that Lithuania couldn't cover them alone. Lithuanian, French and Israeli architects—consulting detailed pre-war maps of the Jewish quarter—have already discussed how to carry out the plans. If the legislation passes, some work could begin as soon as December. Proponents say the rebuilt ghetto would help maintain a key part of the nation's heritage and would also be a major tourist attraction, drawing tens of thousands of Jews around the world who trace their roots back to Lithuania.
Before World War II, Vilnius was a hub of Jewish culture, learning and political activism. Many people at the time referred to Vilnius, home of many influential rabbis and leading Zionists, as the "Jerusalem of the North." The ghetto, with its close-knit, 17th century buildings and narrow cobblestone streets, was also home to leading Jewish theaters, thriving Jewish publishing houses and the acclaimed Yiddish Institute of Higher Learning.
But during the Nazi occupation, the district was circled by barbed wire fences and became a holding center for most of the city's 60,000 Jews. Virtually all the detainees were later executed by Nazi killing squads in a nearby forest.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
EU animal welfare rules must be more rigorously enforced, with more inspections and effective penalties, said the Agriculture Committee on Wednesday.
more »
Fifty-three year old Rasima collects dirt everyday from a paddy field in Indonesia’s east Java province, turning it into a snack made entirely from soil, called "ampo."
more »
At the moment an Argentinian working for a French company in Spain can't travel to France for a meeting on his long-term visa.
more »
An EU-wide strategy is needed to combat violence against women, which must be recognised as a crime, said participants in a European Parliament public hearing with national parliaments and civil society representatives, held on Tuesday to mark International Women's Day.
more »
You know its Tet in Vietnam when Peach and Kumquat orange trees decorate every home, shop and public establishment.
more »
A surveyor has set up his tripod and instruments under a hot tropical sun to measure plots of land in a village where the Dac Kray minority community were settled four years ago.
more »
Japanese men are answering the call of Valentine s Day a month late.
more »
In three urgent resolutions adopted on Thursday, Parliament urges Hamas to release kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, deplores the escalating criminal violence in Mexico and calls on South Korea to scrap the death penalty.
more »
The plight of Europe's 10 million Roma population will fall under the spotlight Tuesday afternoon when MEPs discuss an upcoming Roman summit.
more »
EU Employment and Social Affairs Ministers have today adopted a Directive to prevent injuries and infections to healthcare workers from sharp objects such as needle sticks – one of the most serious health and safety threats in European workplaces and estimated to cause 1 million injuries each year.
more »