Memory Road 1941-2021
In 2021, we will mark the 80th anniversary of the beginning of the Holocaust in Lithuania. Unlike most of Europe, Holocaust victims in Lithuania were murdered near their places of residence. In a few months of summer and fall 1941, Lithuanian Jewish communities were completely destroyed by Nazis and their local collaborators.
In 2021, we will mark the 80th anniversary of the beginning of the Holocaust in Lithuania. Unlike most of Europe, Holocaust victims in Lithuania were murdered near their places of residence. In a few months of summer and fall 1941, Lithuanian Jewish communities were completely destroyed by Nazis and their local collaborators.
To remember these painful historical events, the International Commission for the Evaluation of the
Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania, together with the Tolerance Education
Centers established on its initiative and with other partners, initiates the national project "Memory Road 1941 – 2021", which will take place from June to December this year. Similar events take place at the initiative of the International Commission for more than a decade to commemorate the National Holocaust Remembrance Day - 23 September - which involve 150 - 200 schools and more than 10,000
participants each year.
This year, the "Memory Road 1941-2021" events are organized chronologically, following the calendar of painful historical events. A series of commemoration events are planned to mark the 80th anniversary of the destruction of Jewish communities in individual towns and cities. There are over 200 mass murder sites of Holocaust victims in Lithuania. It would be very symbolic this year to visit all or at least most of these places and pay tribute to innocent victims. We also hope that this year greater attention will be paid to the maintenance of all known mass graves of Holocaust victims. In addition, we hope that information stands will appear next to them about local Jewish communities and their tragic fate during the Nazi occupation.
The format of the "Memory Road 1941-2021" remains traditional: as in previous years, we invite participants to gather in the central parts of cities and towns (where Jews used to live) and then march to mass murder sites, retracking the path of the victims killed during the Holocaust. We would encourage the participants to bring pebbles with the names of the Jews who lived here inscribed on them. It has two
meanings: respect for the historical Jewish tradition of carrying pebbles to cemeteries and the personalization of Holocaust victims. In the commemorations at the sites of the massacre, we would call for these names to be uttered and the stories of individual families and the most prominent personalities of the land to be resurrected from absence. We hope that this initiative will accelerate the appearance of
monuments with immortalized names of victims in the places of massacres throughout Lithuania.
Before participating in these commemorative events, teachers will organize sessions in which students will remember the history of their country and the role of the Jewish communities in it. They learn about the Jews who lived here, their customs, traditions and the most prominent local personalities.
We are grateful that International March of the Living and European March of the Living have already agreed to be partners of "Memory Road 1941-2021" and plan to participate in these events. Since 2019, these organizations have been participants and partners of the Memory Road in Lithuania. In year 2019, fourteen foreign delegations took part in the Memory Road.
We hope that the organization of these meaningful and sensitive commemorations will focus the efforts of all people of good will, the main goal of which is to achieve a natural universal understanding that the Holocaust was a great tragedy not only for Jews but also for all Lithuania. During these tragic events we have lost our phenomenal intellectual, cultural, political and economic potential.
From: International Commission for the Evaluation of the
Crimes of the Nazi and Soviet Occupation Regimes in Lithuania