Jewish Vilnius trove reveals pre-war “Jerusalem of the North”

For decades, a confessional in a church in Lithuania’s capital Vilnius kept a precious secret: a trove of documents offering an unprecedented glimpse into Jewish life in Eastern Europe before and during the Holocaust.

The cache, with documents dating back to the mid-18th century, includes religious texts, Yiddish literature and poetry, testimonies about pogroms as well as autobiographies and photographs.

“The diversity of material is breathtaking,” David Fishman, professor of Jewish History at New York’s Jewish Theological Seminary, told AFP via telephone, describing the discovery as a “total surprise.”

“It’s almost like you could reconstruct Jewish life before the Holocaust based on these materials because there is no aspect and no region and no period that is missing,” he added. The trove was discovered earlier this year during a clean-out of the church that was used as a book repository during Soviet times.

Known as the “Jerusalem of the North” before World War II, Vilnius — Vilna in Hebrew and Vilne in Yiddish — was a hub of Jewish cultural and religious life and home to hundreds of Jewish social, religious, cultural and scientific organisations.

After occupying Vilnius in 1941, the Nazis destroyed the Jewish community and plundered its cultural wealth. Jewish poets and intellectuals were coerced by the Nazis in the Vilnius ghetto into selecting Yiddish and Hebrew books and documents for a planned institute in Germany about the people they had slated for annihilation. The Germans sent a portion of the plundered texts to Frankfurt, but the Jewish archivists risked their lives to hide a vast array of precious documents from their tormentors.

After the war, a Lithuanian librarian, Antanas Ulpis, intervened to save those documents that had survived the Nazis from the country’s new Soviet occupiers, who were bent on destroying them as part of dictator Joseph Stalin’s anti-Jewish purges. Ulpis deftly hid some of the manuscripts “under a pile of Soviet journals — that’s why no one bothered to look, that’s why they weren’t discovered sooner,” Renaldas Gudauskas, director of Lithuania’s National Library told AFP.

There they remained untouched for decades in the confessional in St. George’s Church that the Soviets used as a book repository after the war. It was only earlier this year when any remaining papers were being cleared out in order to hand the building back to the Catholic Church that the pile of Jewish documents was stumbled upon.

They were transferred to Lithuania’s newly renovated national library in Vilnius which already holds a larger archive of Jewish documents discovered in the capital after the collapse of the Soviet Union nearly three decades ago. The entire collection includes roughly 170,000 pages, Lara Lempertiene, head of the national library’s Judaica Research Centre, told AFP.

Library archivists, who read Yiddish and Hebrew, pore over the newly found documents that Fishman estimates will take five years to catalogue. They are also preparing them to be accessible on the internet.

For Simonas Gurevicius, one of the city’s few Jews who still speaks Yiddish, the newly-discovered archive proves that Hitler and Stalin ultimately failed to wipe out his language and the civilisation built around it. “The star of the Northern Jerusalem nearly burnt out, but its light is still shining,” Gurevicius.

Some 195,000 Lithuanian Jews perished under the 1941-44 Nazi German occupation. Today, there are around 3,000 Jews living Lithuania.

related

Subscribe to the EJC newsletter

Get the EJC newsletter, including the latest statements and news from the European Jewish communities, direct to your inbox.

European Jewish Congress will use the information you provide on this form to contact you. We will treat your information with respect and will not share it with others. By clicking Subscribe, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with these terms.

browse by community