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FANIA YOCHELES BRANTSOVSKY Dovid Katz wrote;… veteran of Vilna's Yiddish schools; incarcerated in the Vilna Ghetto from its first day to its last (escaped a few moments before the ghetto was surrounded for liquidation); hero of the free world as brave partisan in the fight against Hitler in the forests of Lithuania; economist; Holocaust educator honored in recent years by the Vilnius embassies of the United States, Britain, Ireland, Austria, Germany, Norway and others; founding librarian of the Vilnius Yiddish Institute; master educator on pre -war Yiddish culture in the city and on the Lithuanian Holocaust. Fto the site of the Jewish partisan fort where she lived and fought from September 1943 until July 1944. The remnants of the fort are in danger of imminent disappearance fort where she lived and fought from September 1943 until July 1944. The remnants of the fort are http://hostinthebaltics.com/388223.html in danger of imminent disappearance Fania Yocheles Brantsovsky was born in 1922.
In the summer of 2008, a group of NATO ambassadors arranged to visit the fort formally, but the plan was thwarted by a protest from the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry. Groups of Western ambassadors simply proceeded to organize private visits to the fort, led by Fania, starting in November 2008, and proceeding uninterrupted to the present day.
The potent symbolism of the Jewish Partisan Fort has been noted in connection with the international effort to honor and defend from defamation the Jewish resistance heroes who fought the Nazis in the forests of Lithuania. In an early public reaction (3 April 2008), the unanimous resolution of the Friends of the Vilnius Yiddish Institute concluded with the words: ‘including the underground forest fort outside today’s Vilnius, which, it is hoped, will be preserved for posterity as a monument to the indomitable human striving for freedom from oppression’. Over the years, Fania Yocheles Brantsovsky and other Holocaust educators have guided visitors and students to the site, which has enormous educational potential.
Samuel Gruber’s Jewish Art and Monuments has taken up the cause to preserve this one surviving mainly Jewish partisan fort in Lithuania from the Holocaust era (‘Lithuania: Time to Save Jewish Partisan Fort in Rudninkai Forest’). He reports that the International Survey of Jewish Monuments is preparing to act as facilitator for the project.
Please contact your elected officials, anywhere in the world, asking them to encourage authorities in Lithuania responsible for historic sites to secure, preserve and protect the site as a vital monument to the noble universal human struggle for freedom from tyranny and genocide.
When you visit the region, do be sure to view this unique site, some 25 miles southwest of Vilnius, in the Rudninkai Forest (famous in Holocaust memoirs and lore by its Yiddish name, der Rudnitsker vald). A number of Holocaust Survivors refer to the fort as der Rudnitsker fort. In English, the phrase ‘Jewish partisan fort’ has become a shibboleth of competence. If your guide in Lithuania knows his or her stuff, you'll be taken there without delay. If you get the ‘It’s only woods, nothing there’ spiel, you'll know where that is coming from...
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