From here in Lithuania, it is painful and baffling to see Jews in the
freedom of the UK defending both a Polish politician who suggests
“the Jews” should apologise for “participation in communism” in
return for any apology for Polish participation in the Holocaust
in specific locations like Jedwabne, and a Latvian party that showers
honour on Waffen SS officers.
But these British Jews — and the Conservatives whom they believe they are helping
— are neither evil nor stupid. They have, rather, succumbed to
the art of sophisticated obfuscation (a kind of Soviet-in-form,
nationalist-in-content phenomenon).
Having been based in Eastern Europe for more
than a decade, I have been treated exceptionally well, and have
found the people of Vilnius, where I work, to be delightful —
open, generous and tolerant. This is not about the people of
Eastern Europe. It is about the ultra-nationalist elites — politicians,
academics, media types — who have perfected their disturbing
message.
The unsanitised version goes like this: “We
love Israel and Israelis. We love American, British and other
foreign Jews who come here to seek out their ancestral roots,
and we hope they will continue to support our commemoration and
study projects of the grand heritage of Jewish culture in our
country.
“The problem is the local, remaining Jews.
In their hearts, they are all communists. And, by the way, what
they and their fellow communists did to us is exactly the same
as what happened to them in their ‘Holocaust’, so now we teach
Europe the truth about the two equal genocides while having the
best relations with Western and Jewish leaders abroad.”
The tiny and shrinking numbers of local Jewish
people here remember very well (personally or via parents’ and
grandparents’ accounts) that it was the Nazis and (particularly
here in the Baltics) local “nationalist patriots” who murdered
nearly the entire Jewish population.
In the vast majority of cases, the tiny remnant
that survived made it thanks to the Russians, either because
they fled eastward and played their part in the anti-Nazi war
effort of the Soviet army, or joined the Soviet anti-Nazi partisans,
or because they were liberated by the Russians at the war’s end.
But the revisionist politicians (masquerading
as centrists but actually of the far right) have made progress
in their efforts to persuade the European Union into adopting
a revised model of history that deletes the Holocaust as a category
(without denying a single death), and goes for the model of “Double
Genocide” (Nazi and Soviet “equality”).
Currently, their major document is the “Prague
Declaration” which human-rights champion and British MP John
Mann correctly described recently in the JC as “sinister”. Here
in Lithuania, incidentally, parliament is discussing a law that
would impose up to two years’ imprisonment on anyone who disagrees
with the new double-genocide model of history.
All this insults anyone who cherishes the
Allies’ noble war effort against Hitler, or the upholding of
human rights in today’s Europe. The Conservative party should
do the decent thing: admit that they have made a mistake and
break with their new, far-right Euro-allies.
thejc.com
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