KUPISHOK: The Memory Stronger
Here, look. A picture: a thousand shrieking horsemen, their swords
drawn, unleash their hatred against me and thirst for vengeance;
don’t ask me why. To escape them, I feign death. Who are they?
Crusaders of what faith? Cossacks in whose service? Frenzied
peasants seeking what adventure, covered with whose blood? Alive I
am their enemy; dead they proclaim me god. So, it’s for my soul’s
sake, for my everlasting glory, that they repeatedly wish to destroy
me and destroy my memory. But they don’t succeed. My memory is
stronger than they are, they should know that by now. Kill a Jew and
you make him immortal; his memory, independently, survives him. And
his enemies as well. The harder they strike, the more stubborn the
Jewish resistance. So, naturally, they are troubled. Puzzled by its
convulsions, owed by its fits of delirious fire. Poor men. They are
the players, but my memory governs the rules of their game. They
regard themselves as hunters, and so they are; but they are quarry
as well—and that they can never comprehend. Well, that is their
problem. Not mine.
—Elie
Wiesel, A Beggar in Jerusalem
THE
SEARCH
I
am from Kupishok. I was not born there; I never lived there; I have
never seen the place. But Kupishok is a part of my historical and
cultural experience as a Jew, and it is the nexus with my more
ancient source, Jerusalem.
My
great-grandfather lived in Kupishok; so did my grandfather and the
other members of the Polin family. (My original family name is Polin.)
My father and mother were married there, and my brother was born
there; they emigrated to the United States, and here they died
natural deaths. My father’s sister, Chena Polin, remained in
Kupishok, married Shmerl Tuber and bore six children, five sons and
a daughter, before she died in 1933.
Hitler and his military and civil bureaucracy with the enthusiastic
support of some of the local populations murdered eleven million
people, six million of them Jews; one million of them Jewish
children; four of them my first cousins in Kupishok. The mind
becomes statistically numbed at the thought of millions of corpses.
I was haunted by the ghosts of my cousins.
What happened to the six Tuber children? What happened to them? Were
they alive, did they die, how did they die, were they ghettoized,
did they die in a ghetto, were they in a concentration camp, was
their burial place in the sky? What happened to them?
After my mother died, I found among her possessions a photograph of
a young man and a woman, and on the reverse of the photograph a
handwritten notation bearing the date, 1957. I believed it was a
picture of one of the Tuber sons. He looked like me. In the early
1970s I began efforts to discover the fate of the six Tuber
children, alive or dead. I contacted a number of international
organizations, the International Tracing Service in Arolsen,
Germany; United HIAS Service in Geneva; Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. And
always the answer was the same: no record of the Tuber name. Not a
trace. It was as though they had never been on earth.
In
1975 I visited Israel and there I met, for the first time, a
cousin—my mother’s niece, Sheva Fega, who had been born in Kupishok.
A woman now in her 60s, she was a holocaust survivor whom we had
encouraged to come to Israel some years before. During the First
World War she had been a war refugee together with my mother, my
brother and my mother’s brother—her father. Together now in her
living room in Bnai Brak we began to watch family pictures. There
was a problem. Sheva Fega had been deaf and mute since the age of
three. She could not speak, could not write, and knew no
international sign language. And yet we communicated—through her
grown daughter—with hand movements, facial expressions, and with
broken Yiddish. She recognized the picture I showed her of one of
the Tuber cousins, and as best as I could understand she indicated
that he was alive and living somewhere in Israel!
A
few days before leaving Israel that year I found a cab driver who
spoke Yiddish and Russian, and together we found the office of the
Russian language newspaper. There I arranged for an advertisement
featuring the picture of the Tuber cousin. After I returned to the
United States I received replies from cousins Josef Tuber and Ella
Tuber Gendelis living in Israel, indicating that their father was
also still alive and that their four older brothers had been killed
in 1941. I could not find it in my heart to ask them for details,
and they did not volunteer.
By
now I needed to know more—not only about the Tuber brothers, but
also the rest of the Jewish population in Kupishok. For me the
holocaust had focused itself in that small town in northeastern
Lithuania. Who, what, where, when, how and why were the questions
that nagged at me, never left me. In the ensuing years there were
more advertisements in Russian, Yiddish and English language
newspapers in Israel and in the United States. I began to receive
some responses from Kupishok survivors. One came in the form of
three pencil-written lines from a man in Brooklyn—a Rabbi who had
been born in Kupishok—indicating that he had written a book in
Yiddish, in 1951, about the destruction of the Jewish community in
Lithuania and Kupishok. (I later found the book and the mention of
Kupishok.) Another response came from a man whom I realized to be a
cousin—eighty year old Yitzhak Polin, the son of my grandfather’s
brother, a survivor not only of Kupishok but also of Dachau. In May
of 1979 my wife and I travelled to Israel, and during a week in the
Tel Aviv and Haifa areas we interviewed some of the survivors and
recorded their stories.
On
the morning after our arrival in Tel Aviv, Yitzhak Polin came to our
hotel and for the first time I met the cousin of whose existence I
had only recently become aware. He walked feebly with a cane, and
was accompanied by a younger woman, Yocheved Elisar. Our meeting was
emotional; we kissed and held hands. Perhaps I was with my father
again. This man knew my grandfather, his uncle, and my
great-grandfather, his grandfather. He remembered my father only
vaguely, but when I showed him a picture he recognized my mother,
“Baila Gitke, the prettiest and most vivacious girl in Kupishok”.
Until this moment he had believed that he was the only Polin left.
He had had no children; his brothers, sisters, uncles—all dead. He
had escaped from Kupishok, was captured and taken to the Kovno
ghetto, later to Dachau. It was in the ghetto that he met Yocheved
who later also survived a concentration camp, came to Israel in
1946, married Tzvi Elisar and raised two sons. After some years
Yocheved learned that Yitzhak had survived and was living in Vilna;
it was through her efforts that he was able to come to Israel in
1963.
He
lives in his own apartment in Herzliya. Yocheved looks after him
much as a daughter would, makes certain that he eats regularly and
is in comfort. We were together, the three of us—Yitzhak, Yocheved
and I—a family. A Jewish family, closely a part of the extended
Jewish family in the old sense, but happening in 1979.
Later that week Israel and Ethel Trapido invited us to their home in
Givatayim for an evening to meet with a few of the survivors of
Kupishok. Israel was born in Kupishok, emigrated first to South
Africa and then to Israel where he is an accountant. His family
settled in Kupishok in 1816. The survivors gathered there in the
Trapido home came, I believe, not so much to tell their stories as
to meet this strange American Jew who had such as abiding interest
in their beloved Kupishok and wanted to write a book about it.
(Indeed, it was at this point that this narrative became a book
instead of the letter originally intended to my two sons.) Why, they
asked not sarcastically, are you interested in Kupishok and the
events there? Why is an American Jew interested when their own
children are not? I couldn’t tell why their children didn’t want to
hear the story. I told them: ikh bihn a yid, ikh bihn oykh fuhn
Kupishok.
I
am a slow thinker. I knew the answer I gave them was not enough, but
I didn’t know what the correct answer was. I am not sure even that
there is a correct answer—or any answer at all. Elie Wiesel writes,
“Answers: I say there are none.” How then can I explain to them now?
I needed to know the story and to tell it to someone. It started
with the Tuber brothers who carried
my
bloodline. They were, the four dead ones: Yechiel, twenty-one, a
recently ordained rabbi; Laibel, nineteen, and Pesakh, fifteen,
tinsmiths like their father; and Berel, seventeen, a tailor. What
happened in Kupishok in the summer of 1941, who were killed, who
killed and how? Why?
There needs to be a memorial to the Jews of Kupishok. Not because
they or the events there were so unusual. Precisely the
opposite—because it was so ordinary during that time of death in the
heart of Europe’s Christendom. An American Jew, I and the rest of us
failed to take to the streets to protest, to demonstrate, to march,
to cry out to our President and to the leaders of the Allies of
Silence that our people were being murdered. They knew it. If such a
thing happened today, would we be silent again? Would they again
offer no hope, no haven? There needs to be a memorial to the Jews of
Kupishok because in 1967 when the Jews of Kiryat Yam, Bat Yam,
Holon, Givatayim were openly threatened with annihilation, the world
again stood by. Among those threatened Jews were the survivors of
Kupishok that I met that May evening in the Trapido home. Left to
themselves, they were to join the dead of Kupishok. And I, an
American Jew of common ancestry with the Tuber brothers, would be
left alive to write about another Jewish holocaust.
Here, look. The truth: Hitler did not order the annihilation of the
Jews immediately, without the realization that the world had given
its permission. Even Hitler hesitated before the “final solution”;
even he had to be convinced that there was no other choice. The
Germans developed their anti-Jewish policy step by step, gradually,
stopping after each measure to watch the reactions. There was always
a respite between the different stages, between the Nuremberg laws
and the Kristallnacht, between expropriation and deportation,
between the ghettos and liquidation. After each infamy the Germans
expected a storm of outrage; they were allowed to proceed. So they
knew what that meant: we can go on. From 1938 to 1940 Hitler made
extraordinary attempts to being about a vast emigration scheme. The
world was divided between those countries who had room for Jews and
would not take them, and Palestine which had room for Jews and was
not permitted to take them. The Germans’ biggest expulsion project,
the Madagascar plan, was under consideration just one year before
the beginning of the killing phase. The Jews were not killed before
the emigration policy was literally exhausted. And having started
the killing, the Germans could never have succeeded in solving the
Jewish Question with such speed and efficiency if it had not been
for the help and tacit consent of the Ukrainians, Lithuanians,
Slovaks, Poles, Hungarians. It was not by accident that the worst
concentration camps were set up in Poland. Shmuel, a Tel Aviv cab
driver, and I became friends. He had been a partisan. He told me
that there were Poles who sold Jews to the Germans for two kilos of
sugar a head.
Historically, the Jewish tendency has been not to run from, but to
survive with, anti-Jewish regimes. Jews have rarely run from a
pogrom; they have lived through it. It is a fact that the Jews made
an attempt to live with Hitler. In many cases they failed to escape
while there was still time, and even more often they failed to step
out of the way when the killers were already upon them. The Jewish
reactions to force have been alleviation and compliance. It should
be noted that the term “Jewish reactions” refers only to ghetto
Jews. This reaction pattern was born in the ghetto and it died
there. It is part and parcel of ghetto life. It applies to all
ghetto Jews, assimilationists and Zionists, the capitalists and the
socialists, the unorthodox and the religious ones. The Jewish
reaction pattern assured the survival of Jewry during the Church’s
massive conversion drive. The Jewish policy assured to the embattled
community a foothold and a chance for survival during the period of
expulsion and exclusion. If, therefore, the Jews have always played
along with an attacker, they have done so with deliberation and
calculation, in the knowledge that their policy would result in the
least damage and injury.
When the Nazis took over in Germany in 1933, the old Jewish reaction
pattern set in again, but this time the results were catastrophic.
The German bureaucracy was not impressed with Jewish pleading; it
was not stopped by Jewish indispensability. Without regard to cost,
the bureaucratic machine, operating with accelerating speed and
ever-widening destructive effect, proceeded to annihilate the
European Jews. The Jewish community, unable to switch to resistance,
increased its cooperation with the tempo of the German measures,
thus hastening its own destruction.
It
is seen, therefore, that both perpetrators and victims drew upon
their ancient experience in dealing with each other. The Germans did
it with success. The Jews did it with disaster.
Elie Wiesel says that during the holocaust the traditional
solidarity of the Jews broke into fragments. When Jews were
persecuted in Germany, Jews in Poland thought: they don’t mean us.
When Jews were massacred in Poland, Jews in France thought: they
don’t mean us. When Jews were deported from France and Belgium and
Greece and Hungary, Jews in America and Palestine thought: they
can’t mean us. Perhaps for the first time in recorded history,
Wiesel says, we missed the real intent of the enemy; he meant all of
us.
Those Kupishok survivors know all this, and they must have guessed
the answer to their own question. This American Jew is one of Elie
Wiesel’s madmen; he wants to create a memorial to an ordinary event.
After the war the few Kupishok survivors drifted back and settled in
Vilna, the traditional capital of Lithuania and now part of Poland.
From there, through their own monetary and political efforts, they
caused to be erected in Kupishok at one of the mass grave-sites a
monument to the murdered Jews of Kupishok. The monument does not
bear the word “Jew”, not does it bear the names of the murdered.
Only a vague reference to the victims of Hitlerish aggression.
The
story contained in this small volume is not unique; it was repeated
hundreds, thousands of times in the shtetls, villages and towns of
the Jewish settlement of Eastern Europe. The monument in Kupishok
bears no names. In this book are only a few of the names of the
Jewish men, women and children murdered in Kupishok. The names will
never be known of those who died along with their relatives and
friends with no one left to remember them. Socialists or
capitalists, Zionists or non-Zionists, religious or irreligious, mad
or sane, good or bad, all those who remained in Kupishok in June
1941 died together. This book is a memorial to them, named and
unnamed. These few pages of paper are all they have, all that is
left.
Arizona, U.S.A., August, 1980
KUPISHOK
Kupishok (in Lithuanian, Kupiskis) is an old town in northeastern
Lithuania, situated between the Levuo River and its left tributary,
the Kupa, which curves from the east to the south of town. About two
kilometers south of Kupishok is a station on the railway which runs
from the city of Ponevezh (Panevezys) northeast to the border with
Latvia, about 70 kilometers from Kupishok, and then east across the
Russian border. Still farther south somewhat, beyond the railway
line, is the Shepata peat bogs. Surrounding the town is thick forest
and farm lands, interspersed with tiny church-villages and
farm-villages.
Historical sources mention Kupishok from 1510 onwards; Jewish
settlement began more than 300 years ago, evidenced by grave markers
in the Jewish cemeteries dated in the seventeenth century. The first
member of the Trapido family came to Kupishok from Holland in 1816,
and the Polin family was already there. In the eighteenth century
the town and the surrounding area belonged to the Tyzenhaus (Tiesenhausen)
family of magnates and later to the Prince Czartoryski. In 1817 its
population was 3,742 of which 2,661 were Jews. During World War I,
in May 1915, most of the Jews left Kupishok to become war refugees,
and only part of them returned there after the war. During the
ensuing years many of the Jewish youth emigrated to South Africa and
to Eretz Israel.
Nevertheless, by 1941 about 3,500—perhaps 4,000—people lived in
Kupishok including 400 families of Jews who lived mainly in the
center of the town and approximately an equal number of Christians
who lived in the area surrounding the core. Relations between the
two groups had always been peaceful; there is no historical record
of a pogrom there until June-July 1941.
Kupishok was one of the few towns in Lithuania with a considerable
community of Hasidim. There were two officiating rabbis in 1941, the
Hasid, Rabbi Israel Noah Khatzkevitz, and the Mitnagid, Rabbi Zalman
Pertzovsky. The community had three synagogues, a yeshiva, a talmud
torah, and three schools (Yavneh, Tarbut and a Yiddish school). Many
of the Jewish children attended the secular Lithuanian high school
(the gymnasia) and the public school for lower grades.
In
the center of Kupishok was the Turgahs, the Market Place, and from
it radiated the main streets. The street north was Tifle Gahs
(Church Street) on which stood the Church of the Assumption of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, built by King Sigismund Vasa. South from the
Market Place ran Bahn Gahs (Train Street), also called officially
Gediminas Street after the fourteenth century King of Lithuania. A
small bridge carried the Bahn Gahs over the Kupa and to the train
station. On this street was the city hall and the town jail, very
near to the Kupa before the bridge, the houses of the Polin, Shavel
and Sneierson families. The Sneierson house, at number 49 Gedeminas,
was across the street from the city hall. Nearby was a small hotel
or inn, the Viesbutis. On the east side of town, on the other side
of the Kupa not far from the Hasidic cemetery, was a small barracks
(kazarmis) and firehouse. Adjoining the Market Place at the
northwest was the area of the synagogues next to which was a small
street, Pozarna Gahs which ran the short distance from Matuliones
Gahs to Vilna Gahs. Pozarna Gahs become the temporary ghetto for a
few weeks in the summer of 1941.
At
5:30 on the morning of Sunday, June 22, 1941, Reichsminister Josef
Goebbels announced on German radio the Wehrmacht attack against the
U.S.S.R. across the borders of the buffer states. The line of
invasion extended from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Black Sea
in the south, the area in which was the main concentration of the
Jewish population of Europe. Later that morning the Lithuanian
revolt against the Russians began in Kovno and on Monday, in Berlin,
fifty enthusiastic Lithuanians raised the flag of their country.
From East Prussia the Fourth Panzer Group (Commander Hoppner) of the
Northern Army Group under General von Leeb thrust toward Kovno and
Shavli in Lithuania; by Tuesday, June 24, the Lithuanians were in
full revolt and the independence of Lithuania was proclaimed. On the
same day Kovno and Shavli were taken, and the Nazis were on the road
north to Riga in Latvia. On the twenty-fifth fighting was reported
between Lithuanian insurgents and Russians in Vilna. By Friday, the
twenty-seventh, the German main forces had driven north of Kovno and
around to Vilna in the east. On July 2 Riga was captured, fighting
was taking place east of Minsk—Vilna far in the rear—and by Friday,
July 4 the Germans were engaged in mopping-up operations in all
three Baltic states.
On
June 23, 1941, Einsatzgruppe A joined the German forces on the
northern front. Wednesday, June 25, Einsatzkommando 3 of
Einsatzgruppe A reached Kovno which had been captured the previous
day, and elements of Ek 3 were already beyond the city and
approaching Kupishok.
Some families, perhaps eighty, fled Kupishok upon the approach of
the Germans, some to neighboring small villages to seek shelter with
Christian peasants as had been done during the First World War.
Others continued in their flight, hoping to reach the Russian
border. Most of the Jews remained in Kupishok where they were
subjected to persecution by their Lithuanian neighbors as soon as
the Germans entered the town. Later all the Jews who had sought
shelter in out-lying farms together with those Jews who lived in
small villages surrounding Kupishok were brought into the town to
join the Jewish population in the temporary ghetto set up in Pozarna
Gahs—a short street—and in the adjoining synagogue yards. All this
area was surrounded by barbed wire.
The
two rabbis, Zalman Pertsovski and Israel Noah Khatskevits were taken
into the Hasidic synagogue where they were burned to death and then
buried in a cemetery for “unbelieving” Christians. The wife of Rabbi
Pertsovski, Chaya Leah Pertsovski, with her children found refuge
for a time in the old Doctor Frantskevitch’s house. Six weeks later
they were all betrayed and killed. Nahum Shmid, the richest and most
philanthropic Jew in town, hid out for two months in a nearby
village, Shmilg, until his money was used up. He was then betrayed
also, brought to the municipal jail and shot.
By
September, 1941, about 3,000 Jews were murdered in Kupishok. So far
as is known, no Jew who remained in Kupishok after Wednesday, June
25, 1941 survived. Perhaps 200 people, from 47 families, survived
and were from the small group who fled Kupishok before the Germans
arrived. Some of those who fled initially could find no refuge and
returned to Kupishok to die; a few others were captured and taken to
other ghettos as was Yitzhak Polin who survived the Kovno ghetto and
Dachau concentration camp. In 1979 he was living in Israel.
Yechiel Tuber as a
student in the Yeshiva Bet-Rubenstein, Ponevezh, Lithuania. Rabbi
Tuber was killed shortly after his ordination, age 21.
A THOUSAND SHRIEKING
HORSEMEN
When the German Wehrmacht attacked the U.S.S.R., penetrating first
the buffer states on June 22, 1941, the invading armies were
accompanied closely by small mechanized killing units of the SS (Schutzstaffeln,
“Protection Squad”) and police which were technically and tactically
subordinated to the army field commanders but who were really free
to go about their special business of killing. These mobile killing
units operated in the front-line areas under a special arrangement
in a unique partnership with the German Army, and were called
Einsatzgruppen (special-duty groups).
Earlier, Adolf Eichmann had become concerned with the problem of the
annihilation of Jews who lived in remote territories. The “solution
of the Jewish question” was his responsibility. The foremost problem
was that of geography, and Eichmann had already experienced
difficulties in this connection. Transporting men, women and
children in railroad trains and trucks require an extensive and
complicated personnel system of guards, engineers, firemen,
interpreters, and so on. Railroad trains were needed to move troops;
trucks were required to haul food, ammunition and all the materials
of war. Something had to be done to avoid the necessity of shipping
Jews from distant Lithuania, Estonia, Romania, the Ukraine and the
Crimea to the concentration camps in Germany, Austria and Poland.
Eichmann pondered and finally arrived at what he considered to be a
satisfactory solution. For those populations that could not be taken
to the executioners, the executioners would go to the populations.
Indeed it would be a waste of locomotive power and gasoline to
transport people long distances just to kill them. Besides, there
would be the expense and trouble of feeding them, sheltering them,
and guarding them from escape before the mass executions. It was
decided to kill them where they were to be found. No long waits, no
costly maintenance of prison camps with barbed wire, guard towers,
blood-hounds and electricity-charged fences. All that was to come
later, when the human numbers became too great and shooting became
too inefficient.
Eichmann conferred with Himmler and Himmler conferred with Hitler.
Eichmann’s recommendations were accepted and the Einsatzgruppen
organization was born. Thus, in early 1941, Himmler, Heydrich and
Eichmann were directed to recruit mobile bands of executioners which
were to accompany and follow the German armies as they overran the
Eastern territories, killing all Jews there as soon as any region or
community was cleared of enemy opposition. Himmler removed all doubt
as to the object of the Einsatzgruppen: “It is not our task to
Germanize the East in the old sense, that is, to teach the people
there the German language and the German law, but to see to it that
only people of purely Germanic blood live in the East.”
The
Einsatzgruppen training program began in May, 1941, with three
thousand men. The assembly points for the Einsatzgruppen personnel
and the four weeks of training were the Border Police School
Barracks in Pretzsch, Saxony and the neighboring villages of Dueben
and Schmiedeberg. The organizational strengths were: an
Einsatzgruppe equal to a battalion, an Einsatzkommando or
Sonderkommando equal to a company, and Teilkommando equal to a
platoon in strength of numbers.
There were four Einsatzgruppen organized to work eastern Europe.
Einsatzgruppe A operated in the three Baltic states of Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia and in northern Russia eastward to Leningrad. Eg
A was commanded by SS-General Walter Stahlecker and later by Heinz
Jost who had specialized in law and economics at the Universities of
Giessen and Munich. Stahlecker was killed in the war; Jost was later
tried at Nuremberg and sentenced first to life imprisonment which
sentence was later reduced to ten years. (At his trial he testified
that he did not remember ordering any Jews to be shot.) Eg B
operated south of the area of Eg A, and eastward to Moscow,
commanded by Arthur Nebe. Eg C worked in most of the Ukraine and was
commanded by Otto Rasch, a Doctor of Law and Economics. He was held
for trial at Nuremberg but was separated from the rest of the
defendants because of an illness from which he died in 1948. Eg D
ranged in the territories of the southern Ekraine, the Crimea and
the Caucasus. Its commander was SS-Major General Otto Ohlendorf, a
graduate in law and political science from the Universities of
Liepzig and Goettingen, and a one-time practicing barrister in the
courts of Alfeld-Leine and Hildesheim; tried at Nuremberg, he was
sentenced to death and hanged.
As
the operations progressed, each sub-Kommando leader reported to his
Kommando leader the results of the day’s actions at the end of each
day, and then the totals were transmitted to the Eichmann Gestapo
headquarters for distribution of the Nazi hierarchy. The original
Einsatzgruppen reports were found in Eichmann’s headquarters after
the war and were translated for the Nuremberg trials.
The
Einsatzgruppen were to be permitted to operate not only in army rear
areas but also in the corps areas right on the front line. This was
of great importance to the Einsatzgruppen, for the Jews were to be
caught as quickly as possible. They were to be given no warning and
no chance to escape. The operational units of the Einsatzgruppen
were the Einsatzkommandos (“striking force”).
Pogroms are short, violent outbursts by a community against its
Jewish population. In its tactics the Einsatzgruppen endeavored to
start pogroms in the occupied areas (and not infrequently such
orders were anticipated by the local populations). The reasons which
prompted the killing units to activate anti-Jewish outbursts were
partly administrative, partly psychological. The administrative
principle was very simple: every Jew killed in a pogrom was one less
burden for the Einsatzgruppen. A pogrom brought them, as they
expressed it, that much closer to the “cleanup goal” (Sauberungsziel).
The
commander of Eg A, Stahlecker, in one of his reports complained that
the Jews “live widely scattered over the whole country. In view of
the enormous distances, the bad conditions of the roads, the
shortages of vehicles and petrol, and the small forces of Security
Police and SC, it needs the utmost effort in order to carry out
shootings.”
The
psychological consideration was more interesting. The Einsatzgruppen
wanted the population to take a part—major part—of the
responsibility for the killing operation. “It was not less
important, for future purposes,” wrote Brigadefuhrer Dr. Stahlecker,
“to establish as an unquestionable fact that the liberated
population had resorted to the most severe measures against the
Bolshevist and Jewish enemy, on its own initiative and without
instructions from German authorities.” So the pogroms were to become
a defensive weapon with which to confront an accuser, or an element
of blackmail that could be used against the local population.
As
soon as war had broken out, anti-Communist fighting groups of
Lithuanians had gone into action against the Soviet rear guard. In
Kovno, the newly arrived Security Police approached the chief of the
Lithuanian insurgents, the journalist Klimaitis, and persuaded him
to turn his forces on the Jews. This he did with considerable
enthusiasm and after several days of intensive pogroms Klimaitis had
accounted for 5,000 dead: 3,800 in Kovno, 1,200 in other towns.
For
the killing units the Lithuanian anti-Soviet “partisans” who had
been engaged in the pogroms became the first manpower reservoir.
Before disarming and disbanding the partisans, Einsatzgruppe A
picked our “reliable” men and organized them into five police
companies. The men were put to work immediately in Kovno. In
September a Lithuanian group attached to Einsatzkommando 3 swept
through the districts of Rasseyn (Raseinyai), Rakishok (Rokiskis),
Sarasi, Perzai, and Pren (Prienal), killing all Jews found in this
area. The total number of victims accounted for by Einsatzkommando 3
with Lithuanian help was 46,692 in less than three months; that is,
from late June to September, 1941. By the end of October, 1941,
80,311 Jews had been killed under the direction of Einsatzgruppe A,
and by December another 56,110 souls had been added to the count.
From the report of Brigadefuhrer Stahlecker covering the activities
of his Einsatzgruppe A from the beginning of the war against Russia
until October 15, 1941:
“…Partisan groups formed in Lithuania and established immediate
contact with the German troops taking over the city (Kovno).
Unreliable elements among the partisans were weeded out, and an
auxiliary unit of 300 men was formed under the command of Klimaitis,
a Lithuanian journalist. As the pacification program progressed,
this partisan group extended its activities from Kovno to other
parts of Lithuania. The group very meticulously fulfilled its tasks,
especially in the preparation and carrying out of large-scale
liquidations.”
“…Pogroms, however, could not provide a complete solution to the
Jewish problem in Ostland. Large-scale executions have therefore
been carried out all over the country, in which the local auxiliary
police was also used; they cooperated without a hitch…”
At
the climax of the mass shootings of Jews there were eight
Lithuanians to every German in Stahlecker’s firing squads.
Since the Jews were not prepared to do battle with the Germans and
their assistants, one might ask why they did not flee for their
lives. Some Jews were evacuated by the Russian authorities, and many
fled on their own, but this should not obscure a phenomenon: most
Jews did not leave. They stayed. People do not voluntarily leave
their homes for uncertain havens unless they are driven by an acute
awareness of coming disaster. In the Jewish community that awareness
was blunted and blocked by psychological obstacles.
First was the prevailing conviction that bad things came from Russia
and good things from Germany. The Jews were historically oriented
away from Russia and toward Germany; Germany, not Russia, had been
their traditional place of refuge. During October and November of
1939 thousands of Jews streamed from Russian occupied Poland to the
German sector and the flow was not stopped until the Germans closed
the border. Similarly, one year later, at the time of Soviet mass
deportation in the newly occupied territories, the Germans received
reports of widespread unrest among Ukrainians, Poles and Jews alike.
Almost everyone was waiting for the arrival of the German Army. When
that Army finally arrived, in the summer of 1941, old Jews in
particular remembered that in the First World War the Germans had
come as quasi-liberators. These Jews did not expect that now the
Germans would come as killers.
Another factor which blunted Jewish alertness was the haze with
which the Soviet press and radio had shrouded events across the
border. The Jews of Russia were ignorant of the fate that had
overtaken the Jews in Nazi Europe. Soviet information media, in
pursuance of a policy of appeasement, had made it their business to
keep silent about Nazi measures of destruction. The consequences of
that silence were disastrous.
From a German intelligence report of July 12, 1941—Report of
Sonderfuhrer Schroter enclosed in Reichskommissar Ostland to
Generalkommissar White Russia, August 4, 1941: “The Jews are
remarkably ill-informed about our attitude toward them. They do not
know how Jews are treated in Germany, or for that matter in Warsaw,
which after all is not so far away. Otherwise, their questions as to
whether we in Germany make any distinctions between Jews and other
citizens would be superfluous. Even if they do not think that under
German administration they will have equal rights with the Russians,
they believe, nevertheless, that we shall leave them in peace if
they mind their own business and work diligently.”
But
also the extreme closeness of living family ties among eastern
European Jews condemned many to their death. To take flight meant
abandoning parents, children, and wives, living like a hunted animal
in the forest with no hiding place anywhere and haunted always by
the guilt of flight. Those who did escape from the edge of the
killing pits were often denounced by anti-Semitic partisan units.
Many were driven to return to the old ghetto or seek out a new one
when life in the wilderness became unbearable; either meant certain
death.
Therefore, a large number of Jews stayed behind not merely because
of the physical difficulties of flight but also, perhaps primarily,
because they had failed to grasp the danger of remaining. That means
that precisely those Jews who did not flee were less aware of the
disaster and less capable of dealing with it than those who did. The
Jews who fell into German captivity were the old people, the women,
the children and the naïve. They were those who were physically and
psychologically immobilized. The mobile killing units soon grasped
the Jewish weakness; they discovered quickly that one of their
greatest problems, the seizure of the victims, had an easy solution.
Those Jews who did flee, who had taken to the roads, the villages,
and the field had great difficulty in subsisting there because the
German Army was picking up stray Jews and the population refused to
shelter them. The Einsatzgruppen took advantage of this situation
by instituting the simplest ruse of all: they did nothing. The
inactivity of the Security Police was sufficient to dispel the
rumors which had set the exodus in motion. Within a short time the
Jews flocked into town. They were caught in the dragnet and killed.
The
Germans and their auxiliaries were able to work quickly and
efficiently because the killing operation was standardized. In
almost every city and town the same procedure was followed, with
minor variations. The site of the shooting was usually outside of
town, at a grave which may have been specially dug or were deepened
anti-tank ditches or shell craters. The Jews were taken in batches,
men first, from the collecting point to the ditch; the killing site
was supposed to be closed off to all outsiders. Before their death,
the victims handed their valuables to the leader of the killing
party. In the winter they removed their overcoats; in warmer weather
they had to take off all outer garments, sometimes underwear as
well.
Some Einsatzkommandos lined up the victims in front of the ditch and
shot them with submachine guns or other small arms in the back of
the neck. The mortally wounded Jews toppled into their graves. There
was another procedure which combined efficiency with an impersonal
element. This system has been referred to as the “sardine method”.
This way the first batch had to lie down on the bottom of the grave.
They were killed by cross-fire from above. The next batch had to lie
down on top of the corpses, heads facing the feet of the dead. After
five or six layers, the grave was closed.
The
leaders of the mobile killing units even as they directed the
shootings, began to justify their actions and to repress the
language of their reports avoiding such expressions as “kill” or
“murder”. The terminology which they used was designed to convey the
notion that the killing operations were only an ordinary
bureaucratic process within the framework of police activity.
Various euphemisms were invented to express their activities:
disposed of, liquidated, area freed of Jews, processed, special
treatment, taken care of, area purged of Jews, the Jewish question
solved, finished off, treatment in a special way, treated
accordingly, actions, resettlement, cleansing, elimination,
executive measure.
The
commanders of the Einsatzgruppen constructed various justifications
for the killings. The significance of these rationalizations is
apparent since the Einsatzgruppen did not have to give any reasons
to Heydrich, their overall commander; they had to give reasons only
to themselves. Generally speaking, the reports contained one
pervasive justification for the killings: the Jewish danger. This
fiction was used again and again, in many variations. In the area of
Einsatzgruppe A (Lithuania) Jewish propaganda was the justification.
“Since this Jewish propaganda activity was especially heavy in
Lithuania,” reads a report, “the number of persons liquidated in
this area by Einsatzkommando 3 has risen to 75,000.”
There was a rationalization which was focused on the Jew: the
conception of the Jew as a lower form of life. Generalgouverneur (of
the occupied territories) Hans Frank was given to the use of such
phrases as “Jews and lice”. In the terminology of the killing
operations the conception of Jews as vermin is quite noticeable. Dr.
Stahlecker, the commander of Einsatzgruppe A, called the pogroms
conducted by the Lithuanians “self-cleansing actions” (Selbstreiningungsaktionen).
It
should not be supposed that the Einsatzgruppen leaders were
uneducated, course barbarians. Among the twenty-three such
defendants at Nuremberg were men who were graduates or educationally
specialized in law, economics, history, banking and dentistry. Among
their civilian professions: University professors, architect,
clergyman, union administrator, voice teacher and opera singer,
importer and linguist, civil service administrator, business man and
civil servant. Only one had been a police officer, another an
intelligence officer.
Nor
were these killers forced to remain in the gruesome business they
had chosen. Kommando leaders who demonstrated themselves incapable
of performing cold-blooded slaughter were assigned to other duties,
not out of sympathy or for humanitarian reasons, but for
efficiency’s sake alone. During the Nuremberg trials, SS-Major
General Otto Ohlendorf, Chief of Einsatzgruppe D, declared that he
forbade the participations in executions of men who did not “agree
to the Fuhrer-Order”, and sent them back to Germany. Another
witness, Albert Hartel, of the German Security Police in Kiev,
testified that SS-General Eugen Thomas, commanding Einsatzgruppe C
at the time, “passed on an order that all those people who could not
reconcile with their conscience to carry out such orders, that is,
people who were too soft, as he said, to carry out these orders,
should be sent back to Germany or should be assigned to other tasks.
Thus at the time a number of people, also commanders, were sent back
by Thomas to the Reich just because they were too soft to carry out
the orders.” There is no record of severe punishment befalling such
individuals nor, indeed, of any punishment at all.
In
fulfilling Hitler’s program every Nazi official saw for himself a
higher rank, a gaudier uniform, an easier and more lucrative post.
Vanity, arrogance, and greed were the vehicles in which the Nazi
leaders traveled the highway of criminality and inhumanity. The
Einsatzgruppe officers had an additional reason for preferring their
assignments: it saved them from hazardous combat services. No one
shot back. In the front lines one faced an armed and aggressive
opponent; in a foxhole one could expect any moment a fragmentizing
artillery shell. But on the Einsatzgruppe field of combat there were
no foxholes. There were only long ditches in front of which one’s
adversaries helplessly stood to await the fire which they could not
return.
These were the “technically competent barbarians”, as Dr. Franklin
H. Littell calls them, available to the highest bidder. Dr. Littell
writes, “The common mistake is to suppose this is solely a result of
his avarice or unbridled ambition; it is aided and abetted by a
system of education that has trained him to think in ways that
eliminate questions of ultimate responsibility. Having eliminated
God as an hypothesis, he exercises godlike powers with pride rather
than with fear and trembling … The worst set of crimes in the
history of mankind was engineered by Ph.D.’s and committed by
baptized Christians.”
As
the Einsatzgruppen trial at Nuremberg in 1947 twenty-three
defendants were charged with one million murders. One was released,
another separated from the trial of the others because of poor
health. Of the remaining twenty-one, fourteen were sentenced to
death, two to life imprisonment and the other five to lesser prison
terms. Upon later review, two of those sentenced to prison were
released on time already served and the other five were given new
terms reduced in years. Of the fourteen sentenced to death, nine
sentences were commuted. Five were hanged.
WHO
ARE THEY?
I
have indicated the involvement of the parts of the Lithuanian
general population in the killing of Jews, my sources taken from
books written on the activities of the Einsatzgruppen, the killing
units, and the destruction of East European Jewry. As will be seen
this activity is corroborated in the testimonies of survivors of
Kupishok and of other towns in Lithuania. As would be expected, the
Lithuanian community in the United States presents a somewhat
different picture to make the claim that the Lithuanian people in
toto are not guilty of genocide. To that end a pamphlet has been
published (1977) by the Lithuanian American Community, Inc. of the
United States entitled “Towards An Understanding of
Lithuanian-Jewish Relations” which consists of an introduction by
The National Executive Committee and a reprint of the article Jews
in Lithuania which appears in the second volume of Encyclopedia
Lituanica (pp. 522-530). Excerpts from this pamphlet follow.
Introduction
“…
The Lithuanian people do not claim exemption from this loathsome
sociological phenomenon (i.e., genocide against European Jewry—SM).
Yes, several score Lithuanians participated in the machine-gunning
of Jews in Lithuania and Belorussia.”
“…
At this juncture the Lithuanian American Community of the United
States wishes to point out one salient argument: anti-Semitism of a
virulent brand is not endemic to the Lithuanian people. While it is
historically accurate that, following the collapse of the first
Soviet occupation of Lithuania (1940-1941) a number of individual
acts of reprisal were committed against Lithuanian and Russian
Communists, Jews and gentiles, nonetheless the Lithuanians did not
engage in wholesale atrocities against the Jewish population. The
Nazi records captured by the Allies point out that the person and
property of local Jews and Poles became the exclusive concern of the
German occupation authorities. Local Lithuanian civil authorities
had no say in the treatment of Jews, Russians, and Poles.”
Jews in Lithuania
“…
Jews … were disproportionately strong in the most profitable
occupations. The Jews owned 77 percent (over ten times their quota)
of the country’s commerce, 22 percent of its industry, and 18
percent of its communications and transportation lines.” (The writer
refers to the period between the two World Wars—SM). “From 35
percent to 43 percent of the country’s physicians and over 50
percent of its lawyers were Jews. Located in the urban centers,
Jewish businesses dominated the face of the country’s cities and
towns. Excited by their newly gained status, they rendered it even
more conspicuous by making their business signs and door plates in
Yiddish, along with an occasionally quite ungrammatical Lithuanian
translation. Most Jewish businessmen chose to keep their
establishments closed on Saturdays and open on Sundays. Quite a few
Jewish enterprises felt entitled to use Yiddish in their
bookkeeping, which made the books inauditable by most tax
inspectors.”
“The Lithuanians, those of the young generation particularly, were
excited by the regained independence of their country, and they were
impatient to see their country acquire an appearance like that of
the long-established European states. Instead they found the most
visible parts of the country’s face looking ‘like a kind of Judea’,
and some of them became irritated. Their resentment burst into a
campaign of ‘cleaning the face of the country’ by smearing Yiddish
language signs and placards with tar. Local authorities claimed that
they were unable to protect all the signs from this patriotically
inspired vandalism, and ordered (in July 1924) replacement of the
bilingual signs with ones drawn in Lithuanian only … The Sunday Rest
Law (1924) was prompted by the same consideration.”
“…
The Tragic End. The end of Lithuania’s independence proved to be the
beginning of the end of Lithuanian Jewry. At first, apparently
because of the role of Jewish apostates in the previous community
underground, a conspicuous number of Jews emerged in key positions
of the Soviet regime, installed in Lithuania following the Russian
invasion of June 15, 1940. This, however, did not preserve the Jews
from the blow inflicted on the entire population of Lithuania by
radical measures of Sovietization. Like everybody else, they were
ruined economically by sweeping expropriation of enterprises,
properties and savings. All their cultural institutions,
organizations, and newspapers were shut down, and their prominent
leaders were jailed along with the other alleged ‘enemies of the
people’. Eventually, in the course of the following months of the
communist regime, the Jews seemed to be adjusting themselves
somewhat more easily to the new conditions; at least such an
impression was increasingly taking hold in the minds of the rest of
the population. This impression was strengthened when the Jews were
but little affected by the mass deportations staged by the troops of
the NKVD in June 1941. The thought of Jews as being the masterminds
behind the communist terror had been held only by a few up to that
time, but now it caught on and spread among people surprised,
shocked, and enraged by the stroke of deportation. Only rumors
promising the imminent German march against Soviet Russia stirred up
hope for rescue from the raging NKVD terror. It was in such a state
of mind that the popular uprising against the communist regime broke
out in Lithuania simultaneously with the German attack of June 22,
1941, only a week after the most shocking NKVD raid. The insurgents
fought retreating Russian troops from two to four days in advance of
the oncoming German ground forces, and they also fervently hunted
down civilian functionaries and helpers of the collapsing regime,
most of whom were retreating eastward along with the Russian troops,
while some were in hiding, a few even sniping back from their
improvised shelters. Most Jews stayed home in anxiety, but several
thousand of them appeared on the roads, looking for some way to
escape imminent Nazi persecution by trying to mix into the columns
of Russian and local procommunist civilians who were being
evacuated. In many instances the insurgents pursued their vendetta
against the communists injudiciously, so that innocent people fell
victims in executions without trial, solely on the grounds of
unchecked suspicion or denunciation. Though this action, which
lasted no longer than two days in any particular area and ended
altogether on the fourth day of the war, was explicitly aimed at
communist activists, not at Jews as such, the Jews, especially those
on the roads or in homes suspected of being used by communists for
shelter, were particularly prone to fall under suspicion in the
circumstances. Consequently an unknown number of Jews were killed
along with an equally unverified number of non-Jews, guilty and
innocent …”
“…
the SD, having found the Lithuanian insurgents uncooperative in the
drive against the Jews, had banished any armed partisan activities
in the area and had ordered the surrender of all weapons in
possession of the insurgents. The label ‘partisans’ was
fraudulently pinned on gangs of mercenaries lured by the SD into
‘auxiliary units’ hurriedly set up for the purpose of helping the
Germans in their alleged task of clearing the area of ‘residual
hostile elements’. Only a few of the insurgents (less than one out
of every thousand) volunteered to join the ‘auxiliaries’, most of
them with little anticipation of the precise nature of their
involvement. Some opportunist collaborators of the communist regime,
having failed to escape, hastily squeezed themselves into the
‘auxiliaries’ seeking safe disguise and new opportunities for
themselves. The rest of the ‘auxiliaries’ were attracted from the
obscurest layers of the population, including adventurers of low
morality and common criminals at large, greedy for loot promised in
return for the unscrupulous execution of bloody assignments.”
“…
In several weeks of sweeping operations, the SD detachments, aided
by the ‘auxiliary units’, achieved almost total annihilation of Jews
in all the provincial towns of Lithuania, and by the end of August
1941, the entire territory of Lithuania was reported in Berlin to be
‘clear of Jews’, except Vilnius, Kaunas, and Siauliai, the three
largest cities, where, after several sporadically staged assaults,
about 70,000 Jews were left alive but confined to the ghettos
established there …”
So
says the Lithuanian American Community, Inc. of the United States.
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