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Lithuanian Activist Front

The Lithuanian Activist Front or LAF (Lithuanian: Lietuvių Aktivistų Frontas) was a Lithuanian underground resistance organization established in 1940 after the Soviets occupied Lithuania. Its goal was to free Lithuania and regain its independence. The LAF planned and executed the June uprising and established the short-lived Provisional Government of Lithuania, which disbanded after a few weeks. The Nazi authorities banned the LAF in September 1941. Its role in the three World War II invasions of Lithuania and the massacre of 95% of Lithuania's Jewish population remains ambiguous and the topic of conflicting information and opinion.

Background edit

 
Seal of the Lithuanian Activist Front

The German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact (Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact), signed on 23 August 1939, assured Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union of mutual non-aggression. A secret addendum divided the Baltic States and Poland between them and also reincorporated Vilnius into Lithuania. Another amendment a month reassigned Lithuania from Germany to Russia.[1]

In the first of the three invasions of Lithuania in the Second World War, the Soviets overthrew the government of Antanas Smetona in 1940 on the basis of a changing list of disparate pretexts.[2] Many Lithuanians were relieved; newspapers had shut down, "the militia confiscated private property, ejected tenants from their homes, publicly called for liquidation of 'enemies of the people' and terrorized the population", and Smetona had stopped holding elections.[3] The Germans arrived on 22 June 1941 and within days required the Jewish population to wear a star, among many other restrictions. Within a few more days, Einsatzkommando 9 was pulling Jewish men from their homes for purported work assignments.[4]

Just days earlier, the NKVD had rounded up and deported between 15,851 and 20,000 “anti-Soviet elements” from across Lithuania.[5] Most of the tens of thousands of people deported were sent to Siberia. Hundreds of political prisoners were tortured to death. The widespread press coverage blames the local Communists but also Jews, who were stereotyped by the Lithuanian media of the time as closely associated with the Soviets.[6] Other stereotypes existed on both sides. Lithuanians for instance considered language an important part of national identity,[7] yet Litvaks tended to speak Yiddish or Russian, and to live in cities, while they in turn considered the Lithuanians rather rustic folk.[citation needed]

Historians generally divide the Lithuanian Shoah in four stages, Stanislovas Stasiulis writes:[8]

  1. late June to early July 1941: pogroms, actions aimed at Jewish men and alleged Communists
  2. early July to mid-August: selective killings of specific individuals
  3. mid-August to late November 1941: “Final Solution” in the countryside and larger towns, then ghettoization of Jews
  4. 1942 to 1943: periodic selections, liquidation of ghettos.

By 1941 refugees had grown the Jewish population of Lithuania to approximately 250,000, or 10% of the total population.[9]

During the German invasion of June 1941, 141,000 Jews were murdered. Unlike in Western Europe, Lithuanian Jews were generally killed a short distance from their homes. Notable execution locations were the Paneriai woods (see Ponary massacre) and the Ninth Fort.[10]

June uprising edit

The LAF anticipated Nazi Germany's attack on the Soviet Union and planned to use it to rebel against the Soviet Union and establish an independent Lithuania.

Kazys Škirpa, a former Lithuanian military attaché to Germany, founded the LAF on 17 November 1940.[11] to unite people with a wide spectrum of political beliefs who wanted to see an independent Lithuania that was not part of either the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany,[12] Škirpa's Berlin unit mainly recruited Lithuanian expatriates and former diplomats, from most of the major pre-war Lithuanian factions and parties. The Nationalist Unionists and Christian Democrats were the most influential.[11]

The Provisional Government was mainly recruited from the Vilnius and Kaunas sections of the LAF. On 22 April 1941, representatives of those sections agreed on a list of members of the planned Provisional Government of Lithuania.[13]

Urban LAF units had more liberal political views than those in the countryside. Lack of communication between the Berlin unit and the Lithuanian units prevented ideological discussion though.

 
Leonas Prapuolenis, commander of the June Uprising in Lithuania, later arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp

"Attention! Attention! This is Kaunas speaking. Independent Lithuania. Declaration of the restoration of Lithuania’s independence...The Lithuanian nation, tormented by the brutal Bolshevik terror, decided to build its future on the basis of national unity and social justice."

Leonas Prapuolenis, first announcement of the Provisional Government on the captured Kaunas radio station.[14][15]

Provisional Government edit

The Provisional Government was short-handed when it took office on June 24, intending to exert the autonomy the Lithuanians hoped the Germans brought with them. Four members of the government were arrested by Soviet authorities on June 21, proposed prime minister Kazys Škirpa was under house arrest in Berlin, and another minister was also unable to serve. Juozas Ambrazevičius became prime minister.

"The historic interplay between the growth of anti-Soviet resistance in 1940–1941 and the behavior of many pro-Nazi Lithuanian collaborators during 1941–1944 is a complex story of nationalist idealism, political naivite, ideological contamination, obsequious opportunism and criminal intent,"[16] wrote historian Saulius Sužiedelis.

 
LAF activists inspect a T-38 tank from the Red Army in Kaunas
 
Lithuanian activists in Kaunas on June 25, 1941

But the Nazis had no interest in an independent Lithuania and General feldmarschall Walther von Brauchitsch issued a directive on June 26, 1941 to the commander of Army Group North under which "small armed Lithuanian groups and Lithuanian police" were to be disarmed and sent to concentration camps.[17]

Under Nazi Germany edit

 
Kazys Škirpa, one of the main founders of LAF

The Provisional Government was mainly recruited from the Vilnius and Kaunas sections. Over time, many members of this government and the LAF were arrested, executed, or exiled by the Soviet authorities.

The Wehrmacht began disarming LAF activists in Kaunas on June 26 to 28. The last LAF activists were disarmed in Zarasai and Obeliai June 28–29. The German authorities did not use brute force, just established their own administrative structure, Reichskommissariat Ostland, and slowly deprived the would-be puppet government of its powers. It lost all authority in a few weeks, and seeing no more reason to continue, dissolved on August 5, 1941.,[citation needed] LAF as an organization remained in existence. On September 15, it sent Germany a memorandum, About the status of Lithuania after the German Civil Administration started to operate (Apie Lietuvos būklę, vokiečių civilinei administracijai pradėjus veikti),[18] protesting the occupation of Lithuania and expressing hope that Germany would not extend its territory at the expense of Lithuania. The Lithuanian Activist Front was banned on September 26, its property confiscated, and its leader Leonas Prapuolenis arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp. Other members like Pilypas Žukauskas [lt] and Petras Paulaitis [lt] joined the anti-Nazi resistance.

Vilnius edit

For historic and religious reasons, Vilnius was very important to Lithuanians. In 1900 Jonas Biliūnas called it “the very heart” of the fatherland. Its effect on Lithuanian national consciousness after World War II has been described as "selective memory"[19] which downplayed the religious aspects of the history while stressing its "secular, cultural and linguistic aspects." Lithuania accepted a military presence to regain administrative control of Vilnius. The former capital of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth clearly was part of Lithuania, to the Antanas Smetona government. But since the city had been taken in a false flag operation in October 1920, the city had become more Polish and more Jewish, a situation made even more so by refugees, garrisons and POW camps after the German invasion of Poland.

The LAF section in Vilnius under Vytautas Bulvičius was dismantled by Soviet arrests just before the German invasion and even before that Lithuanians had only been a small minority of the city's population.[20] The uprising was therefore smaller there, than elsewhere and only started on June 23. The rebels took the post office and radio station, and hoisted the Lithuanian flag over Gediminas' Tower. It was relatively easy to take Vilnius, as most Red Army units were outside the city and quickly retreated.[21]

Controversy edit

 
Soviet poststamp with LAF overprint Independent Lithuania 1941 06 23

The LAF is controversial because of its anti-Semitic[22] The LAF's manifesto "What Are the Activists Fighting for?" said: "The Lithuanian Activist Front, by restoring the new Lithuania, is determined to carry out an immediate and fundamental purging of the Lithuanian nation and its land of Jews...".[23] The LAF's pro-Nazi rhetoric and stridently anti-Semitic propaganda, equating Jews with Bolshevism, was widely disseminated in Lithuania prior to and during the June uprising and likely encouraged the local population to engage in mass violence against Jews that began prior to the arrival of Nazi forces in the country and continued during the Nazi occupation (1941-1945).[citation needed]

"Our aim is to compel the Jews to flee Lithuania together with the Red Army troops and Russians. The more Jews abandon Lithuania under these circumstances, the easier it will be later to achieve complete liberation from the Jews. The hospitality that Vytautas the Great offered to the Jews in Lithuania has been revoked for all times for the ongoing betrayal of the Lithuanian nation." – LAF Pamphlet "Guidelines for the Liberation of Lithuania", March 1941 [24][unreliable source?]

By some calculations, more than 95% of Lithuania's Jewish population was massacred during the Nazi occupation,[25] a more complete destruction than befell any other country in the Holocaust. Historians attribute this to the massive collaboration in the genocide by the non-Jewish local paramilitaries, though the reasons for this collaboration are still debated.[26][27] [28]

 
Participants of the last session of the Provisional Government of Lithuania
 
Funeral of perished Lithuanian Activist Front members in Kaunas on June 26, 1941

The goal of the June uprising organized by the LAF was to seize control of Lithuania as Soviet forces retreated in the face of Germany's attack. LAF paramilitaries committed many atrocities in the uprising (rapes, murders, pillage).[citation needed] According to Tadeusz Piotrowski, the Germans referred to these "allies" as "organized robbers".[11] At the beginning of the occupation, Acting Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of Lithuania Juozas Ambrazevičius (also called Juozas Brazaitis) convened a meeting in of cabinet ministers with former President Kazys Grinius, Bishop Vincentas Brizgys and others. Ministers expressed distress at the atrocities being committed against Jews[citation needed] and decided to help them.[citation needed] However the help would have been very limited; at the very beginning of the Nazi occupation, the affairs of Jews and Poles were excluded from Lithuanian jurisdiction and taken over by the Germans and German military commanders.[29] On the other hand, a number of laws issued by the LAF-instituted Provisional Government of Lithuania discriminated against Jews. for example Žydų padėties nuostatai (English: Regulation on the Status of Jews), although according to some authors they were never actually adopted and were only considered by the Provisional Government.[30] Žydų padėties nuostatai was widely used in the Soviet propaganda. However physical signs that this document initially was not kept with enacted legal texts and was pulled into a set of rulings by the German-appointed councillors as if it were a Provisional Government rule, when the Provisional Government had already withdrawn.[31] Žydų padėties nuostatai was not published anywhere at the time and the affairs of Lithuanian Jews were never governed by it.[31]

Nazi authorities surreptitiously encouraged and involved the local population in attacks on Jews. These tactics are well disclosed in October 15, 1941 report to Reich Minister Heinrich Himmler. Schutzstaffel General Brigadeführer and Security Police Chief of the Occupied Eastern Territories Franz Walter Stahlecker. In this report Stahlecker states that the extermination of Jews in the Wehrmacht-occupied territories should be performed in a way that would keep the Nazis "clean" and show no sign of actual Nazi inspiration, October 15, 1941 report to Reich Minister Heinrich Himmler. organization or management. It should look like the local population and its institutions on their own initiative executed the Jewish population.[32][33][34] The LAF and its paramilitaries initially proved useful for this. But Stahlecker later complained that it was "not a simple matter" to organize Lithuanians into taking actions against Jews.[34][35]

Lithuanian Minister of National Defence General Stasys Raštikis (former Commander of the Lithuanian Army) met personally with Nazi Germany generals to discuss anti-Jewish violence and began narrating about the Lithuanian society and Government dissatisfaction and concern about the persecution and extermination of the Lithuanian Jews started by the Germans and demanded that the campaign against Jews in Kaunas and in the province now be stopped, but the Nazi generals refused and one of them even unexpectedly poured cold water on Raštikis' head when he was leaving.[35][36][37][29]

Meanwhile, the LAF-established Provisional Government of Lithuania did little to oppose the anti-Jewish violence and murder carried out by the Nazis and their local collaborators. Its main goal was to protect ethnic Lithuanians and reestablish an independent Lithuania under the patronage of Nazi Germany. Ministers expressed distress at the atrocities being committed against the Jews, but advised only that "despite all the measures which must be taken against the Jews for their Communist activity and harm done to the German Army, partisans and individuals should avoid public executions of Jews."[38] It is known that the Provisional Government attempted to stop Algirdas Klimaitis and later condemned him for his actions during the Kaunas pogrom.[39][35] Klimaitis and his gang members did not belonged to LAF, which organized the June Uprising, as he and his gang members were imprisoned in a Bolsheviks' prison and left it only during the first days of the war.[35] According to Lithuanian-American Holocaust historian Saulius Sužiedėlis, "none of this amounted to a public scolding which alone could have persuaded at least some of the Lithuanians who had volunteered or been co-opted into participating in the killings to rethink their behavior."[38]

The Lithuanian TDA Battalions, military units of the Provisional Government, were soon taken over by Nazi officials and reorganized into the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police Battalions (Lithuanian version of Schutzmannschaft).[40] The original TDA eventually became the 12th and the 13th Police Battalions. These two units took an active role in mass killings of the Jews in Lithuania and Belarus.[41] Based on the Jäger Report, members of TDA murdered about 26,000 Jews between July and December 1941.[42]

Later Juozas Ambrazevičius actively participated in the anti-Nazi underground, and four members of the Provisional Government were imprisoned in the Nazi concentration camps.[43] There are allegations by certain journalists that, in 1973, a Committee of the United States Congress made conclusions that Prime Minister of the Provisional Government Juozas Ambrazevičius' and Jonas Šlepetys' were not responsible for the Holocaust in Lithuania.[44][45][46] However, a subsequent clarification issued in 2019 by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US Congress said the investigation was not conclusive and did not amount to a "rehabilitation" of Ambrazevičius/Brazaitis. The investigation into his wartime activities was discontinued after Ambrazevičius/Brazaitis passed away in 1974.[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sabliunas, Leonas (1972). Lithuania in Crisis: Nationalism to Communism, 1939–1940. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33600-2. Project MUSE book 94920.
  2. ^ Senn, Alfred Erich (2007). "The Soviet Invasion". Lithuania 1940: Revolution from Above. BRILL. pp. 85–101. doi:10.1163/9789401204569_007. ISBN 978-94-012-0456-9.
  3. ^ Sabliunas, Leonas (1972). Lithuania in Crisis: Nationalism to Communism, 1939–1940. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33600-2. Project MUSE book 94920.[page needed]
  4. ^ Woolfson, Shivaun (2014). Holocaust Legacy in Post-Soviet Lithuania: People, Places and Objects. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-4725-2705-9.
  5. ^ Needleman, Mallory (21 December 2018). "Lithuania under the Soviet Occupation, 1940-41: Observations and Operations by the United States". MCU Journal. 9 (2): 62–75. doi:10.21140/mcuj.2018090204. DTIC AD1068692.
  6. ^ Alfonsas Eidintas. "A Jew-Communist stereotype in Lithuania 1940-1941" (PDF). Vilnius University Institute of International Relations and Political Science. p. 2.
  7. ^ Finn Hasson (Fall 2019). "Ethnolinguistic Nationalism in Lithuania". Towson University Journal of International Affairs. LIII (1): 19.
  8. ^ Stasiulis, Stanislovas (February 2020). "The Holocaust in Lithuania: The Key Characteristics of Its History, and the Key Issues in Historiography and Cultural Memory". East European Politics and Societies and Cultures. 34 (1): 261–279. doi:10.1177/0888325419844820.
  9. ^ "Lithuania". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  10. ^ "The Jerusalem of Lithuania The story of the Jewish community of Vilna". Yadvashem.org.
  11. ^ a b c Tadeusz Piotrowski, Poland's Holocaust, McFarland & Company, 1997, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3, Google Print, pp. 163-168
  12. ^ Bradley Campbell, The Geometry of Genocide: A Study in Pure Sociolo(gy, University of Virginia Press, 2015, ISBN 978-08-13-93742-7, p. 179.
  13. ^ Sigitas Jegelevičius. 1941 m. Lietuvos laikinosios vyriausybės atsiradimo aplinkybės (Circumstances of establishing provisional government of Lithuania in 1941), Voruta, No. 11 (557), June 11, 2004 May 7, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Tikros istorijos. Tverečiaus parapijai 500 metų (recording from 1:20 to 2:17)". Lrt.lt (in Lithuanian). 2001-06-28. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  15. ^ Jegelevičius, Sigitas. "Lietuvių savivalda ir vokiečių okupacinė valdžia: tarp kolaboravimo ir rezistencijos". Genocid.lt. Genocide and Resistance Research Centre of Lithuania. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  16. ^ Saulius Sužiedelis. Lithuanian Collaboration during the Second World War: Past Realities, Present Perceptions (PDF). YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. p. 147.
  17. ^ Vitkus, Zigma (23 June 2013). "Sigitas Jegelevičius: "Birželio sukilimą šiandien dažnai matome pro sovietinės propagandos akinius" (I)" [Sigitas Jegelevičius: "Today we often see the June Uprising through the glasses of Soviet propaganda" (I)] (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 6 October 2019.
  18. ^ "Kai kurie slapto ir viešo Pasipriešinimo bruožai 1940-1942m. dokumentuose - ANTINACINĖ REZISTENCIJA". www.partizanai.org (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  19. ^ Theodore R. Weeks (December 2008). "Remembering and Forgetting: Creating a Soviet Lithuanian Capital. Vilnius 1944-1949". Journal of Baltic Studies. 39 (4–Special Issue: Contested and Shared Places of Memory. History and Politics in North Eastern Europe). Taylor & Francis: 517–533. doi:10.1080/01629770802461548. JSTOR 43212852. S2CID 144016094.
  20. ^ Brandišauskas, Valentinas (2002). . Gimtoji istorija. Nuo 7 iki 12 klasės (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Elektroninės leidybos namai. ISBN 9986-9216-9-4. Archived from the original on 2008-03-03. Retrieved 2009-07-04.
  21. ^ Bubnys, Arūnas (1998). Vokiečių okupuota Lietuva (1941–1944) (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Lietuvos tautinis kultūros fondas lurl=https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/97373. p. 40. ISBN 9986-757-12-6.
  22. ^ Sakowicz, Kazimierz (2008). Ponary Diary, 1941-1943: A Bystander's Account of a Mass Murder. Yale University Press. pp. 2–3. ISBN 9780300129175.
  23. ^ Nikžentaitis, Alvydas; Schreiner, Stefan; Staliūnas, Darius (2004). The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews. Rodopi. ISBN 978-90-420-0850-2.
  24. ^ In Truska, Liudas and Vareikis, Vygantas. Preconditions for the Holocaust: Anti-Semitism in Lithuania: Second Half of the 19th Century–June 1941. Margi Raštai, Vilnius (2004). pp. 268–269.
  25. ^ Algimantas Kasparavičius (2017-02-06). "Lithuanian Political Illusions: The "Policy" of the Lithuanian Provisional Government and the Beginning of the Holocaust in Lithu\ania in 1941". Jewish Community of Lithuania.
  26. ^ Daniel Brook, "Double Genocide. Lithuania wants to erase its ugly history of Nazi collaboration—by accusing Jewish partisans who fought the Germans of war crimes.", Slate, July 26, 2015
  27. ^ MacQueen, Michael (1998). "The Context of Mass Destruction: Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocaust in Lithuania". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 12 (1): 27–48. doi:10.1093/hgs/12.1.27.
  28. ^ Bubnys, Arūnas (2004). "Holocaust in Lithuania: An Outline of the Major Stages and Their Results". The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews. Rodopi. pp. 218–219. ISBN 978-90-420-0850-2.
  29. ^ a b "Birželio sukilėliai: didvyriai ir žudikai viename asmenyje?". lrytas.lt. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  30. ^ "Dokumentas: Lietuvos žydų persekiojimas ir masinės žudynės 1941 metų vasarą ir rudenį". Bernardinai.lt. 15 June 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2012.
  31. ^ a b Skrupskelis, Kęstutis [in Lithuanian]. "K. Skrupskelis. Kaip Lietuvos Laikinoji Vyriausybė vertino politines galimybes?". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  32. ^ Balčiūnas, J. V. "LAIKINOJI VYRIAUSYBĖ IR ŽYDAI - Sovietinė propaganda tebesinaudoja nacių talka". www.aidai.eu (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  33. ^ Zeiger, Henry A. (2015). The Case Against Adolf Eichmann. Pickle Partners Publishing. p. 66. ISBN 9781786254481.
  34. ^ a b Friedman, Philip (1957). Their brothers' keepers. Crown Publishers. p. 136. ISBN 9780896040021.
  35. ^ a b c d "Lietuvos žydų likimas ir Laikinoji Lietuvos Vyriausybė". Partizanai.org (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  36. ^ . LLKS.lt. Archived from the original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved 20 June 2014.
  37. ^ Raštikis, Stasys (1990). Kovos dėl Lietuvos (II tomas). Lituanus. p. 307.
  38. ^ a b Sužiedėlis, Saulius. "The Burden of 1941". Lituanus Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences, Volume 47, No. 4 (Winter 2001).
  39. ^ Budreckis, Algirdas Martin (1968). The Lithuanian National Revolt. Boston: Lithuanian Encyclopedia Press. pp. 62, 63.
  40. ^ Knezys, Stasys (2000). "Kauno karo komendantūros Tautinio darbo batalionas 1941 m". Genocidas Ir Rezistencija (in Lithuanian). 7 (1).
  41. ^ Atamukas, Solomonas (Winter 2001). "The Hard Long Road Toward the Truth: On the Sixtieth Anniversary of the Holocaust in Lithuania". Lituanus. 4 (47).
  42. ^ Bubnys, Arūnas (2004). "The Holocaust in Lithuania: An Outline of the Major Stages and Results". The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews. Rodopi. pp. 209–210. ISBN 90-420-0850-4.
  43. ^ "Kaune perlaidojami 1941-ųjų Laikinosios vyriausybės vadovo Juozo Brazaičio palaikai". 15min.lt. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  44. ^ Sinica, Vytautas. . LZinios.lt. Archived from the original on 7 December 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  45. ^ Lukšas, Aras (2009). J. Ambrazevičius-Brazaitis—Vienų Vienas (J. Ambrazevičius-Brazaitis—Purely alone).
  46. ^ Meidutė, Aistė. "Vanagaitė įkvėpė Kremlių: aukština NKVD smogikus ir vėl šmeižia partizanų vadus". DELFI.lt. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  47. ^ "JAV Kongreso laiškas premjerui: neigia išteisinę J.Ambrazevičių-Brazaitį". 15min.lt. 15 October 2019.
  • , Doc. dr. Sigitas Jegelevičius, Voruta, No. 11 (557), June 11, 2004
  • Lietuvių aktyvistų frontas, Laikinoji Vyriausybė ir žydų klausimas, Dr. Valentinas Brandišauskas, a presentation delivered during a seminar-discussion, March 23, 1999
  • Z.Ivinskis. The Lithuanian Revolt Against the Soviets in 1941

lithuanian, activist, front, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, december, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, message, lithuanian, lietuvių, aktivistų, frontas, lithuania. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Lithuanian Activist Front or LAF Lithuanian Lietuviu Aktivistu Frontas was a Lithuanian underground resistance organization established in 1940 after the Soviets occupied Lithuania Its goal was to free Lithuania and regain its independence The LAF planned and executed the June uprising and established the short lived Provisional Government of Lithuania which disbanded after a few weeks The Nazi authorities banned the LAF in September 1941 Its role in the three World War II invasions of Lithuania and the massacre of 95 of Lithuania s Jewish population remains ambiguous and the topic of conflicting information and opinion Contents 1 Background 2 June uprising 3 Provisional Government 4 Under Nazi Germany 4 1 Vilnius 5 Controversy 6 See also 7 ReferencesBackground edit nbsp Seal of the Lithuanian Activist Front The German Soviet Non Aggression Pact Molotov Ribbentrop Pact signed on 23 August 1939 assured Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union of mutual non aggression A secret addendum divided the Baltic States and Poland between them and also reincorporated Vilnius into Lithuania Another amendment a month reassigned Lithuania from Germany to Russia 1 In the first of the three invasions of Lithuania in the Second World War the Soviets overthrew the government of Antanas Smetona in 1940 on the basis of a changing list of disparate pretexts 2 Many Lithuanians were relieved newspapers had shut down the militia confiscated private property ejected tenants from their homes publicly called for liquidation of enemies of the people and terrorized the population and Smetona had stopped holding elections 3 The Germans arrived on 22 June 1941 and within days required the Jewish population to wear a star among many other restrictions Within a few more days Einsatzkommando 9 was pulling Jewish men from their homes for purported work assignments 4 Just days earlier the NKVD had rounded up and deported between 15 851 and 20 000 anti Soviet elements from across Lithuania 5 Most of the tens of thousands of people deported were sent to Siberia Hundreds of political prisoners were tortured to death The widespread press coverage blames the local Communists but also Jews who were stereotyped by the Lithuanian media of the time as closely associated with the Soviets 6 Other stereotypes existed on both sides Lithuanians for instance considered language an important part of national identity 7 yet Litvaks tended to speak Yiddish or Russian and to live in cities while they in turn considered the Lithuanians rather rustic folk citation needed Historians generally divide the Lithuanian Shoah in four stages Stanislovas Stasiulis writes 8 late June to early July 1941 pogroms actions aimed at Jewish men and alleged Communists early July to mid August selective killings of specific individuals mid August to late November 1941 Final Solution in the countryside and larger towns then ghettoization of Jews 1942 to 1943 periodic selections liquidation of ghettos By 1941 refugees had grown the Jewish population of Lithuania to approximately 250 000 or 10 of the total population 9 During the German invasion of June 1941 141 000 Jews were murdered Unlike in Western Europe Lithuanian Jews were generally killed a short distance from their homes Notable execution locations were the Paneriai woods see Ponary massacre and the Ninth Fort 10 June uprising editThe LAF anticipated Nazi Germany s attack on the Soviet Union and planned to use it to rebel against the Soviet Union and establish an independent Lithuania Kazys Skirpa a former Lithuanian military attache to Germany founded the LAF on 17 November 1940 11 to unite people with a wide spectrum of political beliefs who wanted to see an independent Lithuania that was not part of either the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany 12 Skirpa s Berlin unit mainly recruited Lithuanian expatriates and former diplomats from most of the major pre war Lithuanian factions and parties The Nationalist Unionists and Christian Democrats were the most influential 11 The Provisional Government was mainly recruited from the Vilnius and Kaunas sections of the LAF On 22 April 1941 representatives of those sections agreed on a list of members of the planned Provisional Government of Lithuania 13 Urban LAF units had more liberal political views than those in the countryside Lack of communication between the Berlin unit and the Lithuanian units prevented ideological discussion though nbsp Leonas Prapuolenis commander of the June Uprising in Lithuania later arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp Attention Attention This is Kaunas speaking Independent Lithuania Declaration of the restoration of Lithuania s independence The Lithuanian nation tormented by the brutal Bolshevik terror decided to build its future on the basis of national unity and social justice Leonas Prapuolenis first announcement of the Provisional Government on the captured Kaunas radio station 14 15 Provisional Government editThe Provisional Government was short handed when it took office on June 24 intending to exert the autonomy the Lithuanians hoped the Germans brought with them Four members of the government were arrested by Soviet authorities on June 21 proposed prime minister Kazys Skirpa was under house arrest in Berlin and another minister was also unable to serve Juozas Ambrazevicius became prime minister The historic interplay between the growth of anti Soviet resistance in 1940 1941 and the behavior of many pro Nazi Lithuanian collaborators during 1941 1944 is a complex story of nationalist idealism political naivite ideological contamination obsequious opportunism and criminal intent 16 wrote historian Saulius Suziedelis nbsp LAF activists inspect a T 38 tank from the Red Army in Kaunas nbsp Lithuanian activists in Kaunas on June 25 1941 But the Nazis had no interest in an independent Lithuania and General feldmarschall Walther von Brauchitsch issued a directive on June 26 1941 to the commander of Army Group North under which small armed Lithuanian groups and Lithuanian police were to be disarmed and sent to concentration camps 17 Under Nazi Germany edit nbsp Kazys Skirpa one of the main founders of LAF The Provisional Government was mainly recruited from the Vilnius and Kaunas sections Over time many members of this government and the LAF were arrested executed or exiled by the Soviet authorities The Wehrmacht began disarming LAF activists in Kaunas on June 26 to 28 The last LAF activists were disarmed in Zarasai and Obeliai June 28 29 The German authorities did not use brute force just established their own administrative structure Reichskommissariat Ostland and slowly deprived the would be puppet government of its powers It lost all authority in a few weeks and seeing no more reason to continue dissolved on August 5 1941 citation needed LAF as an organization remained in existence On September 15 it sent Germany a memorandum About the status of Lithuania after the German Civil Administration started to operate Apie Lietuvos bukle vokieciu civilinei administracijai pradejus veikti 18 protesting the occupation of Lithuania and expressing hope that Germany would not extend its territory at the expense of Lithuania The Lithuanian Activist Front was banned on September 26 its property confiscated and its leader Leonas Prapuolenis arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp Other members like Pilypas Zukauskas lt and Petras Paulaitis lt joined the anti Nazi resistance Vilnius edit For historic and religious reasons Vilnius was very important to Lithuanians In 1900 Jonas Biliunas called it the very heart of the fatherland Its effect on Lithuanian national consciousness after World War II has been described as selective memory 19 which downplayed the religious aspects of the history while stressing its secular cultural and linguistic aspects Lithuania accepted a military presence to regain administrative control of Vilnius The former capital of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth clearly was part of Lithuania to the Antanas Smetona government But since the city had been taken in a false flag operation in October 1920 the city had become more Polish and more Jewish a situation made even more so by refugees garrisons and POW camps after the German invasion of Poland The LAF section in Vilnius under Vytautas Bulvicius was dismantled by Soviet arrests just before the German invasion and even before that Lithuanians had only been a small minority of the city s population 20 The uprising was therefore smaller there than elsewhere and only started on June 23 The rebels took the post office and radio station and hoisted the Lithuanian flag over Gediminas Tower It was relatively easy to take Vilnius as most Red Army units were outside the city and quickly retreated 21 Controversy edit nbsp Soviet poststamp with LAF overprint Independent Lithuania 1941 06 23 The LAF is controversial because of its anti Semitic 22 The LAF s manifesto What Are the Activists Fighting for said The Lithuanian Activist Front by restoring the new Lithuania is determined to carry out an immediate and fundamental purging of the Lithuanian nation and its land of Jews 23 The LAF s pro Nazi rhetoric and stridently anti Semitic propaganda equating Jews with Bolshevism was widely disseminated in Lithuania prior to and during the June uprising and likely encouraged the local population to engage in mass violence against Jews that began prior to the arrival of Nazi forces in the country and continued during the Nazi occupation 1941 1945 citation needed Our aim is to compel the Jews to flee Lithuania together with the Red Army troops and Russians The more Jews abandon Lithuania under these circumstances the easier it will be later to achieve complete liberation from the Jews The hospitality that Vytautas the Great offered to the Jews in Lithuania has been revoked for all times for the ongoing betrayal of the Lithuanian nation LAF Pamphlet Guidelines for the Liberation of Lithuania March 1941 24 unreliable source By some calculations more than 95 of Lithuania s Jewish population was massacred during the Nazi occupation 25 a more complete destruction than befell any other country in the Holocaust Historians attribute this to the massive collaboration in the genocide by the non Jewish local paramilitaries though the reasons for this collaboration are still debated 26 27 28 nbsp Participants of the last session of the Provisional Government of Lithuania nbsp Funeral of perished Lithuanian Activist Front members in Kaunas on June 26 1941 The goal of the June uprising organized by the LAF was to seize control of Lithuania as Soviet forces retreated in the face of Germany s attack LAF paramilitaries committed many atrocities in the uprising rapes murders pillage citation needed According to Tadeusz Piotrowski the Germans referred to these allies as organized robbers 11 At the beginning of the occupation Acting Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of Lithuania Juozas Ambrazevicius also called Juozas Brazaitis convened a meeting in of cabinet ministers with former President Kazys Grinius Bishop Vincentas Brizgys and others Ministers expressed distress at the atrocities being committed against Jews citation needed and decided to help them citation needed However the help would have been very limited at the very beginning of the Nazi occupation the affairs of Jews and Poles were excluded from Lithuanian jurisdiction and taken over by the Germans and German military commanders 29 On the other hand a number of laws issued by the LAF instituted Provisional Government of Lithuania discriminated against Jews for example Zydu padeties nuostatai English Regulation on the Status of Jews although according to some authors they were never actually adopted and were only considered by the Provisional Government 30 Zydu padeties nuostatai was widely used in the Soviet propaganda However physical signs that this document initially was not kept with enacted legal texts and was pulled into a set of rulings by the German appointed councillors as if it were a Provisional Government rule when the Provisional Government had already withdrawn 31 Zydu padeties nuostatai was not published anywhere at the time and the affairs of Lithuanian Jews were never governed by it 31 Nazi authorities surreptitiously encouraged and involved the local population in attacks on Jews These tactics are well disclosed in October 15 1941 report to Reich Minister Heinrich Himmler Schutzstaffel General Brigadefuhrer and Security Police Chief of the Occupied Eastern Territories Franz Walter Stahlecker In this report Stahlecker states that the extermination of Jews in the Wehrmacht occupied territories should be performed in a way that would keep the Nazis clean and show no sign of actual Nazi inspiration October 15 1941 report to Reich Minister Heinrich Himmler organization or management It should look like the local population and its institutions on their own initiative executed the Jewish population 32 33 34 The LAF and its paramilitaries initially proved useful for this But Stahlecker later complained that it was not a simple matter to organize Lithuanians into taking actions against Jews 34 35 Lithuanian Minister of National Defence General Stasys Rastikis former Commander of the Lithuanian Army met personally with Nazi Germany generals to discuss anti Jewish violence and began narrating about the Lithuanian society and Government dissatisfaction and concern about the persecution and extermination of the Lithuanian Jews started by the Germans and demanded that the campaign against Jews in Kaunas and in the province now be stopped but the Nazi generals refused and one of them even unexpectedly poured cold water on Rastikis head when he was leaving 35 36 37 29 Meanwhile the LAF established Provisional Government of Lithuania did little to oppose the anti Jewish violence and murder carried out by the Nazis and their local collaborators Its main goal was to protect ethnic Lithuanians and reestablish an independent Lithuania under the patronage of Nazi Germany Ministers expressed distress at the atrocities being committed against the Jews but advised only that despite all the measures which must be taken against the Jews for their Communist activity and harm done to the German Army partisans and individuals should avoid public executions of Jews 38 It is known that the Provisional Government attempted to stop Algirdas Klimaitis and later condemned him for his actions during the Kaunas pogrom 39 35 Klimaitis and his gang members did not belonged to LAF which organized the June Uprising as he and his gang members were imprisoned in a Bolsheviks prison and left it only during the first days of the war 35 According to Lithuanian American Holocaust historian Saulius Suziedelis none of this amounted to a public scolding which alone could have persuaded at least some of the Lithuanians who had volunteered or been co opted into participating in the killings to rethink their behavior 38 The Lithuanian TDA Battalions military units of the Provisional Government were soon taken over by Nazi officials and reorganized into the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police Battalions Lithuanian version of Schutzmannschaft 40 The original TDA eventually became the 12th and the 13th Police Battalions These two units took an active role in mass killings of the Jews in Lithuania and Belarus 41 Based on the Jager Report members of TDA murdered about 26 000 Jews between July and December 1941 42 Later Juozas Ambrazevicius actively participated in the anti Nazi underground and four members of the Provisional Government were imprisoned in the Nazi concentration camps 43 There are allegations by certain journalists that in 1973 a Committee of the United States Congress made conclusions that Prime Minister of the Provisional Government Juozas Ambrazevicius and Jonas Slepetys were not responsible for the Holocaust in Lithuania 44 45 46 However a subsequent clarification issued in 2019 by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US Congress said the investigation was not conclusive and did not amount to a rehabilitation of Ambrazevicius Brazaitis The investigation into his wartime activities was discontinued after Ambrazevicius Brazaitis passed away in 1974 47 See also editSupreme Committee for the Liberation of LithuaniaReferences edit Sabliunas Leonas 1972 Lithuania in Crisis Nationalism to Communism 1939 1940 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33600 2 Project MUSE book 94920 Senn Alfred Erich 2007 The Soviet Invasion Lithuania 1940 Revolution from Above BRILL pp 85 101 doi 10 1163 9789401204569 007 ISBN 978 94 012 0456 9 Sabliunas Leonas 1972 Lithuania in Crisis Nationalism to Communism 1939 1940 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33600 2 Project MUSE book 94920 page needed Woolfson Shivaun 2014 Holocaust Legacy in Post Soviet Lithuania People Places and Objects Bloomsbury Publishing p 63 ISBN 978 1 4725 2705 9 Needleman Mallory 21 December 2018 Lithuania under the Soviet Occupation 1940 41 Observations and Operations by the United States MCU Journal 9 2 62 75 doi 10 21140 mcuj 2018090204 DTIC AD1068692 Alfonsas Eidintas A Jew Communist stereotype in Lithuania 1940 1941 PDF Vilnius University Institute of International Relations and Political Science p 2 Finn Hasson Fall 2019 Ethnolinguistic Nationalism in Lithuania Towson University Journal of International Affairs LIII 1 19 Stasiulis Stanislovas February 2020 The Holocaust in Lithuania The Key Characteristics of Its History and the Key Issues in Historiography and Cultural Memory East European Politics and Societies and Cultures 34 1 261 279 doi 10 1177 0888325419844820 Lithuania United States Holocaust Memorial Museum The Jerusalem of Lithuania The story of the Jewish community of Vilna Yadvashem org a b c Tadeusz Piotrowski Poland s Holocaust McFarland amp Company 1997 ISBN 0 7864 0371 3 Google Print pp 163 168 Bradley Campbell The Geometry of Genocide A Study in Pure Sociolo gy University of Virginia Press 2015 ISBN 978 08 13 93742 7 p 179 Sigitas Jegelevicius 1941 m Lietuvos laikinosios vyriausybes atsiradimo aplinkybes Circumstances of establishing provisional government of Lithuania in 1941 Voruta No 11 557 June 11 2004 Archived May 7 2006 at the Wayback Machine Tikros istorijos Tvereciaus parapijai 500 metu recording from 1 20 to 2 17 Lrt lt in Lithuanian 2001 06 28 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Jegelevicius Sigitas Lietuviu savivalda ir vokieciu okupacine valdzia tarp kolaboravimo ir rezistencijos Genocid lt Genocide and Resistance Research Centre of Lithuania Retrieved 7 June 2021 Saulius Suziedelis Lithuanian Collaboration during the Second World War Past Realities Present Perceptions PDF YIVO Institute for Jewish Research p 147 Vitkus Zigma 23 June 2013 Sigitas Jegelevicius Birzelio sukilima siandien daznai matome pro sovietines propagandos akinius I Sigitas Jegelevicius Today we often see the June Uprising through the glasses of Soviet propaganda I in Lithuanian Retrieved 6 October 2019 Kai kurie slapto ir vieso Pasipriesinimo bruozai 1940 1942m dokumentuose ANTINACINĖ REZISTENCIJA www partizanai org in Lithuanian Retrieved 12 October 2019 Theodore R Weeks December 2008 Remembering and Forgetting Creating a Soviet Lithuanian Capital Vilnius 1944 1949 Journal of Baltic Studies 39 4 Special Issue Contested and Shared Places of Memory History and Politics in North Eastern Europe Taylor amp Francis 517 533 doi 10 1080 01629770802461548 JSTOR 43212852 S2CID 144016094 Brandisauskas Valentinas 2002 1941 m sukilimas ir nepriklausomybes viltys Gimtoji istorija Nuo 7 iki 12 klases in Lithuanian Vilnius Elektronines leidybos namai ISBN 9986 9216 9 4 Archived from the original on 2008 03 03 Retrieved 2009 07 04 Bubnys Arunas 1998 Vokieciu okupuota Lietuva 1941 1944 in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos tautinis kulturos fondas lurl https www lituanistika lt content 97373 p 40 ISBN 9986 757 12 6 Sakowicz Kazimierz 2008 Ponary Diary 1941 1943 A Bystander s Account of a Mass Murder Yale University Press pp 2 3 ISBN 9780300129175 Nikzentaitis Alvydas Schreiner Stefan Staliunas Darius 2004 The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews Rodopi ISBN 978 90 420 0850 2 In Truska Liudas and Vareikis Vygantas Preconditions for the Holocaust Anti Semitism in Lithuania Second Half of the 19th Century June 1941 Margi Rastai Vilnius 2004 pp 268 269 Algimantas Kasparavicius 2017 02 06 Lithuanian Political Illusions The Policy of the Lithuanian Provisional Government and the Beginning of the Holocaust in Lithu ania in 1941 Jewish Community of Lithuania Daniel Brook Double Genocide Lithuania wants to erase its ugly history of Nazi collaboration by accusing Jewish partisans who fought the Germans of war crimes Slate July 26 2015 MacQueen Michael 1998 The Context of Mass Destruction Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocaust in Lithuania Holocaust and Genocide Studies 12 1 27 48 doi 10 1093 hgs 12 1 27 Bubnys Arunas 2004 Holocaust in Lithuania An Outline of the Major Stages and Their Results The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews Rodopi pp 218 219 ISBN 978 90 420 0850 2 a b Birzelio sukileliai didvyriai ir zudikai viename asmenyje lrytas lt Retrieved 27 June 2016 Dokumentas Lietuvos zydu persekiojimas ir masines zudynes 1941 metu vasara ir rudenį Bernardinai lt 15 June 2012 Retrieved 15 June 2012 a b Skrupskelis Kestutis in Lithuanian K Skrupskelis Kaip Lietuvos Laikinoji Vyriausybe vertino politines galimybes DELFI in Lithuanian Retrieved 6 June 2021 Balciunas J V LAIKINOJI VYRIAUSYBĖ IR ZYDAI Sovietine propaganda tebesinaudoja naciu talka www aidai eu in Lithuanian Retrieved 24 December 2017 Zeiger Henry A 2015 The Case Against Adolf Eichmann Pickle Partners Publishing p 66 ISBN 9781786254481 a b Friedman Philip 1957 Their brothers keepers Crown Publishers p 136 ISBN 9780896040021 a b c d Lietuvos zydu likimas ir Laikinoji Lietuvos Vyriausybe Partizanai org in Lithuanian Retrieved 24 December 2017 Kuo reiksmingas 1941 m birzelio 22 28 d sukilimas LLKS lt Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 20 June 2014 Rastikis Stasys 1990 Kovos del Lietuvos II tomas Lituanus p 307 a b Suziedelis Saulius The Burden of 1941 Lituanus Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences Volume 47 No 4 Winter 2001 Budreckis Algirdas Martin 1968 The Lithuanian National Revolt Boston Lithuanian Encyclopedia Press pp 62 63 Knezys Stasys 2000 Kauno karo komendanturos Tautinio darbo batalionas 1941 m Genocidas Ir Rezistencija in Lithuanian 7 1 Atamukas Solomonas Winter 2001 The Hard Long Road Toward the Truth On the Sixtieth Anniversary of the Holocaust in Lithuania Lituanus 4 47 Bubnys Arunas 2004 The Holocaust in Lithuania An Outline of the Major Stages and Results The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews Rodopi pp 209 210 ISBN 90 420 0850 4 Kaune perlaidojami 1941 uju Laikinosios vyriausybes vadovo Juozo Brazaicio palaikai 15min lt Retrieved 20 May 2012 Sinica Vytautas Istorijos perrasymas butina skubiai pasmerkti Vinca Kudirka LZinios lt Archived from the original on 7 December 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2016 Luksas Aras 2009 J Ambrazevicius Brazaitis Vienu Vienas J Ambrazevicius Brazaitis Purely alone Meidute Aiste Vanagaite įkvepe Kremliu aukstina NKVD smogikus ir vel smeizia partizanu vadus DELFI lt Retrieved 23 July 2018 JAV Kongreso laiskas premjerui neigia isteisine J Ambrazeviciu Brazaitį 15min lt 15 October 2019 1941 m Lietuvos laikinosios vyriausybes atsiradimo aplinkybes Doc dr Sigitas Jegelevicius Voruta No 11 557 June 11 2004 Lietuviu aktyvistu frontas Laikinoji Vyriausybe ir zydu klausimas Dr Valentinas Brandisauskas a presentation delivered during a seminar discussion March 23 1999 Z Ivinskis The Lithuanian Revolt Against the Soviets in 1941 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lithuanian Activist Front amp oldid 1216452962, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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