Become a Member
Travel

A tale of two cities

Anthea Gerrie discovers an alternative city break in Kaunas — as well as Jewish life past and present in Lithuania

May 15, 2024 07:12
kaunus-paulius-andriekus-IFc8Of_jnf0CREDITUnsplash.jpg
Statue by the castle at Kaunas (Photo: Unsplash)

ByAnthea Gerrie, Anthea Gerrie

5 min read

Schmaltz herring on the breakfast buffet, vorschmack for lunch and Yiddish melodrama for tea – it could only be Lithuania. As elements of east European culture rapidly disappear from the modern world, a visit here always gladdens the Ashkenazi heart, with more reasons than ever to visit both the capital Vilnius and explore more widely.

The herring you can get across the country, but only in Vilnius does Yiddish cinema play daily in a stunning new museum aiming to show visitors everything Litvaks have given the world.

“Visitors know about the Jewish life that was destroyed, but they increasingly want to know who the residents were, and we aim to present their contributions in every field,” says museum director Aivaras Poska.

The four floors of the former Jewish Gymnasium have been transformed into an immersive experience, complete with music booths, art gallery and the cinema, where I was stopped in my tracks by excerpts from 1937 smash hit The Dybbuk.