Become a Member
Marcus Dysch

ByMarcus Dysch, Marcus Dysch

Opinion

In Lithuania, students are being taught an uplifting lesson of integration

Despite the horrors of the past, Vilnius's future is looking quite different

November 2, 2018 08:27
Nikita Yusupov, 11, the aspiring singer
2 min read

It was hard to concentrate as the chazan led the davening. But why? My mind whirred.

Was it the fact I had walked into Vilnius’s Choral Synagogue with barely any security interventions at all? There had been no sign of burly guards or armed police, unlike outside almost every other shul in the world. But that was not what unsettled me.

As I stared up at the ornate, aqua-coloured aron hakodesh and listened to the familiar tunes of the Shabbat morning prayers, I felt a chill.

Here I was, sitting in this 115-year-old building, in the centre of the capital city of a country where, within living memory of some of my fellow congregants, 95 per cent of the once quarter-of-a-million-strong Jewish population had been slaughtered.