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17 Tammuz 5763 - July 17, 2003 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
Efforts to Implement Agreement to Halt Grave Desecration in Grodno
by Eliezer Rauchberger

A newly set up committee comprised of Grodno City Council members and representatives of Jewish organizations in Byelorussia and other countries is working to implement an agreement reached just days ago to halt grave desecration at a 500-year-old cemetery located in the city. Following concerted efforts by Byelorussia Chief Rabbi Sender Oritzky, who also serves as rosh yeshivas Minsk, city authorities agreed to discontinue plans to build a stadium and sports center on the site. Nonetheless, excavation work continued late last week.

"Byelorussia is the type of country where it takes time for every decision to trickle down from the decision-making level to the place where the decision has to be carried out in practice," Rav Sender told Yated Ne'eman. "Every decision made is implemented very slowly, and I assume that in this case as well . . . it could take another few days during which, unfortunately, the grave desecration will continue."

The construction plan and excavations began almost 50 years ago under communist rule, but the project was shelved until recently. When bulldozers began to raze the ground last month, uncovering skeletal remains, Rav Oritzky took immediate action. Discovering Byelorussian law permits municipalities to level cemeteries where no burials have taken place for at least 50 years, Rav Oritzky went to Minister of Religions Stanislav Boko, explaining to him how deeply disturbing the abominable grave desecration was to Jews around the world.

Moved by Rav Oritzky's entreaties Minister Boko immediately placed a call to Grodno Mayor Alexander Antaneniko asking him to arrange a meeting with Rav Oritzky and other representatives as soon as possible, stressing the strong opposition among Byelorussia's 70,000 Jews and agitation among Jewish communities elsewhere and urging him to forge an immediate dialogue between the two sides.

At a meeting the next day attended by Mayor Antaneniko, District Governor Meltz and Minister Boko--who traveled the 150 miles from Minsk especially to attend the meeting--Rav Oritzky impressed upon the public officials Grodno's important role in Jewish history as a major center for Torah and Judaism, and as the home of the renowned Grodno Yeshiva until its destruction during the Holocaust, adding that today there is even a yeshiva in Israel named after the hallowed Grodno Yeshiva.

Following the meeting Rav Oritzky led a group of his talmidim who had traveled with him from Minsk to Grodno to gather the bones scattered on the cemetery grounds and to take the crates where other bones had been laid to one of Grodno's other two Jewish cemeteries where HaRav Shimon Shkop zt'l lies buried.

According to Rav Oritzky, Byelorussia's aging Jewish population, most of whom lived through the horrors of World War II, are unable to take part in the struggle actively, but many trembled at the thought past events could repeat themselves. "I felt I was carrying out a great mission in the name of these Jews, who are waiting tensely to see whether once again they will be forced to experience the scenes of devastation and destruction of Jewish cemeteries," he said following the agreement reached with city officials. "I also knew I was acting in the name of all chareidi Jews around the world and I am glad that through great mesirus nefesh we were able to persuade the involved parties to cease the grave desecration in Grodno and to set up a committee that will oversee what takes place in the field. Unfortunately for them a stadium and sports center is very important, much more than the bones of Jews from decades and centuries ago. But we will continue to oversee and be'ezras Hashem Yisborach I hope we will be able to prevent further grave desecration in Grodno."

When the large-scale excavation work was not halted as anticipated, Rav Oritzky tried to accelerate the implementation. "The Deputy Foreign Minister of Byelorussia visited Grodno to tend to the matter and I made contact with the Byelorussian Ministry of Religions several times," he said. "I am optimistic what we agreed upon will be executed. They promised me this and I want to believe they will keep their promise."

 

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