WIESENTHAL CENTER AND “TARGUM SHLISHI” FOUNDATION LAUNCH INNOVATIVE AD CAMPAIGN AS SECOND STAGE OF “OPERATION: LAST CHANCE”
The Simon Wiesenthal Center and the Targum
Shlishi Foundation have launched the second stage of their “Operation: Last Chance” campaign which offers financial rewards for information leading to the prosecution
and punishment of Nazi war criminals in the Baltics, by initiating
an innovative ad campaign which utilizes authentic Holocaust-era
photos of Nazi atrocities to urge informants to supply the
Center with incriminating information against local Holocaust
perpetrators. The ads, which have already appeared in Lithuania
and are slated to run in Latvia and Estonia during the coming
two weeks, note the tragic fates of the Baltic Jewish communities
and the role-played by local collaborators in their liquidation.
In Lithuania, for example, the ad noted, “Lithuanian
Jewry did not disappear. They were murdered in Ponar (Vilnius),
Fort IX (Kaunas), Kuziai Forest (Siauliai) and over a hundred
other places of mass murder…”In Latvia the ad, whose publication will coincide with the anniversary of the
large-scale annihilation of 30,000 Riga Jews (on November 30
and December 8, 1941), will focus on that atrocity, the worst
in Latvia’s history.
“Our goal is not only to
notify the public about “Operation: Last Chance,” but to inform people about the critical role played by local Nazi collaborators
in each of the Baltic countries (as well as in other countries)
in the implementation of the Final Solution. In that respect,
while our immediate focus is on justice and the prosecution
of those responsible, our larger goal is education. Although
these countries have already been admitted to NATO, they have
a long way to go in confronting their World War II past and
the active participation of numerous Lithuanians, Latvians
and Estonians in the crimes of the Holocaust, “ said Dr. Efraim Zuroff, the Center’s chief Nazi-hunter and the coordinator of the project.
“Operation: Last Chance is
designed to arouse the conscience of these societies and help
them confront their pasts. It’s about justice not revenge. And therein is an important message for today’s terrorists from Al-Quaida, that the guilty will be hunted for decades, if necessary,” said Targum Shlishi founder Aryeh Rubin.
For more information please contact: 972-51-214-156
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