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Mobile Culture Studies. The Journal 4 2o18
Katy Beinart | Khlebosolny/Bread and Salt 25
Jatkowa Street, Vilnius, Lithuania: Ar pamenate ÄŻ Meisels? (2012)27
Arriving in Vilnius, where we were
staying with an artist friend, we
explored the old city, which was also
the location of the former Jewish
Ghetto. A memorial plaque showed
the location of the âsmallâ and âbigâ
ghettos (figure 10), but few other
physical remnants of the heritage
of the Jewish community remained
in these sites. Historically, Vilnius
had been the centre of a large Jew-
ish community and a focus of Judaic
religious culture in Europe; it was
known as âthe Jerusalem of the
northâ.28 According to the 1897 cen-
sus, Jews constituted 38.8 per cent of
the cityâs population, amounting to
64,000 individuals.29 By the early twentieth century, half of the cityâs population of 120,000
were Jews, most of whom spoke Yiddish. The city was also a focus for the Yiddish language, and
it was home to the famed Yiddish Institute of Higher Learning (YIVO), which was relocated to
New York in 1940,30 as well as the Strashum Library, which housed the worldâs largest collection
of Yiddish language books.31 Under the Nazis, Jews were corralled first into the âsmallâ ghetto
and later into the âbigâ ghetto, from where they were subsequently taken to be liquidated.32
We had been in touch with a distant relative on a family tree website who had told us that
we had ancestors, the Meisels, who had lived in the old city in the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries. Rabbi Moishe Meisels, Rebeccaâs and my fifth great-grandfather, was
born in the city in 1759 and was a renowned rabbi, leading the Chassidic community in Vilnius
until 1816 when he emigrated to what was then Palestine.33 According to Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak
Schneersohn, Meisels also acted as a spy for the Russian army during the Napoleonic wars, and
was fluent in German, Russian, Polish and French.34 In the local archives we found records
27 Katy and Rebecca Beinart, Ar pamenate ÄŻ Meisels?, performance, photographic documentation, 27 July 2012.
28 Carmelo Lisciotto, âThe Vilnius ghetto: Jewish life in Vilnius/Vilnaâ (Holocaust Education & Archive Research
Team, 2007), Holocaust Research Project website: <http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/ghettos/vilnius.
html> [accessed 10 July 2017].
29 Lisciotto, âThe Vilnius Ghettoâ.
30 YIVO website: <https://www.yivo.org/History-of-YIVO> [accessed 10 July 2017].
31 Lisciotto, âThe Vilnius Ghettoâ.
32 Lisciotto, âThe Vilnius Ghettoâ.
33 See âBonaparte-and-the-Chassidâ, Chabad website: <http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1155/jew-
ish/Bonaparte-and-the-Chassid.htm> [accessed 10 July 2017]; originally published in Yanki Tauber, Once Upon
a Chassid: The Wisdom and the Whimsy, the Fire and the Joy: Stories, Anecdotes and Sayings (Brooklyn, NY:
Kehot Publication Society, 1994).
34 âBonaparte-and-the-Chassidâ. Figure 10: Ghetto map, Vilnius.
Photograph: Katy Beinart. Source: author.
Mobile Culture Studies
The Journal, Band 4/2018
- Titel
- Mobile Culture Studies
- Untertitel
- The Journal
- Band
- 4/2018
- Herausgeber
- Karl Franzens University Graz
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- deutsch, englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 182
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Mobile Culture Studies The Journal