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A chilling wartime diary of the destruction of the
Lithuanian/Polish Jews, recorded by a non-Jew About sixty thousand
Jews from Wilno (Vilnius, Jewish Vilna) and surrounding townships
in present-day Lithuania were murdered by the Nazis and their
Lithuanian collaborators in huge pits on the outskirts of Ponary.
Over a period of several years, Kazimierz Sakowicz, a Polish
journalist who lived in the village of Ponary, was an eyewitness to
the murder of these Jews as well as to the murders of thousands of
non-Jews on an almost daily basis. He chronicled these events in a
diary that he kept at great personal risk. Written as a simple
account of what Sakowicz witnessed, the diary is devoid of personal
involvement or identification with the victims. It is thus a unique
document: testimony from a bystander, an "objective" observer
without an emotional or a political agenda, to the extermination of
the Jews of the city known as "the Jerusalem of Lithuania."
Sakowicz did not survive the war, but much of his diary did.
Painstakingly pieced together by Rahel Margolis from scraps of
paper hidden in various locations, the diary was published in
Polish in 1999. It is here published in English for the first time,
extensively annotated by Yitzhak Arad to guide readers through the
events at Ponary.
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