Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08TIRANA119
2008-02-16 10:09:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Tirana
Cable title:  

HONORING ALBANIA'S RECORD OF RESCUING JEWS DURING THE

Tags:  PREL KPAO PHUM PGOV AL 
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RUEHLZ RUEHPOD RUEHROV RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHTI #0119 0471009
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 161009Z FEB 08
FM AMEMBASSY TIRANA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 6700
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS TIRANA 000119 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/PPD AND EUR/SCE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL KPAO PHUM PGOV AL
SUBJECT: HONORING ALBANIA'S RECORD OF RESCUING JEWS DURING THE
HOLOCAUST

REFTEL: 07 TIRANA 1024

UNCLAS TIRANA 000119

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/PPD AND EUR/SCE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL KPAO PHUM PGOV AL
SUBJECT: HONORING ALBANIA'S RECORD OF RESCUING JEWS DURING THE
HOLOCAUST

REFTEL: 07 TIRANA 1024


1. SUMMARY: Warren Miller, Chairman of the U.S Commission for the
Preservation of America's Heritage
Abroad, visited Tirana January 27-29 to take part in the country's
first official ceremony marking Holocaust Remembrance Day. Miller's
visit included addressing a plenary session of Parliament,
participation in a remembrance ceremony with Prime Minister Berisha,
receiving a medal of gratitude from President Topi, meetings with
the Speaker of Parliament and other high-level government officials,
and a meeting with Albanian rescuers and Jewish survivors. He also
appeared on a popular TV talk show, attended a Holocaust-themed
student art competition, and participated in a promotion of the
Albanian translation of Elie Wiesel's "Night." Miller's visit
garnered local and international media coverage, raising the
country's positive profile by making Albanians' heroic rescue of
Jewish refugees during WWII more widely known. END SUMMARY.


2. Warren Miller, Chairman of the U.S Commission for the
Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad, visited Tirana January
27-29 to take part in the country's first official ceremony marking
Holocaust Remembrance Day. In what was the centerpiece of the
visit, Miller received a rare invitation to address a plenary
session of Parliament. Prime Minister Berisha, representatives of
Jewish and rescuer families, and members of the diplomatic corps
were also present for the address, which received live TV coverage.
Miller thanked the people of Albania for their heroism in saving the
Jews during the Nazi Genocide, remarking, "When a dark shroud of
evil fell upon Europe, and most European government officials
refused to give sanctuary to Jews, Albania was a haven and a shining
example of goodness...I say thank you Albania for your efforts, both
in the not-so-distant past and in the present, to promote tolerance
and help make this a better world. You have set an example for
other nations to follow."


3. Parliamentary Speaker Jozefina Topalli opened the plenary session
by forcefully expressing the need to punish all acts of inhumanity,
from the Holocaust to contemporary terrorism, such as the September

11 attacks. She described Albanian actions during the Nazi Genocide
as a great history, a story of a nation that did not hesitate to
save Jewish refugees. The victims of the Holocaust, Topalli said,
deserve the deepest homage, and the Albanians who protected Jews
should be "placed on a pedestal for exhibiting the highest and most
beautiful of human qualities." Their actions are a source of
national pride, she said.


4. In other highlights of the visit, President Topi awarded a medal
of gratitude to Miller for his and the Commission's work to promote
Albania's image abroad. Miller, with the Ambassador and the Israeli
Ambassador, also took part in the country's first official Holocaust
Remembrance Ceremony held at the Office of the Prime Minister.
Other commemorative activities that Miller attended included a
Holocaust-themed student art competition and the promotion of the
Albanian translation of Elie Wiezel's "Night." In addition, Miller
appeared on a popular TV talk show.


5. During an informal lunch with representatives of rescuer and
Jewish families, Miller sought deeper understanding of the
motivations that caused ordinary citizens to risk their safety for
strangers. While Jews were being deported and murdered elsewhere in
Europe, Albanian citizens quietly offered protection to all Jews who
asked for it. No authority told them to do so, nor did they ask
anything in return. According to official and unofficial sources,
Albanian families successfully hid between 1,200 and 2,000 Jews from
various countries, making Albania the only country in Europe to have
a larger Jewish population after the war than before. In response
to Miller's question on motivations, family members offered no
eloquent philosophical explanations. Instead, they referred to
Albania's long tradition of religious tolerance, visible in its
Hellenic era mosaics, and its ancient honor code, in which the guest
in one's house has equal status with God.


6. COMMENT: Albanians' rescue of Jews during the terrible years of
the Nazi genocide exemplifies the extraordinary religious and ethnic
tolerance that is part of this country's cultural fabric. Unlike
that of most other European countries, Albania has a great story of
compassion and heroism to tell the world. With the Gershman photo
exhibition (see reftel) and Miller's high profile visit to Tirana,
that story is becoming better known. In addition, the Albanian
Government plans to work closely with the U.S Commission for the
Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad to build a permanent
memorial to Holocaust victims, which will commemorate both Albanian
rescuers and those they saved. Albanians anticipate that memorial
will serve as a focal point for future Holocaust commemorations.
END COMMENT.

WITHERS