No more crimes against humanity, says Urmas Paet.
TALLINN - According to the Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Minister Urmas Paet opened the exhibit in the Museum of Occupation entitled “Convoy no. 73 - Convoy with a Singular Fate,” which is dedicated to the memory of the 900 French Jews who were deported to Tallinn and Kaunas in 1944. Paet stated that the crimes against humanity committed during the Second World War still require Estonia’s attention. “We must work together in the name of getting archives opened to everyone, increasing peoples’ awareness of what happened, and making sure that these crimes against humanity are never repeated,” Paet emphasized.
“To this day we do not know, and we will probably never know, exactly how many people sentenced to death were brought to occupied Estonia. People became numbers that were only known to the planners and implementers of the crimes,” stated Paet, adding that a concrete list of Holocaust victims is still being worked on.
“We can try, but we will never completely understand what those people were feeling, the ones who were sent from occupied France to occupied Estonia in May 1944 as part of ‘Convoy no. 73’,” said Paet. “In a moment, the future was slashed and what used to be Europe became, for the captive peoples, a uniformly grey spider web of railway stations and concentration camps, in which each thread served a role in the devilish system,” the foreign minister added.
Paet stated that within the past decades an invaluable amount of work has been done in Holocaust research and preserving the memory of the Holocaust. “Estonia gained the opportunity to do such things after it was freed from Soviet occupation in 1991,” Paet explained.
According to the foreign minister, out of the 79 convoys that deported French Jews from Drancy, in France, between March 1942 and August 1944, only one was sent to the Baltics, for reasons that are still unknown. It was convoy number 73, which departed from Drancy on May 15, 1944. Of the people in the convoy, nearly 600 men were sent to Fort IX in Kaunas, and five cars carrying about 300 people moved on to Tallinn, where they most likely arrived on May 20. On Sept. 1, 34 survivors of convoy no. 73 were deported to the Stutthof concentration camp. Only 22 survivors returned to France in 1945.
Other participants at the opening of the exhibit were chairwoman of the Estonian Jewish Community Alla Jakobson, director of the Museum of Occupation Heiki Ahonen, and French Ambassador to Estonia Frederic Billet. The exhibit dedicated to the memory of those deported in convoy no. 73 was created by the association “Relatives and Friends of the Deported in Convoy 73” with the support of the Shoah Memorial Fund, the French Embassy in Estonia, and the Estonian Embassy in France.
According to the ministry, both France and Estonia are members of the Task Force for International Co-operation on Holocaust Education, Remembrance and Research and help to preserve the memory of the Holocaust as well as provide a responsible education for youth, who will shape Estonia’s future.
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