Rachel Kostanian is a Lithuanian Jewish activist, founder and longtime director of a Holocaust museum in Vilnius, and book author. She is a recipient of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Early life
Kostanian was born Rachel Zivelchinski in Lithuania. Kostanian's father, Yosif Zivelchinski, was a judge in Šiauliai, and her mother Bluma (née Danzig) was a Yiddish teacher.[1]: 142
The family followed Bundism.[2]: 39 Kostanian and her mother escaped the Holocaust in 1941 because they were taken to the Soviet Union together with other families of Soviet officials. They lived in Balachna near Gorky until Kostanian was sent with 200 other Lithuanian, Jewish and non-Jewish children to a children's home in the Urals.[1]: 145 At the end of 1944, Kostanian returned to Vilnius. After finishing high school, she studied law at Vilnius University,[1]: 159 and earned a degree in law.[3] She could not find work as a lawyer.[1]: 159 She went on to work in Kirovakan as an English teacher at a music school.[3]
In 1989, Emanuelis Zingeris offered Kostanian the position of Scientific Secretary for the Museum.[2]: 40 Under her leadership, the Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum with exhibits centering on the Holocaust, was established.[4] The museum opened in 1991 in the so-called "Green House", formerly part of the Museum of the October Revolution.[5] Kostanian expanded the museum's inventory of personal narratives[6] by placing advertisements in local and international media asking for "letters, books, photographs, manuscripts, clothing, dishes."[1]: 163 [7]
A first conference on the Holocaust in Lithuania was held in Vilnius in 1993, on the 50th anniversary of the liquidation of the Vilnius ghetto. Zingeris and Kostanian jointly published the proceedings of the conference in 1995.[8] In 2020, she participated in an international conference Remembering for the Future - The Holocaust in an Age of Genocide in Oxford.[2]: 42 [9] From this meeting, she wrote a paper describing the activities of Jews in the ghetto in the fields of health care, culture, art, science, music, sports, and religion.[2]: 42
Selected publications
Kostanian, Rachilė (2004). Spiritual resistance in the Vilna Ghetto. Vilnius: Vilna Gaon Jewish State Museum. ISBN978-9986-9387-2-9.
Kostanian, Rachilė; Atamukas, Solomon (1996-01-01). The Jewish State Museum of Lithuania. The Museum.
^Shivaun Woolfson: The Memory Bearer: Rachel Kostanian, 2014, p. 163; see also Ekaterina Makhotina: Memories of War - War of Memories. Lithuania and the Second World War, 2017, p. 338.
^Esther Goldberg: Historian whose task is remembrance of the Holocaust. Rachel Kostanian. 2010, p. B42; cf. John K. Roth, Elisabeth Maxwell, Margot Levy, Wendy Whitworth (eds.): Remembering for the Future - The Holocaust in an Age of Genocide. Palgrave McMillan, Basingstoke 2011, Vol. I, p. 6.
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