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Email: muziejus@jmuseum.lt
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The Pit of Life and Torment
 

Saulius Kuklianskis, the pharmacist from Veisiejai, his wife Zinaida, the physician, with their three children Moshe, Anna and Samuel lived in Alytus on the eve of the war. Just after the Nazi Germany occupied Lithuania, the family lost Zinaida Kukliansky, still young, careful, loving and beloved mother of three. The Veisiejai pharmacist and his three children managed to survive.

The dramatic way of this family survival – the escape from the occupied Lithuania, a year and a half spent in Grodno Ghetto, the escape from the Grodno Ghetto and return to Lithuania – was full of constant danger and fighting for the life. Saulius Kukliansky and his children Moshe, Ana and Samuel after return to Lithuania on February 1943, hid in the forests near Druskininkai during a year and a half. They received help from the people – inhabitants of four villages: Sventijanskas, Vainiūnai, Macevičiai and Bugieda.

Saulius Kukliansky and his children Moshe, Ana and Samuel after return to Lithuania on February 1943, hid in the forests near Druskininkai during a year and a half. They received help from the people – inhabitants of four villages: Sventijanskas, Vainiūnai, Macevičiai and Bugieda. All the Veisiejai Jews with many Kukliansky’s relatives among them were killed on the 3-d of November 1941 in Katkiškės.

Although 70 years passed already from the beginning of these events, Moshe Kukliansky forgot nothing. His words are: neither the bad misery, unjustified hatred, the death wait and smell each moment of these long three years, and nor the good heart, wish to help, friendliness, the emotional warmth – that was the source of hope and strength for them, – the donating and, at last, the survival.

Moshe Kukliansky, living in Israel, today is the sole witness of these events. His memoirs were used in the movie. The movie was shot in the places mentioned: in Grodno, in the beautiful Dzūkija. The large number of Moshe’s, Anna’s and Samuel’s Kukliansky children and grandchildren participated in this work together with the rescuers’ descendants.

The documentary created by:

Lilija Kopač  –  director and the scenario author

Danutė Selčinskaja – the scenario co-author

Algis Liutkevičius – the operator

edited by Anatolijus Tetiušinas

Modified: 2/27/2013
Information
2017.03.01

 

 If you want to order a guided tour or educational programme please contact us in advance:
tel. 
 +370 60163612, 
email:
 muziejus@jmuseum.lt

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If you want to order an educational programme, please contact us at:  +370 5 212 0112,
+370 6 8986 191 or via email
muziejus@jmuseum.lt

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   Tolerance Center 
(Naugarduko St. 10/2) 
working hours:

Monday,Thursday: 10:00-18:00
Tuesday, Wednesday: 10:00-18:00
Friday: 10:00-16:00
Saturday-closed,
Sunday: 10:00-16:00

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  Holocaust Exposition 
(Pamėnkalnio St. 12) 
working hours:

Monday-Thursday: 9:00-17:00
Friday: 9:00-16:00
Saturday-closed
Sunday: 10:00-16:00

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  Memorial Museum of Paneriai
(Agrastų St. 15, Aukštieji Paneriai)
working hours:
Monday-closed
Tuesday–Sunday 9:00-17:00
From October until May the Memorial Museum is open by appointment only.

If you are interested in visiting the museum/the memorial with a tour guide, please contact us at least a day in advance at
+370 699 90 384  or via email mantas.siksnianas@jmuseum.lt

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© Penki Kontinentai 2006. All rights received.