Pope to end Lithuania visit at
KGB Museum
External wall of the Museum of Occupation and Freedom Fights in Vilnius. |
Pope Francis on Sunday wraps up the first leg of his visit
to Baltic Nations paying tribute to the victims of the bloody repression
perpetrated by the Soviet regime in Lithuania.
By Linda Bordoni
The Museum of Occupations and Freedom Fights,
with which Pope Francis ends is two-day apostolic visit to
Lithuania is housed in the former headquarters of the KGB: a stark
reminder never to forget the mistakes and the atrocities of the past.
The Museum’s bloody history began when this former gymnasium
became the headquarters of the Gestapo during the Nazi occupation of Lithuania
in 1941. It was then re-occupied by the Soviet Secret Police – the KGB – when
the Nazis left in 1944. The KGB stayed until 1991 when Lithuania became
independent from the Soviet Union.
The museum is divided into two parts – the upper two floors
document the Lithuanian partisans’ resistance against the Soviet occupiers, the
deportations of Lithuanians to Siberia and day-to-day life in the Lithuanian
Socialist Soviet Republic. The other parts of the museum are the prison cells,
and execution and torture chambers in the basement.
The cells are exactly how the KGB officers left them upon
leaving Lithuania in 1991.
The grounds are where the bodies of those tortured in
Vilnius’ interior prison by the forerunner of the KGB – the NKVD/MGB – were
buried between 1944-1947.
Amongst those who were interrogated and imprisoned here is
Jesuit priest Sigitas Tamkevičius, an important figure in the Lithuanian
resistance to Soviet occupation. Arrested in 1983, he served 10 years in prison
and in exile in Siberia before becoming the auxiliary bishop of Kaunas in 1991
and the archbishop of Kaunas in 1996.
In the company of Archbishop Tamkevičius, Pope Francis, will
visit the Museum on Sunsay afternoon and utter a prayer of remembrance and hope
for the people of Lithuania.
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