, when he was district chief of siauliai, during the nazi occupation, he wrote about 1,000 documents.o do with the holocaust. so his signature is on 70 of these documents that have to do with the holocaust, creating a ghetto, sending jews to a ghetto, rounding up thejews, collecting their property, distributing their property, and even details of, like, finding barbed wire and nails fora ghetto, so, erm... silvia... to me, this is pretty overwhelming. well, the whole story is overwhelming. i mean, here you sit as an american but, of course, of lithuanian heritage. lithuania, this country that means so much to you still, it seems to me doesn't want to hear your story. you fought this court case to get the plaque honouring your grandfather taken off the academy of sciences. you lost the case. the plaque was then vandalised, but it has been replaced by the authorities, so it still sits there. there's still a school in lithuania named after your grandfather. there's a road named after your grandfather. he's still, in the collective memory, regarded as a hero. how do you feel about that? e