Applying for a Job Nobody Should Ever Want |
Lithuania routinely condemns Russian revanchism, historical falsification, disinformation, and propaganda. It presents itself as a frontline democracy—morally opposite to Moscow, aligned with truth, transparency, and the post-war European order.
That posture must now face a test it cannot outsource.
I have applied for a position inside the Lithuanian state apparatus that no honest person should ever want: a role requiring confrontation with Lithuania’s own documented participation in the Holocaust, its post-1990 institutional denials, and its sustained refusal to correct the historical record after notice. The full application is here: https://grantgochin.substack.com/p/formal-application
The underlying institutional analysis, with primary documentation and embedded sources, is here: https://grantgochin.substack.com/p/an-institution-no-one-honest-can
No rational person would seek this job for advancement. The work guarantees institutional hostility, political isolation, and reputational risk. I submitted my candidacy anyway—not to rehabilitate Lithuania’s image, but to determine whether its public self-description has any factual grounding.
I am a Lithuanian citizen. I offered to relocate to Lithuania full-time. I offered to forgo salary. I submitted not merely a candidacy, but a structured program of corrective action grounded in documentary evidence, institutional audit, and procedural reform.
No other candidate is likely to combine comparable subject-matter depth, archival reach, legal familiarity, and external evidentiary support. No other candidate has publicly proposed a defined program of action.
This was not a symbolic application. It was an operational one.
If Lithuania hires me, it aligns its internal conduct with the standards it demands of Russia. If it does not, its denunciations of Russian disinformation become difficult to distinguish from rhetoric.
Lithuania’s Russia Rhetoric Meets Its Own Record
Lithuania accuses the Russian state of historical distortion, denial of crimes, and the weaponization of archives.
Those accusations are accurate.
They are also symmetrical.
For more than three decades, Lithuania has:
attributed local mass murder to generic “Nazis” while suppressing Lithuanian administrative agency;
honored perpetrators as national figures;
resisted correction after documented notice;
used state-funded institutions to stabilize contested narratives;
substituted commemoration for accountability.
Hiring a candidate whose mandate is factual correction rather than narrative maintenance would break that symmetry. Refusal without transparent justification preserves it.
The Unfulfilled Commitments to Truth
Lithuania’s accession to EU and NATO occurred in a moral context. Jewish organizations, restitution bodies, and Holocaust institutions engaged Lithuania on the understanding that historical truth would be part of its Western legitimacy. In the 1990s and early 2000s, Lithuanian officials made repeated commitments to tell the truth about their Holocaust history.
Those commitments were explicit.
They were never fulfilled.
Instead, Lithuania perfected a model of acknowledgment without agency—memory without correction.
This application offers a clean, lawful mechanism to address that failure.
Restitution Requires Truth
Jewish organizations that engaged Lithuania on restitution acted in good faith to secure material redress for surviving communities and their descendants. Restitution matters. It restored a minuscule fraction of stolen assets and absolved Lithuania’s legal continuity, without imposing conditions of truthfulness.
But restitution does not complete justice.
Justice requires truth. It requires clarity about who was murdered, who administered the process, and how the state now represents that history.
As I previously argued in the Times of Israel, https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/restitution-without-truth-is-betrayal/ restitution without truth is betrayal. That argument was not directed at Jewish institutions, nor at restitution itself. It was a defense of the victims. Money cannot substitute for historical honesty. Compensation cannot replace acknowledgment of responsibility.
If restitution proceeded while factual disputes about agency and institutional responsibility remained unresolved, then those organizations now carry an obligation—not of guilt, but of clarity. They must state publicly whether truth is inseparable from justice, or whether restitution was treated as a sufficient endpoint.
This application provides a concrete test. Supporting it affirms that restitution and truth are inseparable. Declining to address it requires explanation—not to me, but to the historical record. This is not about money. It is about whether justice is understood as a moral process or a transactional endpoint. Does the memory of the victims matter, or just the acquisition of a fraction of their assets.
Institutions That Have Hosted or Engaged Lithuanian Officials
A number of Jewish institutions have hosted Lithuanian officials or partnered with the Lithuanian government in public forums on Holocaust memory and Jewish history, including:
American Jewish Committee
World Jewish Restitution Organization
Los Angeles Holocaust Museum
Tali Nates and the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre
These engagements were conducted under the banner of truth, education, and memory. That framing now requires consistency.
Silence is not neutrality. It is continuity.
Jewish Leaders Honored by Lithuania
Lithuania has awarded high state honors to prominent Jewish leaders, including:
Acceptance of state honors does not imply complicity. It does, however, create standing.
These leaders should state publicly whether Lithuania must demonstrate factual accountability as a condition of moral partnership.
Legal Transparency and Equal Treatment
Because I am a Lithuanian citizen, because I offered full-time relocation, because I waived salary, and because I submitted a structured corrective program, any rejection must meet objective, transparent, and legally defensible criteria.
If I am treated unfairly or discriminatorily in the evaluation process, I will pursue remedies available under Lithuanian and European Union law. That is not a threat. It is the ordinary operation of rights within the EU legal order.
Transparency protects Lithuania as much as it protects applicants. This is not a private employment matter. It is a public diagnostic.
This application is the clearest, documented, and public path for Lithuania to demonstrate that its stated commitments to truth are real and enforceable.
If Lithuania hires someone whose mandate is correction rather than curation—truth rather than optics—it signals a break with post-Soviet narrative practice and alignment with Western accountability norms.
If it does not, the distinction between Lithuanian and Russian memory policy collapses into rhetoric.
This is not about me. I am replaceable.
It is about whether a European state that invokes history as a moral weapon against others is prepared to submit its own history to the same standard.
Closing: Commitment Without Office
I am realistic about the likelihood of appointment. That is not the point.
Truthful memory is not contingent on office, salary, or institutional acceptance. I pledge—without qualification—that I will not abandon factual integrity regarding the murder of Lithuanian Jews. That commitment does not expire with this application, and it does not depend on state approval.
The position would provide a lawful mechanism for correction. If it is denied, the obligation to pursue truth does not disappear.
The principle is not.
The application has been submitted. The evidentiary record exists. The response must now be public.