Blame the Nazis for the Holocaust
Blame the Communists for the '68 purge
But don't blame Poles, just because it all happened in Poland
Poland's President Andrzej Duda. © Agencja Gazeta/Dawid Zuchowicz / Reuters
Polish President Andrzej Duda has apologized to Jews who were kicked out of the country in the anti-Semitic campaign of 1968. At the same time though, Duda asserted that Warsaw bears no responsibility for the country’s past.
“The free and independent Poland of today, my generation, is not responsible and does not need to apologize. To those who were driven out then… I’d like to say please forgive the Republic, Poles, the Poland of that time for having carried out such a shameful act,” Duda said as cited by AFP.
Fifty years ago, more than 10,000 Jews were forced to leave Poland after being sacked from their jobs and accused of working against the country by the media and participants of staged mass rallies. The anti-Semitic campaign, led by Interior Minister Mieczyslaw Moczar, was the result of struggles in elite Polish circles.
It was also a response to the Six-Day War of 1967, an Israeli-Arab conflict, which saw the Jewish State occupying East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Golan Heights, drawing the condemnation of the USSR and other Communist states.
Duda’s apology comes at a time when tensions are running high between Warsaw and Jerusalem over new Polish legislation which outlaws blaming Poles for Nazi crimes committed on Polish soil, and makes using the phrase “Polish death camps” illegal. The standoff began as Israel and Jewish groups from around the globe argued that the law was an attempt by the Poles to whitewash their past.
The head of the Polish National Security Council, Pawel Soloch, was to visit Israel in early February, but the visit was suspended while a group of Israeli MPs demanded the country’s Holocaust denial law be amended. The bone of contention was criminalizing efforts to diminish cooperation with the Nazis. Swastikas and anti-Polish slogans were also painted on Poland’s embassy in Tel Aviv.
Polish officials have been adding fuel to the fire by making controversial statements, such as that of Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, who said last month that there were not only Jewish victims, but also “Jewish perpetrators” in the Holocaust. Presidential advisor Andrzej Zybertowicz also explained Israel’s furious reaction to the legislation in terms of a “feeling of shame at the passivity of the Jews during the Holocaust.”
If Poles weren't complicit with the Nazis in the Holocaust, then they also should be blamed for their passivity in allowing such human rights atrocities to be committed on Polish soil.
Polish priest and editor-in-chief of Catholic magazine, Henryk Zielinski, made headlines after claiming that Jews have “different concept of truth”, as something that “serves Israel’s interests.”
That is because 'real truth' usually does serve Israel's interest. How cynical to dismiss truth because it happens to benefit one country.
Poland needs to stop trying to tell the world how wonderful they are and start digging for the real truth. Only then will you be able to purge the ugliness that lies below the surface. Those of you who remember the '68 purge, how did you feel about it? Were you sympathetic to the Jews or were you happy to see them go? The answer to that question will tell you whether you are (were) antisemitic.
Perhaps it would be good to visit the Polin Museum and see how you respond to the March, 1968 purge display? But do it quickly before it disappears.
There is antisemitism in Poland and it's obvious by the statements quoted above. It is also obvious by their willingness to believe the Palestinian Propaganda Machine which is so easily discredited with only a little effort.
An estimated 6 million Jews, around two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe, were killed by the Nazis, including at the Auschwitz, Sobibor and other death camps, which operated on the territory of occupied Poland from 1939 to 1945.
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