Thursday, March 8, 2018

'68 Expulsions

From the BBC:
"Poland's Andrzej Duda apologises to Jews expelled in 1968"

Polish President Andrzej Duda has apologised to Jews driven out of the country by the communist authorities in 1968. Poland regretted the "shameful act", he said, paying tribute to thousands of Jews who were forced out. During his speech some protesters shouted "hypocrite" and "shame", local media report. Relations with Israel have been tense over a law relating to the Nazi Holocaust in World War Two. Talking about the events of 1968 in post-war Poland, Mr Duda said: "What a shame, what a loss for the Polish Republic today that those who left - and some who are maybe dead because of 1968 - are not here with us today... I am so sorry. "The free and independent Poland of today, my generation, is not responsible and does not need to apologise. "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."  Before the speech, he laid a wreath in front of the board at the Gdanski Railway Station in Warsaw, which commemorates Poles of Jewish origin forced to leave the country.

What happened in 1968?
An estimated 15,000 people - half the country's Jewish population - were stripped of their citizenship and kicked out of Poland. The purge followed nationwide student protests that had begun after a decision to close down a patriotic play by Poland's national poet, Adam Mickiewicz. Protests had quickly spread across the country before being crushed with considerable violence. Many of the students and professors were of Jewish origin and the communist party used this to purge Jews from public life.

Why is there a row over the Nazi Holocaust?
Diplomats from Poland and Israel met in Jerusalem last week in an effort to resolve the row sparked by the Holocaust law, which came into effect last Thursday. The law makes it illegal to accuse the Polish nation or state of complicity in Nazi war crimes. Israel says it could criminalise some survivors whose testimony implicates Poles.


^There was anti-Semitism in modern Poland before the Nazis (the Ghetto Benches of 1935,) there was anti-Semitism in Nazi-occupied Poland (no support given to the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising,) there was anti-Semitism in Communist Poland after the Nazis (Kielce pogrom of 1946, the 1968 forced expulsion of Jews) and there is anti-Semitism in Poland today (the 2013 ban on Kosher ritual slaughter, the 2018 Holocaust Bill, etc.) I say this with having Polish ancestry and having worked at the USHMM. Poland is a great country and like every country it has it's dark moments that need to be addressed openly and fully so that they aren't allowed to happen again. When remembering the dark/bad things that happened we need to also remember the good things that happened. More Christian Poles saved Polish Jews than in any other country during the German occupation. Poland was the only German-occupied country that didn't have a collaborationist government. There was a Polish Government-in-exile in London and after 1941 a Polish-Government-in-exile in Moscow. So remembering the bad we can also remember the good, but you can't only remember the good. The true sign of any great nation is one that remembers everything (good and bad) that has made it what it is today. ^




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