From the BBC:
“World War Two: German president
asks Poland to forgive Nazi 'tyranny'”
German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier has asked Poland's forgiveness for Nazi "tyranny", 80
years on from the start of World War Two. Mr Steinmeier and other world leaders
are in Poland to commemorate the outbreak of the conflict. Speaking in the
capital, Warsaw, Mr Steinmeier apologised for the "horrific war"
unleashed by Germany. "This war was a German crime," he said in a
speech. His Polish counterpart, Andrzej Duda, and US Vice-President Mike Pence
also delivered speeches in front of crowds and heads of state on Pilsudski
Square. Mr Duda denounced Nazi Germany's
attack as "an act of barbarity", while Mr Pence praised Polish
people, saying they "never lost hope". Earlier on Sunday, two other
commemorative events were held in the cities of Wielun and Gdansk, where the
first German attacks of the war happened. Mr Steinmeier and Mr Duda lit candles
at a commemorative memorial "Wielun
was to show what kind of war it would be, that it would be a total war, a war
without rules, a destructive war," Mr Duda said. Later on Sunday, Mr Duda appeared to criticise
Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, alluding to a recent "return
of imperialist tendencies" in Europe. In a warning to European leaders, Mr Duda said
"turning a blind eye" to this amounts to "consent to further
attacks". Poland suffered some of
the worst losses of World War Two - about six million of its citizens were
killed, up to half of them Jews. Eighty
years on, Poland is still demanding compensation from Germany for the death and
destruction inflicted. Recent calls for reparations by Polish Prime Minister
Mateusz Morawiecki, whose governing Law and Justice (PiS) party has been
accused of fanning nationalist sentiment, have fuelled tensions with Germany. A
Polish parliamentary committee is still assessing the amount of compensation,
but Germany argues the matter is settled.
How did World War Two start?
At dawn on 1 September 1939, the
German Luftwaffe (air force) bombed the city of Wielun, a town with no military
significance. Thousands of people are estimated to have died in the bombings,
designed to sow terror among the civilian population. After the attack, ordered
by Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, Britain gave Germany an ultimatum to cease
military operations. When the ultimatum
was ignored, Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September,
igniting a six-year conflict that would kill tens of millions of people.
How is the anniversary being
marked?
Three commemorative events were
held on Sunday in Warsaw, Wielun and the former military post of Westerplatte,
in the coastal city of Gdansk. In
Westerplatte, where Nazi German battleships attacked a Polish military base on
1 September 1939, Mr Morawiecki and European Commission Vice-President Frans
Timmermans attended a dawn remembrance. At
the same time, Mr Steinmeier pleaded for "forgiveness" at a ceremony
held in the Polish city of Wielun, where the first German bombs of the conflict
fell. At the ceremony, which began shortly after 04:00 (02:00 GMT), a minute's
silence was observed in memory of the victims. Later in Warsaw, international
leaders rang a bell of peace and lay wreathes at the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier, a central memorial in the Polish capital.
Who is attending?
In all, around 40 foreign
delegations were expected to join the commemorations, according to the Polish
presidency. They include German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French Prime
Minister Edouard Philippe. But world leaders including Russian President
Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump, France's Emmanuel Macron and UK
Prime Minister Boris Johnson were not present. Mr Trump had been due to attend but cancelled
the visit abruptly, sending Mr Pence in his place, as the US east coast braced
for Hurricane Dorian. Mr Putin was not
invited, unlike 10 years ago, when he attended commemorations remembering the
estimated 600,000 Soviet soldiers killed driving out the Nazis. But on this
occasion, Poland changed the criteria, inviting from Europe only members of the
European Union or its Eastern Partnership (which includes six former Soviet
countries). Relations between Russia and Poland, always strained by the legacy
of Soviet domination after the war, have plummeted since Russia annexed Crimea.
Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for Russia's foreign ministry, called the decision
not to invite Mr Putin "stupid".
^ Germany has always talked the
good talk (well since 1945) in terms of being sorry for World War 2 and the
countless crimes it committed throughout occupied Europe and North Africa, but
when you look at the actions the German Government has done since 1945 to atone
for its crimes there really isn’t much there. We all know actions speak louder
than words so that says a lot even 80 years on. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49541111
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