From the AP:
“Yad Vashem
concerned over Polish case against researchers”
Israel's Yad
Vashem Holocaust Memorial said Thursday it was “deeply disturbed” by the
implications of a libel case in Poland in which two prominent Holocaust
researchers were ordered to apologize to a woman for allegedly slandering her
uncle over his wartime actions. Lawyers for 81-year-old Filomena Leszczynska
argued that the scholars had slandered her late uncle, Edward Malinowski, by
suggesting he had helped kill Jews during World War II. The family says he
saved Jews during the German occupation of Poland. At stake in the case was
Polish national pride, according to the plaintiffs, and according to the
defendants, the future of independent research into an extremely sensitive
issue. In a statement, Yad Vashem stressed the importance of academic freedom
and said any attempt to limit it through political or legal pressure was
“unacceptable.” It defended the two researchers, Barbara Engelking and Jan
Grabowski, and the book they co-edited and partly wrote: “Night Without End:
The Fate of Jews in Selected Counties of Occupied Poland." “As with all
research, this volume about the fate of Jews during the Holocaust is part of an
ongoing discussion and as such is subject to critique in academia, but not in
courts,” Yad Vashem said. Grabowski, a Polish-Canadian history professor at the
University of Ottawa, and Engelking, founder and director of the Polish Center
for Holocaust Research in Warsaw, are among Poland’s most prominent Holocaust
researchers. The University of Ottawa issued a statement pledging its
“unwavering support” to Grabowski and reiterating its commitment to academic
freedom.
Poland was
occupied by Nazi Germany during the war and its population subjected to mass
murder and slave labor. While 3 million of the country’s 3.3 million Jews were
murdered, so were more than 2 million mostly Christian Poles. Poles resisted
the Nazis at home and abroad and never collaborated as a state with the Third
Reich. Thousands of Poles have been recognized by Yad Vashem for risking their
own lives to save Jews. Yet amid the more than five years of occupation, there
were also individual Poles who betrayed Jews to the Germans. The topic was
taboo during the communist era and each new revelation of Polish wrongdoing in
recent years has sparked a backlash. Leszczynska has been backed by the Polish
League Against Defamation, which is ideologically aligned with Poland’s ruling
party. The scholars believe the case is part of a government-backed effort to
promote its historical narrative. Stanislaw Zaryn, the spokesman for the secret
services in Poland, accused the media of “slandering Poland in the
international arena” and harming the country's “information security” by
reporting on the case.
^ It is sad to
see this verdict. Poland chose national pride over the truth. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/yad-vashem-concerned-over-polish-170421874.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.