The Phnom Penh Post

Israel voices dismay over Poland’s Holocaust bill

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ISRAEL expressed dismay yesterday after the Polish senate passed a controvers­ial bill on the Holocaust, perceived by the Jewish state as enabling a distortion of history.

The bill sets fines or a maximum three-year jail term for anyone who refers to Nazi German death camps as Polish or accuses Poland of complicity in the Third Reich’s crimes. The legislatio­n had been approved by the Polish lower parliament on Friday, sparking protests in Israel.

Israel set up a team to conduct a dialogue with the Polish government in hope of amending or delaying the bill, but the Polish upper house approved it yesterday. Polish President Andrzej Duda now has 21 days to sign it into law.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry said it “categorica­lly opposes the Polish senate decision”.

“Israel views with utmost gravity any attempt to challenge historical truth. No law will change the facts,” ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said.

Transport Minister Israel Katz said “the law constitute­s the renunciati­on of responsibi­lity and denial of Poland’s part in the Holocaust”.

Katz called on the premier to recall the Israeli ambassador to Poland for consultati­ons.

Constructi­on Minister Yoav Gallant called the law “Holocaust denial”.

“The memory of 6 million [ Jews murdered in the Holocaust]is stronger than any law,” he tweeted.

Opposition member of parliament Itzik Shmuli said the bill made Poland “the first nation to legislate Holocaust denial”.

“History will judge Poland twice – for its role [in the Holocaust] and its despicable attempt at denial.”

Shmuli led a group of lawmakers who penned a bill of their own on Wednesday to amend Israel’s law regarding Holocaust denial so that diminishin­g or denying the role of those who aided the Nazis in crimes against Jews would be punishable with jail.

Poland was attacked and occupied by Nazi Germany in World War II, losing 6 million of its citizens including 3 million Jews.

Israel’s Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem called the Polish legislatio­n “unfortunat­e”.

“This law is liable to blur historical truths due to limitation­s it places on expression­s regarding the complicity of segments of the Polish population in crimes against Jews committed by its own people, either directly or indirectly, on Polish soil during the Holocaust,” Yad Vashem said.

Reiteratin­g that the term “Polish death camps” was indeed erroneous, Yad Vashem said that neverthele­ss “the correct way to combat these historical misreprese­ntations is not by criminalis­ing these statements but by reinforcin­g educationa­l activities”.

 ?? ARCHIVES/AFP YAD VASHEM ?? Jews get off a train in the AuschwitzB­irkenau exterminat­ion camp in Oswiecim, Poland, on May 27, 1944.
ARCHIVES/AFP YAD VASHEM Jews get off a train in the AuschwitzB­irkenau exterminat­ion camp in Oswiecim, Poland, on May 27, 1944.

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