National Post (National Edition)

Holocaust ruling a jolt to history, scholar says

- COLIN PERKEL

A renowned Holocaust scholar ordered by a Polish court to apologize for suggesting a man helped the Nazis kill Jews said on Tuesday the ruling was a direct blow to sensitive academic research.

The ruling, said Prof. Jan Grabowski, with the University of Ottawa, had to be seen in the context of efforts by Poland’s nationalis­t government to scrub Polish complicity in the murder of millions of Jews during the Second World War.

“This is a fairly unpreceden­ted verdict which strikes at the heart of what I as a historian do,” Grabowski said.

“This verdict, if upheld on our appeal, which will follow, means an end to independen­t research of the history of the Holocaust and, I would argue, of many other parts of Polish history which run contrary to the official myths and legends espoused by the Polish state today.”

Nine researcher­s, including Grabowski, spent six years writing a 1,700-page book called Night Without End: The Fate of Jews in Selected Counties of Occupied Poland, released in Polish in mid-2018. The tome contradict­s the official line that Poles were exclusivel­y victims of wartime atrocities.

“The results of this research have been greeted warmly by academia, and they were greeted with absolute fury by the nationalis­ts governing in Poland right now and of course their electorate,” said Grabowski, who was born and raised in the East European country.

The backlash prompted one nationalis­t group to back a lawsuit by a woman against the professor and his co-editor, Barbara Engelking.

The woman claimed that the book had defamed her uncle by citing a Jewish survivor as saying the man had helped the Nazis find and kill 22 Jews in eastern Poland in 1943.

“I became sort of a face to hate,” Grabowski said. “There are bad people out there, with vast support from different states, who want to write themselves a new history.”

Last week, the judge ordered the editors to make a written apology for “providing inaccurate informatio­n” and “violating his honour.” The judge stopped short of ordering monetary compensati­on.

Defence lawyers were awaiting the judge’s written reasons before launching an appeal, a process Grabowski likened to diving into a swimming pool without knowing how much water was in it.

At the same time, he suggested the deck was stacked, pointing to the avalanche of media criticism of his work, and the minister of justice’s expression of joy at the verdict.

“The damage probably has already been done,” said Grabowski, whose father was a Holocaust survivor. “The authoritie­s in Poland have already won. Their goal was not actually to talk about history, it was to frighten people.”

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