The Jerusalem Post

Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia also police what can be said about Holocaust

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

In 2015, Ukraine’s president signed a law whose critics say stifles debate on the historical record of World War II and whitewashe­s local perpetrato­rs of the Holocaust.

Law 2538-1 criminaliz­ed any rhetoric insulting to the memory of anti-communist partisans. And it celebrates the legacy of such combatants – ostensibly including the ones who murdered countless Jewish and Polish citizens while collaborat­ing with Nazi Germany.

The law generated some backlash, including an open letter by more than 70 historians who said it “contradict­s the right to freedom of speech,” ignores complicity in the Holocaust and would “damage Ukraine’s national security.”

But as with similar measures in Europe’s ex-communist nations, the Ukraine law generated little opposition or even attention internatio­nally – especially when compared to the loud objections to a similar measure in Poland that was signed into law on Tuesday by the president. The law had passed both houses of parliament in recent days. The United States and Israel joined historians and Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust authority in decrying the bill.

“The Ukrainian and Polish laws are similar, but in Ukraine’s case we didn’t see anything even close” to the avalanche of condemnati­ons that Poland received, said Eduard Dolinsky, director of the Ukrainian Jewish Committee and a longtime campaigner against Holocaust revision in Ukraine. “I wish we had; maybe this law could have been stopped in Ukraine.”

To activists like Dolinsky, the singling out of Poland reflects the ongoing politiciza­tion of the debate on Eastern Europe’s bloody WWII history. They say the conversati­on is distorted by geopolitic­al tensions involving Russia, populism, ignorance and unresolved national traumas.

There are clear similariti­es between the Ukrainian and Polish laws, according to Alex Ryvchin, a Kiev-born Australian-Jewish journalist and author who has written about the politics of memory in Eastern Europe.

“Both seek to use the legitimacy and force of law to enshrine an official narrative of victimhood, heroism and righteousn­ess while criminaliz­ing public discussion of historical truths that contradict or undermine these narratives,” he said. Yet, he noted, “The reaction to the Polish law has indeed dwarfed the response to persistent state revisionis­m elsewhere in Europe in spite of the fact that the rate of collaborat­ion was generally lower in Poland than in Ukraine and Latvia.” THE BALTIC NATIONS of Lithuania and Latvia were pioneers in nationalis­t legislatio­n that limits discourse about the Holocaust in their territorie­s. Critics say these laws also shift the blame for the murder of Jews, which was done with local helpers, to Nazi Germany alone. They also seem to equate the Nazi genocide with political repression by the Soviet Union – which many in the former Soviet Union blame on Jewish communists.

In 2010 Lithuania – a country where Nazi collaborat­ors virtually wiped out a Jewish community of 250,000 – amended its criminal code, prescribin­g up to two years in jail to anyone who “denies or grossly underestim­ates” the crime of genocide or “other crimes against humanity or war crimes committed by the USSR or Nazi Germany against Lithuanian residents.”

Similar legislatio­n in Latvia from 2014 imposes up to five years in jail for those who deny the role of “the foreign powers that have perpetrate­d crimes against Latvia and the Latvian nation,” without mentioning the involvemen­t of Latvian SS volunteers in murdering nearly all of the country’s 70,000 Jews.

The denial of local culpabilit­y during the Holocaust is at the root of opposition to Poland’s law, which sets a maximum of six years in jail for “whoever accuses, publicly and against the facts, the Polish nation or the Polish state of being responsibl­e or complicit in the Nazi crimes committed by the Third Reich” or ”grossly diminishes the responsibi­lity of the actual perpetrato­rs.” On Tuesday, President Andrzej Duda said he would sign the laws (which he did later in the day), finalizing them, but also refer them for review by Poland’s highest court.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who in the past has been criticized for not calling out his country’s Eastern European allies on these issues, called the Polish legislatio­n “baseless” and said Israel opposed it. The US State Department in a statement suggested it could have “repercussi­ons” for bilateral relations with Poland.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett’s scheduled visit to Poland this week was canceled after he criticized the law, which Israel’s embassy in Poland said was generating antisemiti­c hate speech in the media.

Back in Israel, the Polish Embassy condemned what it called ignorant remarks by Yair Lapid, a prominent opposition leader and chairman of Yesh Atid. Citing his credential­s as the son of a Holocaust survivor, Lapid said the Polish law is designed to hide how Poland was “a partner in the Holocaust.”

Jewish organizati­ons, including the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said that they understand the Polish frustratio­n with terms like “Polish death camps,” which seem to shift the blame for Nazi war crimes to Poland – one of the few Nazi-occupied countries where the Nazis did not allow any measure of self-rule or integrate locals into the genocide.

And the term is especially offensive in Poland, where the Nazis killed at least 1.9 million non-Jews in addition to at least three million Jews.

But, many Jewish groups added, the legislatio­n in Poland ignores how many Poles betrayed or killed Jews and is therefore detrimenta­l to the preservati­on of historical record and free speech.

Dolinsky in Ukraine isn’t a fan of the Polish legislatio­n, either.

“But I don’t quite understand why it and only it provoked such a strong reaction,” he added. “We needed that strong reaction two years ago in Ukraine. This fight needs to apply to all these cases. For the pressure to be effective, it shouldn’t be selective.”

Dolinsky believes that Ukraine – which, unlike Poland, shares a border with Russia – is getting a pass from the West because it is subjected to hostility from Russia under President Vladimir Putin.

In 2014, Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine amid ongoing psychologi­cal warfare against the Baltic nations, often involving the deployment of Russia’s mighty army around those countries in blunt loudspeake­r diplomacy.

“There is a lot of Russophobi­c sentiment worldwide and it means internatio­nal silence on countries with a conflict with Russia,” said Joseph Koren, chairman of the Latvia Without Nazism group.

“Poland and Hungary are in a different category,” agreed Dovid Katz, a scholar of Yiddish in Lithuania and longtime campaigner against Holocaust distortion there. The singling out of Poland and Hungary, he said, is “not least because the issues of the Holocaust, antisemiti­sm and restrictio­ns on democratic expression in these countries have never been perceived primarily through the same binary lens of pro-and anti-Putin.”

Under that alleged cover of silence, in Ukraine and the Baltic countries there is a rapid lifting on taboos that had been in place for decades on the honoring of war criminals, even including SS volunteers who enthusiast­ically participat­ed in the mass killings of Jews and Poles. LARGELY IGNORED by the internatio­nal media, Latvian President Raimonds Vejonis last week gave the final approval for a law that offers financial benefits to all WWII veterans – including SS volunteers who murdered Jews. Latvia is the only country in the world known to have an annual march by SS veterans, which takes place with the approval of authoritie­s’ on the country’s national day in the center of its capital, sometimes with mainstream politician­s in attendance.

Last year, the municipali­ty of Kalush near Lviv in Ukraine decided to name a street for Dmytro Paliiv, a commander of the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS, also known as the 1st Galician.

Ukraine’s state television observed a moment of silence for the first time last year for Symon Petliura, a nationalis­t killed by a Jewish communist for Petliura’s role in the murder of 35,000 to 50,000 Jews in a series of pogroms between 1918 and 1921, when Petliura was head of the Ukrainian People’s Republic.

“There is less willingnes­s to speak out on Ukraine in media, in the scientific community and in Western government­s, so it seems,” Dolinsky said.

But this alleged turning of a blind eye, he added, is a disservice. “Ukraine needs to join Europe as a civilized member of that family of nations. And for that to happen, it needs to speak honestly and openly about its history,” he said.

To Ryvchin, the Australian author, the “particular­ly forceful reaction to the Polish law is likely because Poland is seen as the epicenter of the Holocaust,” he said. The Germans built exterminat­ion camps only in Poland, according to Holocaust historian Efraim Zuroff.

“Any attempt to distort or disguise what happened in Poland is seen as a particular­ly egregious attack on the history of the Holocaust and the memories of the dead,” Ryvchin said.

Ironically, Poland is perhaps singled out for criticism because of the country’s vocal civil society and the lively debate it is generating over the politics of memory, Katz suggested.

Even today, he said, Poland and Hungary “have robust liberal movements that themselves counter official government policy on many issues – unlike the Baltics, where dissent is often quashed using the full force of the law.” (JTA)

 ?? (J. Sedois/Wikimedia Commons) ?? THE BIKERNIEKI MEMORIAL to Holocaust victims is seen in 2001. The Bikernieki Forest, near Riga, was Latvia’s biggest mass-murder site during the Holocaust.
(J. Sedois/Wikimedia Commons) THE BIKERNIEKI MEMORIAL to Holocaust victims is seen in 2001. The Bikernieki Forest, near Riga, was Latvia’s biggest mass-murder site during the Holocaust.

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