The Jewish Chronicle

Poland denies ‘Jewish themes’

- BYTOBYAXEL­ROD Smolensk, Ida,

A DIPLOMATIC row is brewing over the dismissal of the director of the Polish Cultural Institute in Berlin.

Katarzyna Wielga-Skolimowsk­a was fired last week by the Polish Foreign Ministry, more than six months before her contract was to expire.

Rumours spread through the German media that Ms Wielga had upset the conservati­ve Polish government by paying too much attention to Jewish-Polish issues and not enough to Polish-Ukrainian or Polish-Lithuanian dialogue.

The Jewish Museum in Berlin urged Poland’s ambassador to Germany, the decision.

The Polish Embassy has denied that Jewish programmin­g had anything to do with the dismissal, and has demanded a correction and apology from two German newspapers.

However, in a private memo written in Octo cised the Institute for spending too much time on JewishPoli­sh themes.

Ms Wielga Given the sack: Wielga is not allowed to speak to the press until her employment officially comes to an end. Observers say the real issue is not Ms Wielga’s coverage of Jewish topics but Poland’s shift towards ethnonatio­nalism. Warsaw sent a new deputy director to work with Ms Wielga last spring. It was not long before this deputy, reportedly asked by Ambassador 2010 plane crash that killed numerous members of the Polish conservati­ve political elite, among them President Lech Kaczynski. Ms Bochwic-Ivanovska reportedly could not find a venue in Berlin willing to screen which has been panned by film critics. But Ms Wielga did hold a successful screening of the 2015 Academy Award-winner for best foreign film, which deals with the rediscover­y of Jewish roots in Poland and the participat­ion of some Polish Catholics in the exterminat­ion of Jews.

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