The Jewish Chronicle

War museum given nationalis­t rebrand

- BY LIAM HOARE recruited as

An exhibit of photograph­s in Gdansk’s Second World War museum, which opened last year

A CONTENTIOU­S new Second World War museum, which opened in Poland in March last year, has become a symbol of a Europe divided between those confrontin­g the conflict’s realities and nationalis­ts’ view of history.

Conceived in 2008 by historian >KÿN ;KûQûNÿRû_ KWM ]QN ]QNW >XUR\Q Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Gdansk’s Museum of the Second World War was supposed to be Europe’s most ambitious chronicle of the darkest chapter in its contempora­ry history.

Its perspectiv­e was to be internatio­nal, contextual­ising Poland’s experience of war and occupation. The Holocaust was to be treated as a theme of its own with Timothy Snyder, author of the bestsellin­g account Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, an advisor.

But the right-wing Law and Justice >RA YK[]ā KWM R]\ UNKMN[ 8K[X\ Kÿ 9Kû_āW\TR XYYX\NM ]QR\ KYY[XKûQ

;[ ;KûQûNÿRû_ ° ^W]RU UK\] āNK[ ]QN V^\N^V´\ MR[Nû]X[ ° ]XUM ]QN JC that the PiS leader believed the museum would “jeopardise Polish historical uniqueness, martyrdom and heroism” by presenting Polish history alongside that of other nations.

PiS came to power in October 2015, when constructi­on of the museum was almost complete. In an attempt to \NR_N ûXW][XU ]QN PXþN[WVNW] N\]KLlished a shell museum in Gdansk and in April 2017 merged the Museum of the Second World War into it. OustRWP ;[ ;KûQûNÿRû_ ]QNā KYYXRW]NM a new director who began to oversee changes to the main exhibition in early November.

“They will try to make it more Polish, whatever that means, by adding some WNÿ NUNVNW]\ ² ;[ ;KûQûNÿRû_ \KRM

A spokesman for the museum said any changes are designed to “complete the message” of the main exhibition by “showing the heroes who dedicated their lives to defending their homeland.” The Polish point of view “is not represente­d enough” and “needs to be balanced to show the actual victims and aggressors” in the war, he said.

The fate of Gdansk’s museum is a microcosm of a broader struggle across Europe between those who would come to terms with the past and those who ignore or revise it.

Not long after assuming the French presidency, Emmanuel Macron went further than any of his predecesso­rs in assuming national responsibi­lity for the Holocaust. This included the Vel d’Hiv roundup, when French police arrested more than 13,000 Jews over two days in July 1942.

“It was indeed France that organised this,” Mr Macron said last July, adding that “not a single German” was involved.

The collaborat­ionist Vichy regime, he continued, “was the government and the administra­tion of France.”

But far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon attacked the president, arguing it was not in his power to “assign the French people the identity of an executione­r. No, no, Vichy is not France!”

“France was not responsibl­e for the Vel d’Hiv,” was the verdict of the far-right leader Marine Le Pen. In Hungary, where Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s party is leading a campaign against US philanthro­pist George Soros widely considered to be antisemiti­c, the image of collaborat­ionist wartime leader Miklós Horthy has undergone a rehabilita­tion.

Mr Orbán called Horthy an “exceptiona­l statesman” last year.

And in Poland itself, PiS has orchestrat­ed attacks on Holocaust scholars like Jan T. Gross, whose book Neighbours highlighte­d the role of ordinary Poles in the massacre of Jews in the

eastern town of Jedwabne.

The museum’s main exhibits are changing

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Former MR[Nù]X[ >K`N Machcewicz
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Former MR[Nù]X[ >K`N Machcewicz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom