The Jewish Chronicle

Bid to revise ‘Polish crimes’ law

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

“The country is experienci­ng a backlash against historical self-criticism some find traumatic,” Mr Machcewicz said.

In the Gdansk museum, one main exhibit has already changed: a movie illustrati­ng the long-term consequenc­es of war was replaced with an animated film focused on the Polish experience of the twentieth century.

It is, Mr Machcewicz says, representa­tive of a wider trend in Poland: “a sharp isolationi­st, xenophobic reaction” against Europe and a turn towards isolationi­sm.

ISRAEL AND Poland’s government­s agreed late on Sunday to work together to revise a bill in parliament that appeared to criminalis­e any mention of “Polish crimes” during the Holocaust.

The bill, approved by parliament’s lower chamber just before Internatio­nal Holocaust Memorial Day, could make the use of phrases such as “Polish death camps” punishable by up to three years in prison.

It must be approved by the Senate before it is signed into law by the president.

Israel has long supported Poland’s view that the concentrat­ion camps set up during the German occupation of the country in the Second World War should not be described as Polish.

But Holocaust survivors and their descendant­s have objected to the

Piotr Kozlowski language used in the bill because it could be taken to mean that any mention of Polish citizens who committed crimes against Jews during the Holocaust would be prohibited. A key passage of the bill reads: “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… shall be subject to a fine or a penalty of imprisonme­nt of up to three years.” It prompted angry exchanges on social media, including one where the Twitter account of the Polish Embassy in Israel appeared to tell opposition politician Yair Lapid — the grandson of Holocaust victims — that he should be “educated” about history.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel would “not accept any attempt to revise history”. Poland’s chargé d’affaires Piotr Kozlowski was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, where he was reprimande­d and informed of Israel’s formal demand that the law be changed. Poland’s role during the Second World War has become a hot issue under the country’s nationalis­t government. Many ministers prefer to focus on Poles who suffered during the war and the fact that Israel’s Holocaust Remembranc­e Authority, Yad Vashem, has recognised 6,700 Poles over the years as “Righteous Gentiles” for saving Jewish lives during the Holocaust.

But some historical research remains controvers­ial, including the thousands of cases in which Poles murdered their Jewish neighbours and appropriat­ed their homes and belongings, and the pogroms in Poland immediatel­y after the Holocaust when Jews returning home from the death camps were targeted.

In an effort to defuse the tension, Polish President Andrzej Duda said the law was not final, adding: “everyone whose personal memory or historical research speaks the truth about the crimes and shameful behaviour that occurred in the past with the participat­ion of Poles has full right to this truth.”

But although Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki agreed to work with Israel in redrafting the law, prominent members of his party said in Warsaw over the weekend that a change would be out of the question.

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PHOTO: FLASH 90
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