Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S.’ Holocaust-property law riles Poles

- VANESSA GERA AND MONIKA SCISLOWSKA

WARSAW, Poland — President Donald Trump has signed an act that Jewish groups praise as helpful in their efforts to reclaim lost property in Poland but which the Polish government says is discrimina­tory.

The White House said Trump signed the Justice for Uncompensa­ted Survivors Today Act. It requires the State Department to report to Congress on what steps dozens of countries in Europe have taken to compensate Holocaust survivors or their heirs for assets seized under Nazi German and communist rule.

The law does not give the U.S. any powers to act against any country and does not single out Poland. But Poland is the only country in Europe that has not passed legislatio­n to compensate former owners for assets seized in the upheavals of 20th-century European history, and Warsaw sees itself as the target of the law.

A spokesman for Polish President Andrzej Duda reacted by saying that Poland should not be expected to pay compensati­on for losses and damages caused by Nazi Germany, which initiated World War II and brutally occupied Poland.

Krzysztof Lapinski said the U.S. act “can be dangerous in the sense that claims can be formulated” and that diplomatic talks should address the issue.

The Nazis’ seizure of Jewish-owned property in Poland during the war and the killings of most of Poland’s Jewish population was followed after the war by the communist state’s seizure of large amounts of property that was nationaliz­ed. Most of the original owners of that property were not Jewish.

Since the fall of communism, some claimants have regained lost property on a case-by-case basis through courts, but so far Poland has not passed comprehens­ive legislatio­n regulating the process. That has created a situation that has been riddled by fraud.

Polish Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowic­z said he believes the U.S. pressure through the act unfairly sets Jewish claimants above non-Jewish ones, creating tensions in Poland. He argued that Polish law treats all Polish citizens equally.

“This position of the [U.S.] Congress is not good because it wants some privileges for the Jews, for the Jewish community, but not for the Poles. I think that the Poles who live in the U.S. may feel hurt by that,” Czaputowic­z told said.

He said some non-Jewish Poles fought against Nazi Germany and then settled in the United States, leaving behind property that was seized by the communist regime.

“Their property here remains without any settlement and nobody speaks on their behalf, only on the behalf of the Jews. That is not good because that divides our society,” Czaputowic­z added.

The World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on said Thursday that Czaputowic­z was wrong in describing the U.S. law as discrimina­tory, saying that it covers “both Holocaust victims and other victims of Nazi persecutio­n.”

Gideon Taylor, World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on chairman of operations, also argued that legislatio­n Poland’s ruling party presented last year promising some compensati­on to some victims would have “excluded the vast majority of Holocaust survivors and their families.”

The legislatio­n is being rewritten.

“[We] have long advocated for the passage of legislatio­n that would provide restitutio­n to all property owners whose property was wrongfully taken — both Jewish and non-Jewish owners,” Taylor said.

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