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Statement on Holocaust fuels ire it meant to end

Document opens wounds that go back decades

- By Vanessa Gera

WARSAW, Poland — A joint statement by the prime ministers of Poland and Israel wasmeant to lay to rest a months-long dispute over how to remember Polish behavior during the Holocaust. Instead, the document has re-opened wounds that go back decades.

Prime Ministers Benjamin Netanyahu and Mateusz Morawiecki signed and recited the statement in their respective capitals last week after Poland scrapped potential prison terms for anyone claiming the country bore some responsibi­lity for the Holocaust.

The declaratio­n, which denounced “anti-Polonism” alongside anti-Semitism, was seen as a diplomatic coup for Poland, which has long sought internatio­nal recognitio­n of the massive suffering its people experience­d under Germanoccu­pation and for the heroism its wartime resistance fighters showed against theNazis.

Thisweek, aPolish staterun bank, PKOBank Polski, paid for ads in major internatio­nal newspapers to publish the full statement — anexampleo­fhowPolish state authoritie­s harness the profits of state enterprise­s to support their ideologica­l positions.

The bank told The Associated Press on Friday that it will not publicize how much it paid for the ads, which ran in TheWashing­ton Post, the Wall Street Journal and major papers in Britain, France, Germany, Israel and Spain.

In an emailed statement, PKO Bank Polski Foundation President Malgorzata Glebicka said the campaign was part of a broader “mission of disseminat­ing historical truth and building an accurate image of Poland in theworld.”

Publicatio­n of a triumphant Polish message in Israel sparked an outcry against Netanyahu, who was accused of accepting a narrative that betrays the Jewish people. Polish-born Holocaust survivors and their offspring in Israel remember anti-Semitism in Poland from before, during and afterWorld­War II.

OnWednesda­y, the Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem, in a rare rebuke of the Israeli government, said the prime ministers’ statement contains “grave errors and deceptions.” The Jerusalem-based institutio­n said the document exaggerate­s in particular the work of Poland’s wartime resistance to help the country’s sizable Jewish population.

“Much of the Polish resistance in its various movements not only failed to help Jews, but was also not infrequent­ly actively involved in persecutin­g them,” Yad Vashem said.

The prime ministers’ statement acknowledg­ed the cruelty perpetuate­d against Jews by individual Poles in some cases, but stressed Polish resistance efforts to protect Jews.

“We acknowledg­e and condemn every single case of cruelty against Jews perpetrate­d by Poles during the World War II” and honor the “heroic acts of numerous Poles” who saved Jews, the statement read.

In Poland, the bank has also faced some questions for paying whatwas likely a large sum to get the statement a wide audience.

“It is sad, all things considered, that a bank in which millions of Poles hold their savings wasted its funds to troll the Israeli public,” said Michal Bilewicz, a social psychologi­st at Warsaw University who specialize­s in theHolocau­st.

While Netanyahu faces calls to disavow the statement, Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Bartosz Cichocki said Poland considers it “binding.”

The reaction in Israel “confirms our belief that we need to further enhance the cooperatio­n of Polish, Israeli, and Jewish historians, teachers and museum guides to protect the truth aboutWorld­War II and the Holocaust,” he said.

The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum backed Yad Vashem’s position Friday, saying the revision lawmakers made last week “does not address our primary concern, which is the potential for intimidati­on, self-censorship and politiciza­tion.”

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