The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

WWII start marked with remorse and warning

WWII start marked in Poland with German remorse and warnings

- By Monika Scislowska and Vanessa Gera Jill Colvin contribute­d to this report from Warsaw.

Germany’s president expressed deep remorse for the suffering his nation inflicted on Poland and Europe.

WARSAW, POLAND >> Germany’s president expressed deep remorse for the suffering his nation inflicted on Poland and the rest of Europe during World War II, warning of the dangers of nationalis­m as world leaders gathered Sunday in the country where the war started at incalculab­le costs.

“This war was a German crime,” President FrankWalte­r Steinmeier told Poland’s top leaders, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other world leaders at a 80th anniversar­y ceremony marking World’s War II’s outbreak.

Also in attendance were elderly Polish war veterans wearing military uniforms and a Holocaust survivor wearing a yellow Star of David and the striped clothes that prisoners wore at Nazi German death camps.

Steinmeier expressed his sorrow over the mass killings Adolf Hitler’s regime committed in Poland, which paid a huge price for being the place war began on Sept. 1, 1939. The German president expressed gratitude to Poles for the gestures of forgivenes­s Poland has bestowed in return.

“I bow in mourning to the suffering of the victims,” Steinmeier said. “I ask for forgivenes­s for Germany’s historical debt. I affirm our lasting responsibi­lity.”

Two weeks after the German invasion, the Soviet army invaded Poland from the east, putting the country under a dual occupation that came with atrocities committed by two invaders. By the war’s end nearly six years later, about 6 million Polish citizens had been killed, more than half of them Jews.

Polish President Andrzej Duda recalled Poland’s immense suffering and he appealed to those assembled not to close their eyes now to imperial tendencies and border changes imposed through force.

Duda cited aggression against Georgia and Ukraine, and though he didn’t name Russia, it was clear he found that country at fault as the aggressor.

“Recently in Europe we are dealing with a return of imperialis­t tendencies, with attempts to change borders by force, with aggression against countries,” Duda said. “Turning a blind eye is not the recipe for preserving peace. It is a simple way to embolden aggressive personalit­ies, a simple way to, in fact, give consent to further attacks.”

Germany’s president had a modern-day warning of his own — about the dangers of nationalis­m — and described European unity as a guarantee for peace in the future.

Polish authoritie­s didn’t invite Russian President Vladimir Putin to attend anniversar­y events because of Moscow’s annexation of Crimea and support for separatist fighters in eastern Ukraine.

Russia’s recent rehabilita­tion of the Stalinist era, and a pact Soviet leader Josef Stalin made with Hitler that led to Poland’s dismemberm­ent in 1939, were apparently also behind the decisions not to invite Putin. That represente­d a change from 10 years ago, when Putin was invited amid attempts to thaw relations between the West and Russia at the time.

With Putin not on the guest list, Russia’s Foreign Ministry tried to make sure the Soviet Union’s role in ending the war got acknowledg­ed. It tweeted: “One may have varying opinions on Soviet policy during the initial period of World War II, but it is impossible to deny the fact that it was the Soviet Union that routed Nazism, liberated Europe and saved European democracy.”

President Donald Trump had originally been scheduled to attend, but canceled as Hurricane Dorian barreled toward the U.S. That removed the opportunit­y for potential comments about his go-it-alone “America First” approach to foreign policy, which has rattled allies in Europe.

Pence spoke on behalf of the United States in Warsaw.

“While the hearts of every American are with our fellow citizens in the path of a massive storm, today we remember how the gathering storm of the 20th century broke into warfare and invasion followed by unspeakabl­e hardship and heroism of the Polish people,” he said.

Pence said the Polish people “never lost hope” and “never gave in to despair.”

The “character, faith, and determinat­ion of the Polish people made all the difference,” Pence said. “Your oppressors tried to break you, but Poland could not be broken.”

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: “80 years after the invasion of Poland by the Nazi army, let us remember the eruption of the second world conflict, which ravaged our Europe. May we be more committed than ever to the fight for peace and our values.”

During the observance­s in Warsaw, church bells tolled across a capital that German forces razed to the ground decades ago. Polish and foreign leaders laid wreaths, and one by one rang a bell in memory.

The observance­s started at 4:40 a.m. at the sites of the first German attacks — Wielun, a defenseles­s town, and minutes later on the Westerplat­te Peninsula in Gdansk.

In Wielun, Steinmeier also voiced remorse, which Duda said provided “moral satisfacti­on.” He addressed his German counterpar­t.

“Mr. President, thank you for your presence and your attitude,” Duda said. “I can see a man who has come with humility, a bowed head in order to pay homage ... to share the pain.”

Minutes later, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and Frans Timmermans, a top European Union official, led an event on Westerplat­te Peninsula, the Baltic Coast site where Polish troops put up resistance to fight the war’s first battle.

“Eighty years ago, unspeakabl­e horrors were unleashed on the Polish population, unspeakabl­e horrors that we need to remember to prevent them from recurring in Europe,” said Timmermans, the first vice president of the European Commission. “Can you imagine in this gathering that every fifth person sitting and standing here would suddenly disappear? This is what happened to the Polish nation at the hands of cruel Nazis who lost every understand­ing of humanity.”

 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Officials and leaders, among them U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, Polish President Andrzej Duda, and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier stand during a memorial ceremony marking the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Warsaw, Poland.
PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Officials and leaders, among them U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, Polish President Andrzej Duda, and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier stand during a memorial ceremony marking the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Warsaw, Poland.
 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks at the commemorat­ion ceremony of the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Wielun, Poland.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks at the commemorat­ion ceremony of the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Wielun, Poland.
 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Polish war veteran arrives for a memorial ceremony marking the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Warsaw, Poland.
PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Polish war veteran arrives for a memorial ceremony marking the 80th anniversar­y of the start of World War II Sunday in Warsaw, Poland.

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