National Post (National Edition)

Historian says he’s target of Polish ‘hate’ campaign

- COLIN PERKEL

An eminent Canadian historian whose writings on the Holocaust in Poland have attracted death threats said Tuesday that fierce criticism of his research is an unjustifie­d attack on academic freedom.

In an interview, University of Ottawa Prof. Jan Grabowski, 55, said he would not allow the “campaign of hate” to distract him from delving into what he called an ugly, but little-told, piece of history.

“I feel personally attacked but this is for me a much more dangerous and general problem that has to be dealt with,” Grabowski said in an interview from Ottawa. “It’s a pure and simple attack on basic academic freedoms, which we take for granted here in Canada. I’m dismayed.”

The history professor, who has spent years studying the Holocaust in Poland, maintains many Poles who killed Jews were not simply forced to collaborat­e with the Nazis, who occupied the country during the Second World War.

“They were realizing their own dream of a Jew-free Poland,” Grabowski said. “At the same time, they were very ardent opponents of the German occupation. Nothing is simple here.”

While no stranger to controvers­y over his views, what’s changed recently is that his critics are no longer content to denounce him in Poland. Now, he said, they have brought their criticism to Canada by writing directly to the university where he has worked for almost 25 years to accuse him of lying and fabricatin­g historical evidence.

In two letters this month, the Polish League Against Defamation says Grabowski’s views are damaging to Poland.

“He falsifies the history of Poland, proclaimin­g the thesis that Poles are complicit in the exterminat­ion of Jews,” the league writes. “Grabowski fails to adhere to the fundamenta­l rules of researcher’s credibilit­y. He uses vivid and exaggerate­d statements to create propagandi­stic constructi­ons, rather than to provide an honest picture.”

One of the letters is signed by 130 Polish scholars — none, he says, with any connection to Holocaust studies.

In 2014, Grabowski was given the Yad Vashem Internatio­nal Book Prize for his work Hunt for the Jews: Betrayal and Murder in German-Occupied Poland, an award the league called “disturbing.”

Grabowski said the prevailing political climate in Eastern Europe is emboldenin­g nationalis­t groups. He also said some of the league’s founders are now either ranking members of Poland’s government or senior advisers to its ministers.

“It’s to an extent aligned with the wishes of the Polish state, which makes it all the more, I would say, appalling,” he said of the group’s campaign.

In a display of solidarity, however, scores of preeminent internatio­nal Holocaust scholars on Monday wrote to the chancellor of the University of Ottawa defending Grabowski as a scholar of “impeccable personal and profession­al integrity.”

The letter praises his courage in pursuing his research despite the attempts to shut him down. The writers also criticize the league.

“The current attack on Prof. Grabowksi by the Polish League Against Defamation, as in a recent public letter signed by more than 100 academics who have no expertise in the subject, is baseless, putting forth a distorted and whitewashe­d version of the history of Poland during the Holocaust era,” the letter states.

League founder Maciej Swirski denied in an email on Tuesday that it was running a campaign targeting Grabowski or academic freedom.

The University of Ottawa did not responded immediatel­y to a request for comment but the professor said the rector assured him of its full support.

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Jan Grabowski

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