Poland marks 75th anniv of Warsaw uprising
■ Jewish fighters had taken up arms in 1943 against Germans
Warsaw, April 19: People in Warsaw pinned paper daffodils to their clothes as the Polish capital began a day of commemorations on Thursday on the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
Sirens will wail, church bells will toll and newscasters on TV, politicians and citizens are wearing the daffodils in what has become a symbol of mourning for the Jews who died fighting, as well as the millions of other Jews murdered in the Holocaust.
The daffodils tradition comes from Marek Edelman, who was the last surviving commander of the uprising and on every anniversary used to lay these spring flowers at the monument to the fighters. He died in 2009.
President Andrzej Duda is to speak during official commemorations and will pay homage to the hundreds of Jewish fighters who took up arms in the 1943 rebellion against the German forces that occupied Poland during World War II. The revolt ended in death for most of the fighters, yet left behind an enduring symbol of resistance.
At a ceremony at Warsaw's Town Hall, three Holocaust survivors - Helena Birenbaum, Krystyna Budnicka and Marian Turski — were given honorary citizenship of the city.
There is also to be an “independent” gathering by Poles furious at a government that sometimes seems to tolerate or even support anti- Semitic views despite its official denunciations of anti- Semitism.
Open Republic, an association that fights antiSemitism and xenophobia, said it was organizing its ceremony in opposition to what it called the “hollow nationalist pomp” of the government, recalling how the prime minister earlier this year paid tribute to a Polish wartime insurgency unit that had collaborated with the Nazis.
The signs of rising nationalism have also strengthened the resolve of those seeking reconciliation, and this year a record 2,000 volunteers are handing out the paper daffodils, which have become a moving symbol of Christian Poles expressing their sorrow at the loss of a Jewish community that was Europe's largest before the Holocaust.
“I feel this is my responsibility and do it with all my heart,” said Barbara Sekulska, 76, who joined mostly younger volunteers.