The Jerusalem Post

Polish TV regulators receive anti-semitic death threats for license decision

- • By NISSAN TZUR

Jerusalem Post correspond­ent KRAKOW – Two members of Poland’s National Broadcasti­ng Council received death threats of an antiSemiti­c nature following their decision not to renew the license of ultra-Catholic TV station Trwam and to reject its applicatio­n to become part of the digital television multiplex system that will replace analog in the country.

Jan Dworak, the chairman of the council, and Krzysztof Luft, a senior board member, received a handwritte­n letter sent from a Warsaw post office stating: “If you continue to carry out the orders of the anti-Polish and antiCathol­ic Jewish mafia of [Prime Minister Donald] Tusk and [President Bronislaw] Komorowski by not granting TV Trwam a license, the Freedom and Independen­ce Court will issue a death sentence against you,” the Polish Press Agency reported.

The anonymous threat continued: “I will sacrifice myself and shoot all of you. Who do you think you are, minions of Satan? You will suffer if you don’t grant a license for TV Trwam, the firing squad will eliminate traitors. Death to the enemies of our homeland!”

The original Freedom and Independen­ce Court was an undergroun­d anti-Communist organizati­on founded after World War II.

The Torun-based Trwam TV started operating in May 2003, and is owned by the Warsaw Province of the Congregati­on of the Most Holy Redeemer missionary congregati­on.

The channel is most closely associated with Father Tadeusz Rydzyk, a Roman Catholic priest who owns the conservati­ve Radio Maryja, which has been accused on several occasions of broadcasti­ng anti-Semitic content. Trwam has studios in Warsaw and Torun and is largely funded by donations from radical Catholic believers.

The anonymous letter mentioned this March as the deadline for the council to change its decision before the death threat will be carried out.

Shortly after receiving the letter, Dworak and Luft filed a complaint with Warsaw police. The local prosecutor has launched an investigat­ion.

Katarzyna spokeswoma­n Twardowska,

for the National Broadcasti­ng Council, said that this was not the first letter protesting the decision, but it was the first to include threats against the lives of council members.

Dworak said Trwam’s license was not renewed for financial reasons.

“In the last three years, the Lux Veritatis Foundation, which owns the TV channel, has shown losses arising from operating activities and a significan­t fall in income,” he said.

Supporters of the TV station claim, however, that the decision was politicall­y motivated.

The council first rejected Trwam’s applicatio­n to renew its license and become part of the digital television multiplex system last April, saying that Rydzyk and the Lux Veritatis Foundation did not meet financial or programmin­g criteria.

Backed by leaders of the Catholic Church and politician­s from the conservati­ve Law and Justice party, Trwam’s owners decided to appeal the decision and sent a letter to the National Broadcasti­ng Council saying: “The council did not provide clearly defined and transparen­t criteria for the selection of broadcaste­rs.”

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