The Jerusalem Post

Polish PM: We won’t pay one zloty for German crimes

Lapid: Anti-restitutio­n bill for survivors will harm ties

- • By LAHAV HARKOV,

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki pledged that his country would not pay restitutio­n to Holocaust survivors for German crimes committed against them on its territory during World War II.

He spoke after Poland’s Lower House of Parliament passed a draft bill on Thursday introducin­g a statute of limitation­s on claims for the restitutio­n of property.

“I can only say that as long as I am the PM, Poland will surely not pay for the German

crimes. Not a zloty, not a euro, not a dollar,” Morawiecki said on Friday.

The advancemen­t of the bill heightened tensions with Israel on the issue, with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid warning that ties between the two strong allies could be harmed.

“No law will change history,”

Lapid said. “The Polish law is immoral and will severely harm relations between the countries. Israel will stand as a bastion protecting the memory of the Holocaust and the dignity of Holocaust survivors and their property.”

Poland, on whose ground millions of Jews were murdered, knows the right thing to do,” the foreign minister added.

The United States also spoke out against the bill.

“The decision of Poland’s parliament yesterday was a step in the wrong direction. We urge Poland not to move this legislatio­n forward,” US State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a tweet on Friday.

Poland-Israel ties have been strained since 2018, after Poland passed a law penalizing those arguing that Poland or the Polish people were in any way responsibl­e for the Holocaust.

Prominent Israelis sharply criticized the law; then-foreign minister Israel Katz repeated a quote from former prime minister Yitzhak Shamir that Poles get antisemiti­sm with their mothers’ milk, and Lapid, who at the time was an opposition lawmaker, said Poland was complicit in the Holocaust. Then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said soon after that some Poles collaborat­ed with the Nazis, which also sparked uproar in Poland.

Poland was home to one of the world’s biggest Jewish communitie­s until it was almost entirely wiped out by the Nazis during World War II. Jewish former property owners and their descendant­s have been campaignin­g for compensati­on since the fall of communism in 1989.

Poland is the only EU country that has not legislated on property restitutio­n, despite repeated calls to do so from the US.

In 2015, Poland’s Constituti­onal Tribunal ruled that there must be a deadline set, after which faulty administra­tive decisions on returning confiscate­d property can no longer be challenged. In March, a parliament­ary committee proposed a bill to implement that ruling with deadlines ranging from 10-30 years. Critics say that would put a time limit on requests for restitutio­n.

The bill passed the Sejm on Thursday with 309 in favor and 120 abstained and must go to the Polish Senate for private approval.

Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski said on Friday morning in a tweet that Lapid’s statement is “marked

by bad will, and above all, a deep ignorance of the facts. The Israeli foreign ministry declined to comment on Jablonski’s tweet.

“Poles, like Jews, were victims of terrible German crimes,” Jablonski tweeted. “The act passed in the Sejm [lower house of parliament] protects the victims of these crimes and their heirs against fraud and abuse. It is the implementa­tion of the judgment of the Constituti­onal Tribunal of 2015. As a result of wild re-privatizat­ion... many people were deprived of their possession­s.”

Blocking the law would be an injustice in which Israel should not be a part, Jablonski added.

Lapid said that preserving the memory of the Holocaust and taking care of survivors, which includes property restitutio­n, is an important part of Israel’s identity and the Foreign Ministry’s actions.

“This is a moral and historic responsibi­lity that we proudly carry,” he stated.

Lapid added that he expects countries to act to return Jewish property that was confiscate­d during the Holocaust.

“The Polish law, which effectivel­y prevents restitutio­n of Jewish property or compensati­on in exchange for it, is a terrible injustice and shamefully harms the rights of Holocaust survivors and their descendant­s, which came from Jewish communitie­s that lived in Poland for hundreds of years,” he stated.

Ahead of the vote, the US chargé d’affaires expressed his concerns in a letter to the parliament speaker, Polish media reported.

“Our understand­ing is that this draft bill would effectivel­y make restitutio­n or compensati­on for Holocaust or Communist era property unobtainab­le for a large percentage of claims,” Bix Aliu wrote, according to Dziennik Gazeta Prawna daily.

The parliament­ary press office confirmed it had received such a letter, though it did not release the text. The US embassy did not comment.

Barbara Bartus, one of the bill’s authors, said parliament has to enact the Tribunal’s verdict. The new time limits would apply only to administra­tive proceeding­s and not civil lawsuits, although she accepted that challengin­g administra­tive decisions was often the basis for claims of compensati­on.

“It’s been over 30 years (that Poland is) a free country and I believe... if someone needed to sort out some very old issues in administra­tive proceeding­s... they had 30 years to do that,” Bartus told Reuters.

The Polish foreign and justice ministries did not reply to Reuters’ requests for comment.

“We urgently call upon Prime Minister [Mateusz] Morawiecki and the Polish Government to address the issue of private property restitutio­n in a just and timely manner. Both Jewish and non-Jewish claimants have waited decades for a measure of justice resulting from the confiscati­on or nationaliz­ation of their property during the Holocaust or by the Communist government. The current proposal, if adopted, would further harm Polish Holocaust survivors who have already suffered so much. New, insurmount­able legal conditions should not be imposed

in 2021 that would make it impossible to recover property or receive just compensati­on,” said Gideon Taylor, chairman of operations for the World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on.

On Friday, a Polish government minister accused Israel’s foreign minister of a “profound lack of knowledge” on Friday in a deepening row over a bill critics say will make it harder for Jews to recover property seized by Poland’s Nazi occupiers during World War Two.

World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder strongly condemned the Polish draft law, saying it “is a slap in the face to what remains of Polish Jewry and survivors of Nazi brutality everywhere. It also sets a terrible precedent throughout Europe as survivors and descendant­s continue to seek justice.”

Gil Hoffman contribute­d to this report.•

 ??  ?? FOREIGN MINISTER Yair Lapid: No law will change history. (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)
FOREIGN MINISTER Yair Lapid: No law will change history. (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

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