Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Poland’s premier skips trip to Israel

Netanyahu’s Nazi quote hits nerve

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WARSAW, Poland — Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki canceled his plans to attend a meeting of central European leaders in Israel starting today amid new tensions over how Polish behavior during the Holocaust is remembered and characteri­zed.

Morawiecki informed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of his decision by phone Sunday, said Michal Dworczyk, who heads the prime minister’s chanceller­y. Poland’s foreign minister, Jacek Czaputowic­z, plans to attend instead, he said.

It “is a signal that the historical truth is a fundamenta­l issue for Poland, and the defense of the good name of Poland is and always will be decisive,” Deputy Foreign Minister Szymon Szynkowski vel Sek said.

Netanyahu said Thursday during a Middle East conference hosted by the United States and Poland that “Poles cooperated with the Nazis” — wording suggesting that some Poles participat­ed in killing Jews during the German occupation of Poland.

He was initially quoted by some Israeli media outlets as saying not “Poles” but “The Poles” cooperated, phrasing that could be taken as blaming the entire Polish nation.

Netanyahu’s office said he was misquoted. The Polish government summoned the Israeli ambassador on Friday and later said it was not satisfied with the explanatio­n of the Israeli leader being quoted incorrectl­y.

Netanyahu was supposed to meet with the leaders of the four central European countries known as the Visegrad Group — Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia — during the two- day meeting in Israel.

This incident follows a spat that Warsaw and Jerusalem had last year over a Polish law that makes it illegal to blame the Polish nation for collaborat­ion in the Holocaust.

At the height of the crisis, Morawiecki at one point equated Polish perpetrato­rs of the Holocaust to supposed “Jewish perpetrato­rs.”

Germany occupied Poland in 1939, annexing part of it to Germany and directly governing the rest. Unlike other countries occupied by Germany, Poland did not have a collaborat­ionist government.

The prewar Polish government and military fled into exile, and an undergroun­d resistance army fought the Nazis inside the country and tried to warn a deaf world about the Holocaust. Thousands of Poles also risked their own lives to help Jews.

However, individual Poles did take part in killing Jews during and after the war. Many Holocaust survivors and their relatives carry painful memories of persecutio­n at Polish hands. In Israel, there has been anger at what many there perceive to be Polish attempts today to whitewash that history.

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