Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Auschwitz speech by survivor angers Polish politician­s

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WARSAW, Poland — An Auschwitz survivor’s warning about indifferen­ce to discrimina­tion is reverberat­ing strongly in his native Poland, with some people praising the 93-year-old’s World War II anniversar­y speech as wise while others criticize it as overtly political.

Marian Turski was one of the keynote speakers during observance­s held Monday to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz. He addressed an internatio­nal audience of world leaders and about 200 other survivors of the notorious Nazi Germany death camp.

During his speech, Turski said the Holocaust did not “fall from the sky” all at once but took hold step by step as society’s acceptance of small acts of discrimina­tion eventually led to ghettos and exterminat­ion camps.

Turski, who along with his family was forced into the Lodz ghetto and later deported to Auschwitz, called on people not to remain indifferen­t when minorities are discrimina­ted against, when history is distorted and when “any authority violates the existing social contract.”

Turski never specifical­ly mentioned Poland’s current nationalis­t government in his remarks. But many understood his words as criticism of Polish politician­s and public officials who have used discrimina­tory language against migrants, LGBT people and religious minorities, and have sought to harness history as a political tool.

While Turski received a standing ovation on Monday, some members of Poland’s conservati­ve governing party, Law and Justice, who were in the audience did not applaud him.

In the two days since, there have also been angry comments, with some suggesting Turski had no moral authority because he belonged to Poland’s Communist Party before 1989.

Samuel Pereira, the head of Polish state news broadcaste­r TVP Info’s website, wrote on Twitter that a former Auschwitz prisoner going on to work for the Polish United Workers’ Party showed that “evil can be contagious.”

Pawel Jablonski, a deputy foreign minister, told The Associated Press in a statement Wednesday that the government appreciate­d Turski’s warnings “as a very important voice to remind us and future generation­s of the atrocities of World War II” and preserving historical truth, but added in the statement “we strongly disagree with any attempts at abusing or misusing survivors’ statements for today’s political purposes.”

Turski began his speech by saying he did not want to talk about what he suffered while imprisoned at Auschwitz, during two forced death marches, or near the end of the war, when he weighed just 70 pounds.

Michael Schudrich, chief rabbi of Poland, said Turski’s message was very important because it reminded people that what allowed the Holocaust to happen was not only the evil of the Nazis, but also the indifferen­ce of the rest of the world. He said the stir Turski’s words have caused, including negative reactions, meant “he touched people’s souls.”

“If somebody feels that he is speaking against them, then maybe that person needs to look into himself,” Schudrich said. “The fact is, this speech will be quoted for decades and decades, and I hope for centuries. It said what had to be said.”

 ?? (AP/Markus Schreiber) ?? The Holocaust did not “fall from the sky,” but took hold step by step over society’s acceptance of small acts of discrimina­tion, death camp survivor Marian Turski said Monday at events marking the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp in Oswiecim, Poland. More photos are available at arkansason­line. com/130survivo­r/.
(AP/Markus Schreiber) The Holocaust did not “fall from the sky,” but took hold step by step over society’s acceptance of small acts of discrimina­tion, death camp survivor Marian Turski said Monday at events marking the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp in Oswiecim, Poland. More photos are available at arkansason­line. com/130survivo­r/.

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