"They brought their factories of death to the Polish lands."
"In
Poland, even if you gave a glass of water or a slice of bread [to a Jew
during the Nazi occupation] that was considered help and was punishable
by death."
"The
Polish state has a special obligation, a special duty to make sure that
remembering the Holocaust is preserved. We need to make sure that this
remembrance is passed on to the future generations."
Wojciech Kolarski, Polish culture minister
"The
government tries to impose a certain narrative showing Poland as the
most pure nation of the world. Many governments do this; it is not a
very original idea."
"There's no doubt whatever that the Ulma family were heroes and what they did was absolutely heroic. We should remember them."
"The problem is that using the righteous people for an electoral campaign is very low."
Piotr Wrobel, history professor, University of Toronto, Konstanty Reynert Chair of Polish Studies
"Jews were generally accepted in Poland when they weren't necessarily accepted in other places in Europe."
"Most
of the Holocaust survivors are people who survived in hiding, either
because they went east [fleeing to Russia], or because they were given
out by their family members to non-Jewish families [to hide and give
Polish names and backgrounds to]."
"What
we try to do is we try to expose people to the idea that war is
complicated and it brings out the best and the worst in people."
"Did Poland perpetrate the Holocaust? No. Were there Poles who contributed to the suffering of the Jews? Yes."
Sebastian Rudel, deputy director, Jewish Community Centre, Krakow, Poland
The
Catholic Church in Poland earlier this month beatified Wiktoria and
Jozef Ulma, along with their children and their unborn child, in what is
potentially the first step on the path to sainthood in the Church for
the family. It will represent the first time in Catholic history that an
entire family will have been so honoured. Poland holds this family in
the highest regard, memorialized in postage stamps and coins. A museum
is even dedicated to the family and to hundreds of other Polish families
who stepped into the lethal danger zone of aiding Jews during the
Holocaust.
Ulma Family, circa 1943
In
the case of the Ulmas, an indigent rural family with a stern moral
outlook on life that committed them unequivocally to face danger in
exchange for self-respect and empathy for the plight of their
neighbours, they undertook to shelter two Jewish families, eight people
in total in their modest home close to the village of Markowa in the war
years. Jozef was 44, his wife Wiktoria 31, their daughters Stanislawa,
7, Barbara,6, Maria, 18 months, and sons Wladyslaw, 5, Franciszek, 3,
and
Antoni, 2.
The Jews they sheltered and who were
summarily slaughtered by the Nazis in the crowded little farmhouse were
70-year-old Saul Goldman, his sons Baruch, Mechel, Joachim and
Mojzesz, along with Golda Grunfeld and her sister Lea Didner with her
young daughter Reszla, according to Poland’s Institute of National
Remembrance which documented the Ulmas’ story. The family was previously
memorialized as 'righteous among the nations' by Yad Vashem in Israel
in 1995.
On March 24, 1944 when
German police -- responding to an informer who became aware of the
family's involvement in sheltering Jews and then reported them to
authorities -- raided the home. Not only were the eight Jews being
sheltered by the Ulma family murdered, but the murder spree included
Jozef and Wiktoria, pregnant at the time, and their six children. During
the violence, Wiktoria went into sudden labour and the Ulma family's
youngest was briefly introduced to the world. None survived.
A nun views a display about the Ulma family outside the presidential palace in Warsaw. Photo by Ryan Tumilty
The
family has been recognized as an important symbol of national honour
for Poles, fitting right in with the national narrative that Jews and
Catholics lived a peaceful co-existence before the German occupation
shattered the status quo and produced the Holocaust, drawing Poland into
Germany's state-sponsored genocide through its orchestrated mass
extermination of Europe's Jews.
Before
the advent of the Second World War, an estimated 3.5 million Jews lived
in Poland. During the Nazi occupation of Poland, 90 percent of Polish
Jews were murdered, along with hundreds of thousands of Poles whom the
Nazis also considered to be a sub-human species. It was not only Polish
Jews that were annihilated in the many death camps established in Poland
by Nazi Germany; Poland became a gathering-point for Jews transported
from other parts of Europe.
The
six most-infamous extermination camps were established in Poland:
Auschwitz-Birkenau, Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor, Majdanek, and Treblinka.
Although Jews felt more accepted in Poland than in many other countries
in Europe, particularly in the east, there was ample persecution and
antisemitism along with deadly pogroms carried out against Jews in the
country. Violence by Poles, stoutly religious Catholics where the church
itself acted in promoting antisemitism, was not uncommon before the
war.
There
were many Jew-hating Poles who took their hate out in persecution and
violence against Polish Jews. The Ulma family was an exception, among
even the thousands of Poles who sacrificed their security in favour of
trying to help neighbours frantic to escape mass death. Postwar, when
Communists ruled Poland, they encouraged the Jews that remained to leave
the country, continuing the old tradition of antisemitism. In fact,
Jews who survived the Holocaust, returning to their towns and villages
were met with threats from former neighbours now living in their homes.
Relations
between Jews and the Polish Law and Justice party government in 2018
became strained when the country's Holocaust denial law made it illegal
to publicly claim Poland or the Polish nation to have been involved in
Nazi atrocities. The changes were withdrawn under outraged protests,
including from the government of Israel. What remains is the potential
of civil penalties for anyone implying Poles had any element of an
active role during the Holocaust. Which, in certain documented instances
they did have.
Jan
Gross, Polish American history professor, has received opprobrium and
has been investigated for libel, criticized by the current Polish
government in relation to his work identifying a number of pogroms
carried out in Poland against Jews by Poles themselves in the early
period of the war. As Piotr Wrobel, University of Toronto history
professor points out, Poland's view of history and Jews is accurate
enough, albeit politicized by the government Law and Justice party.
The
estimated 16,000 people comprising the Jewish community in today's
Poland is small in a country of close to 38 million, yet the many
synagogues that serviced Poland's large pre-war Jewish population have
been protected and preserved. Sebastian Rudol, deputy director of
Krakow's Jewish Community Centre, states that the contemporary
community views the debate surrounding responsibility as more nuanced in
view of various aspects of the past in Polish-Jewish relations.
His
centre caters to their small Jewish community. And it has reached out
to respond to the war in neighbouring Ukraine to help the conflict's
refugees. Its agenda is also to help people whom ancestry searches
identify their families' hidden backgrounds as Jews. When their forbears
sought to protect themselves from antipathy to and persecution of Jews,
by hiding their Jewish identity and assuming a Christian background in
its stead.
Clergy attend the beatification ceremony of the Ulma family, who were
murdered by German Nazis for sheltering Jews in Markowa, Poland
September 10, 2023. Patryk Ogorzalek/Agencja Wyborcza.pl via REUTERS
This represents a general opinion site for its author. It also offers a space for the author to record her experiences and perceptions,both personal and public. This is rendered obvious by the content contained in the blog, but the space is here inviting me to write. And so I do.
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