|
From H.E. Zbigniew Matuszewski
the Ambassador of the Republic of Poland in London
The Guardian, 28 January 2005
Sir, thank you for publishing
my letter (Poland's people have nothing to hide, January
27), which was a reaction to the opinions concerning
Poland, expressed in Ian Black's article (World Watch,
January 24). However, I must express my opinion on yet
another, even more striking matter. In one of the leading
articles, (Eternal memory, January 26) you wrote that
during the World War Two, the French Jews were rounded
up and shipped into cattle trucks to the Polish gas
chambers and crematoria'.
It makes me feel embarrassed to
have to explain to the newspaper of such a reputation
as yours, that the gas chambers and crematoria were
not Polish, but were designed, built and used by the
Nazis occupiers in the enslaved Poland.
In the same commentary, you admit that `there is still
alarming ignorance' about Holocaust. I cannot help but
agree in the light of the formulation you have chosen.
+++
BBC News Scotland, 28 January 2005
From Aleksander Kropiwnicki
Press Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Poland
in London
Dear Sirs,
I strongly object to your statement that Auschwitz
was the Polish death camp (`McConnell's `never forget'
plea', January 27). The Nazis built a number of death
camps in occupied Poland during the World War II. But
they were the Nazi death camps, not the Polish ones.
I expect the correction to be made as soon as possible.
+++
The Guardian, 27 January 2005
From H.E. Zbigniew Matuszewski
the Ambassador of the Republic of Poland in London
Sir,
Although I read his column with interest, I can see
no grounds for
Ian Black saying that hosting today's ceremony in Auschwitz
on Thursday, January 27 "is not a role they (the
Poles) relish" (World watch, January 24). In fact,
Poland would like as many people as
possible to visit the former Auschwitz death camp and
understand the evil of Nazism.
Ian Black mentions his participation in the study tour
to the small farms in Poland. With regard to the impromptu
visit to the former death camp Treblinka he observes
that it "wasn't quite what our hosts, aware of
Poland's own anti-Semitism and pogroms, had in mind
to display to opinion-formers from the European mainstream
they were desperate to rejoin". Let me point out
that, as a victim of the German aggression occupation,
Poland lost 6m citizens - half Jewish - and has nothing
to hide about the Holocaust.
+++
The Independent on Sunday, 23 January 2005
From H.E. Zbigniew Matuszewski
the Ambassador of the Republic of Poland in London
Sir,
According to Francis Elliott the
Tory leader Michael Howard's grandmother died "in
a Polish death camp" (`Out of touch, out of control:
how Harry's joke backfired on loyalty', January 16).
The Nazis built a number of death camps in occupied
Poland during the World War II, the most traumatic experience
in our history. But they were the Nazi death camps,
not the Polish ones. I find the expression used by Francis
Elliott misleading, to say the least. I strongly object
to this expression and expect the correction to be made
as soon as possible.
++++
On 30 January 2004 the Press Counselor of the Polish
Embassy in London wrote a letter to the Editor of The
Times expressing his
disappointment after reading that Auschwitz was "the
Polish concentration camp" (The Eye, 24-30 January
2004, p. 45). Poland was strongly against the Holocaust
and never co-operated with the Nazi criminals, unlike
the governments of some other European states. Many
Poles whose relatives died in Auschwitz can feel offended
reading that it was "the Polish concentration camp".
The Counselor expressed also his
protest against describing the picture of the Nazi-established
Jewish ghetto as "The Warsaw Ghetto in the 1930s"
(T2, 26 January 2004). There was no Jewish ghetto in
Poland before the German invasion that happened at the
very end of the 1930s. The mistake seems to be small
but it leaves a false impression that the Jewish ghettos
were established before the
Second World War by the Polish
authorities.
|