E-mail

Polski





AN ENDURING LEGACY

Guy Billauer

FORUM - Christian Culture Foundation

ZNAK

 

Much has happened since terrorists crashed airliners into New York's World Trade Center and Washington's Pentagon building last year, changing forever the world, as we know it. For Poles and Jews, the heart-wrenching events of the last ten months were intensified by the untimely passing of the best our respective communities could produce - George Szabad, an American Jew and Professor Stanislaus Blejwas, a Polish American.


Guy Billauer

Genuine voices for reconciliation and understanding, both Szabad and Blejwas dedicated their life to not only leaving a legacy full of inspiration and motivation for future generations of Poles and Jews, but also to reminding us that a person's actions could make a difference in the world.


Born in Russia and raised in Poland, Szabad emigrated to America in the mid-1930's, fleeing mounting European anti-Semitism. A graduate of Columbia University Law School, Szabad pledged to defend the weak and protect the unfortunate. In 1947 he joined a New York law firm where he argued cases before Federal Appellate Courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court. He also worked with the Polish Mission for Relief and Reconstruction in America and traveled to Poland on behalf of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency.


Szabad was instrumental in the fight against Communism, tyranny and anti-Semitism, and was personally involved in securing the release of Solidarity and Polish intelligentsia leaders in the early 1980's, including the release of former Polish foreign ministers Wladyslaw Bartoszewski and Bronislaw Gemerek, as well as renowned Polish scholar and writer Adam Michnik.


Among his numerous public and voluntary activities, George was a leading member of the American Jewish Committee since the early 1960's, working tirelessly to enhance the Jewish community's cooperation with ethnic and religious minorities in the America.


Although a generation separated them in age, Szabad and Blejwas shared a their vision and moral convictions that virtually indivisible.


A son of Polish Catholic immigrants, Stanislaus Blejwas grew up in post-World War II New York City. He attended the same Columbia University Szabad went to, only to receive a doctorate degree in Polish and Polish American History, on the way to a distinguished academic career. His devotion to public life was as inspiring as his prolific scholarly achievements. As member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Council, former director of the Polish American Congress, and president of the Polish American Historical society, Blejwas always pursued leadership roles, standing for historical truth, open-ended dialogue, and uncompromising integrity.


Professor Blejwas taught Polish history at Central Connecticut State University, where he became the first Endowed Chair of Polish and Polish American Studies. In 1994, he joined a special committee of Eastern European experts to advise then-President Clinton who was about to make his first presidential visit to Eastern Europe. In 1995, Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski awarded Blejwas the Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland for his contributions to the Polish-American community and for developing his university's Polish Studies Program. In 1999, Professor Blejwas was the winner of the 1999 Joseph Swastek Prize for the best article in Polish American Studies.


Often in the midst of considerable criticism, Szabad and Blejwas always stood firm in their commitment to do the right thing. Their persistence and passion for Polish-Jewish reconciliation have become beacons of hope and inspiration for a growing number of Poles and Jews in America. Courageously and admirably, they pushed us to engage us in a process of self-examination and soul searching of our shared history and shared tragedy.


When Blejwas pleaded with his community to come to terms with Polish responsibility for the 1941 Jedwabne massacre last year, Szabad worked determinedly to tell Jews the numerous stories of Polish heroism - as well as suffering - during the Nazi occupation. Szabad and Blejwas were also instrumental in demanding that Polish and Jewish suffering should neither be compared nor contrasted. Both nations, they argued, have unique stories and narratives that should never be regarded as mutually exclusive.


Poland is the place to which most American Jews would trace their familial and historical roots - a place Szabad evoked with warmth and charm. Polish Americans proudly and intuitively regard Poland as their beloved motherland -- a passion Blejwas expressed with equal warmth and pride. Regrettably, several generations after the Second World War, instances of stereotyping and misunderstanding dominated the relationships between Poles and Jews. Some of those emanated from the pain and agony of their parents and grandparents. Few have any clear notion of the other's history or point of view. Thanks to Szabad and Blejwas, the leaders of the two communities are now, at the very least, closer in recognizing the importance and substance of an ongoing interchange between Poles and Jews.


While the dialogue is mainly at the leadership level, the remarkable achievements of the past two decades in building bridges should not be overlooked and will, in time, filter down to the larger communities. For the past two years, I have had the privilege of coordinating National Polish American-Jewish American Council, a practical realization of Szabad and Blejwas' shared vision. For over two decades, the Council modest but ambitious agenda has been to bring together leaders from both communities to promote constructive cooperation and interaction between Poles and Jews in America. Through meetings, publications and statements, we bring together the leadership of both of these significant communities to grapple with their shared past and to shape better future relations, both in the United States and Poland, and to wrestle with the conflicts that inevitably arise.


The Council membership amounts to nearly 80 members, spanning from academics, local and national community leaders, and representatives of several generations of Poles and Jews in America.


Unresolved matters stemming from 60 years of foreign occupation of Poland will undoubtedly remain a part of the Council's agenda. Those include property restitution for Poles and Jews, preservation of Auschwitz-Birkenau and other sites of martyrdom, improving Catholic-Jewish relations, and combating anti-Polish and anti-Semitic sentiment in America, Poland and Israel. Increasingly, the Council is discovering that its moral voice on issues beyond the Polish-Jewish prism is not only welcomed but also requested.


Those who knew and those who did not have the extraordinary fortune to meet Szabad and Blejwas will miss them for their compassionate leadership and intrinsic sense of justice they imparted among members of the Polish-Jewish family. They may have left us, but not before they built a solid framework for dialogue and cooperation that will endure for many years to come.


 



Guy Billauer is a program specialist at the American Jewish Committee, and executive coordinator of the National Polish American - Jewish American Council, a national group representing the leadership of the Polish and Jewish communities in the U.S., committed to improving relations between the two communities in America and throughout the world.