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On Warsaw Ghetto Anniversary,
A Pole Calls for Understanding
By WLADYSLAW BARTOSZEWSKI
NPAJAC, The Forward - April
18, 2003
The proud and beautiful city of
New York is known worldwide as one of the most important
centers of the Jewish Diaspora. In fact, nowadays it
is true to say that it is the most important city in
the entire world. But as a Pole who lives and was born
in Poland's capital city, Warsaw, I can never forget
that it was from Warsaw and other Polish cities, and
from countless shtetls, that during the 1900s Polish
Jews left for New York, for the freedom of America,
in search of a better future for themselves and their
children.
This Saturday we commemorate
the 60th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
While we must never forget the horrors of the past,
let us also remember the centuries of peaceful coexistence
between Poles and Jews. Our common cultural heritage
can serve our communities well as we confront the challenges
of the 21st century.
Before it was attacked and destroyed by the Nazis, Warsaw
had a population of 1.3 million, of whom one in three
was Jewish. At the outbreak of World War II, Poland
had the greatest concentration of Jews in Europe. The
total number of Poland's Jewish citizens on September
1, 1939, was 3,474,000, about 10% of the country's population.
The course of war led in 1939 to Poland being divided
geographically in half between Germany and the Soviet
Union. Based on prewar demographic data, 61.2% of Polish
Jews ended up under German occupation, 38.8% under Soviet
rule. These figures in large part determined that it
would be in Poland — home to Europe's largest Jewish
community — where the Nazi death camps for the extermination
of Jews were located.
The Nazis invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941.
Within a few weeks they took all of prewar Poland. By
July 1941, Polish Jews who had not fled or been deported
into the Soviet Union found themselves under Nazi control.
Almost immediately after the invasion, in several towns
of Bialystok province — Grajewo, Radzilow and Jedwabne
— mass murders of Jews were committed by groups of local
Poles or with their participation. Historians do not
doubt that the Germans were the inspiration behind these
shameful crimes, but this does not alter the fact that
they were committed by Poles.
The first few months of German occupation of Poland
were characterized by a repressive regime that discriminated
against Jews, yet did not cause either Jews or Poles
to suspect the possibility of a physical threat to the
entire Jewish population. At the same time, from late
1939 to late 1940, the Nazi occupation authorities carried
out a consistent operation to exterminate the Polish
intellectual and political elites. By the end of 1939
the Germans had murdered some 45,000 Poles. From the
spring to the fall of 1940 they carried out "Operation
AB" — the liquidation of "Poland's spiritual
leadership," involving the murder of some 3,500
politicians, scholars, journalists, clerics and social
activists. Tens of thousands more were sent to concentration
camps. All told more than 2 million Polish Christians
perished at the hands of the Nazis during the Holocaust.
In the late fall of 1940 in Warsaw and several months
later in Krakow, large ghettos were set up by the Germans
on the territory of occupied Poland. Hundreds of thousands
of Jews were sequestered within the walls. In Warsaw
alone approximately 113,000 Poles and 138,000 Jews were
"resettled," resulting in a feeling between
both communities of shared suffering. We Poles never
felt it was just Jews who were being driven out — we
were all being driven out, Poles and Jews alike, whatever
street we lived on in our city.
In November 1941, the Nazis declared helping Jews a
crime punishable by death. Historians reckon that the
saving of a single Jew during the Holocaust required
the involvement of at least a dozen people. I took part
in helping out, and I can say we had no instant formula.
No one had ever done anything like it before in their
life. There were no experts around with experience in
hiding people at risk of genocide, nor are there any
now. There were no quick fixes and no safety instructions,
apart from common sense.
Our task in the Polish underground was, in general terms,
to save people from death: to find accommodation for
escapees from the ghettos and camps, to supply them
with documents, to provide material allowances and often
to help find work for those, mainly women, who were
able to move about.
Yes, even while we were doing what we could to thwart
Hitler's "Final Solution," there were Poles
who were ill-disposed toward Jews, who washed their
hands of involvement in their fate. As we examine their
actions today, with the benefit of 60 years' perspective,
we should take care to note the difference between active
dislike and passive lack of understanding.
Lack of understanding falls under what Catholics are
commanded to confess as the sin of neglect. They believe
the true Christian offends God by deed, word and neglect.
The offense may be a criminal deed, or an evil, sinful
one; it may be a word spoken that has far-reaching consequences,
or it may be neglect — that is, not doing something
one should in the spirit of the injunction to love one's
neighbor.
While many Poles did indeed commit the sin of neglect,
judging their culpability must consider the fact that
war brings with it a moral crisis. War polarizes extremes.
In war, good attitudes evolve into heroism; bad attitudes
descend into villainy.
If we accept that in any human society there exists
a certain percentage of decent, benevolent people, and
also a certain number of egoistic, selfish people —
those willing to break society's rules to make their
own lives simpler — then between these two groups there
is a majority with middling attitudes, the sort of people
who answer "don't know" in opinion polls.
It is this middling majority who, in extreme circumstances,
can be transformed into heroes, evildoers or accessories.
Today I understand that the mass extermination of Jews
between 1942 and 1944 was an event for which no one
was prepared, neither practically nor psychologically;
it surpassed all possible expectations or capacity to
counteract. The disproportion between the hellish situation
and the limited opportunity to help was immense.
The world's helplessness in the face of Nazi evil leads
one to reflect that humanity failed — and will always
fail — in allowing a totalitarian system to develop.
But in the last analysis, only those who have themselves
faced the ultimate choice — as entire societies did
during World War II — and chosen good over evil can
fully affirm their humanity.
Many of the heroes during the Holocaust paid for their
choices with their lives. None of those still living
can say of themselves that they did enough to save others.
But no one who has not faced such a test should ever
accuse others wholesale, for whatever reasons, of not
having been heroes.
Jewish society thrived in Poland for hundreds of years.
This is now a closed chapter in the history of the Jews
and in the history of Poland, yet it demands remembrance.
Only where there is free public life and open exchange
of views can people effectively be taught to be free
of prejudices and to reject stereotyping. Until recently
— until 1990 — these conditions did not exist in Poland.
Now those conditions exist.
Poland, a NATO member since 1999, has been a staunch
ally of both the United States and Israel as they fight
their respective wars against terrorism. Economic cooperation
between our countries grows as we put into practice
the free-market principles championed by America.
Perhaps most important, given our shared heritage, Polish
interest in all things Jewish is growing exponentially,
particularly the heritage of East European Jews who
formed the core of modern Israel and American Jewry.
Hundreds of new books on Jewish history and culture
are published in Poland every year. Many Poles have
also taken an active interest in Israel, including visiting
there.
At home, the decision to create the Museum of History
of Polish Jews in Warsaw - on the very spot where the
ghetto was established by the Nazis 60 years ago - is
indicative of Poles' growing understanding of the role
Jews have played in Polish and European history. The
museum, designed by Frank Gehry, will be more than a
symbol of our communities' shared history; it will help
to raise new generations of Poles in a spirit of tolerance.
From the devastation of the Holocaust, let that spirit
of tolerance help build new communal ties between Poles
and Jews. As we remember what we lost during the Holocaust,
let us work together to gain a common future.
Wladyslaw Bartoszewski was foreign
minister of Poland in 1995 and from 2000 to 2001. A
co-founder of the Holocaust-era Polish underground group
Zegota, the Council for Aid to Jews, he was one of the
first Poles to be recognized by Yad Vashem as "Righteous
Among the Nations
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