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2014: The Year of Jan Karski, anti-Nazi Resistance fighter

Jan Karski, before a wall-map of the Warsaw Ghetto at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, recalls his secret 1942 missions into the Nazi "prison-city-within-a-city" (From Wikipedia)


Cool. As many readers will know, I am of Polish descent and all things Polish from WWII interest me greatly.

The Polish parliament has declared 2014 as “Karski Commemoration Year,” named after legendary anti-Nazi Resistance fighter Jan Karski, who brought the first updated reports about the extermination of European Jews to England, and later to the United States, in the fall of 1942. Karski was also one of the Righteous Gentiles and an honorary citizen of Israel.

Last Friday’s decision by the Polish parliament was supported unanimously by all members of both the ruling party and the opposition. It was the result of an intiative by Poland’s Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorsky, and was sponsored by Poland’s President, Bronislaw Komorowski.

Throughout the year, Poland’s representatives around the world will endeavor to remind the world of Karski’s actions, telling people the truth about the struggles of the Polish Resistance movement, and especially about the extermination of the Jewish people on Polish soil.

Karski visited the Warsaw Ghetto many times, before embarking on his dangerous mission. Dressed as a German officer, he also investigated the living conditions in the ghetto-transit camp of Izbica. His report was intended for the Polish government-in-exile in London, but Karski also delivered it to representatives of the Bund and of other Polish Zionist organizations, who had found refuge in England.

While doing so, he proclaimed that “these people still have equal rights, since they are citizens of Poland and their parties were represented in parliament before the war.”

Based on Karski’s testimony and on documents he provided, the Polish Foreign Minister-in-exile, Edward Raczynski, prepared a detailed report on the Holocaust and submitted it to the Allied authorities on December 10, 1942.

He did not receive an adequate response. Winston Churchill refused to see Karski, saying that his reports were exaggerated. In July 1943 Karski was invited to see U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt but, according to Karski, the President treated the reports of annihilation of European Jews with suspicion.

Karski’s requests that the railway lines leading to the camps be bombed were turned down. His suggestion that German cities should be threatened with destruction, unless the massacre of Jews stopped, was also rebuffed. Karski did not despair and met with almost all influential personalities across the country in order to tell his story but, in his words, nowhere did the plight of Europe’s Jews raise real interest.

Read more: Poland names 2014 after anti-Nazi Resistance fighter Jan Karski ~ Haaretz

Comments

  1. As the Jews say "Never forget".

    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/aftermath-dares-unearth-terrible-secrets-651230

    ReplyDelete
  2. Never forget, but don't re-write history.

    Here is a far more balanced account of the terrible event. It wasn't a case of "All of the towns Catholics slaughtering 1600 Jews, but probably 40 Polish men who followed German orders, killing 340-400 innocent Jews.

    The anti-Catholic media like to interchange the word "Catholic" and "Pole" to make it seem like an issue of religion.

    It was an event covered extensively in the Polish media over the years, had the full backing of the Polish Government to investigate it, and their actions have been appropriate in admitting terrible shame attributed to their country by the actions of these collaborators.

    We all understand in war that there are good and bad people on all sides of the battle, so the more mature of us don't suggest ALL Germans/Catholics/Poles/Atheists/Humanists were evil or snow white, but accepts the reality of the complexity of life. This event is tragic and awful, but that it is hi-jacked by people to turn into an exaggerated story of anti-Catholicism is so disproportionate to the balance of Polish actions and suffering in the war is very disappointing.

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  3. LRO,

    I have a book on the massacre that is far more balanced than the one written by Gross. It's by Marek Jan Chodakiewicz, and available on Amazon. If you are as interested in this subject as you imply by making the comment you did, then by all means go and read it: The Massacre in Jedwabne.

    ReplyDelete

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