WATCH: Lecture On Holocaust In Poland Canceled After Far-right Lawmaker Storms Podium

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    Polish-Canadian historian Jan Grabowski stands at the podium for a planned lectured as far-right lawmaker Grzegorz Braun of Poland’s Confederation party grabs the microphone and smashes it at the German Historical Institute in Warsaw, Poland, May 30, 2023. (Courtesy of Jan Grabowski)

    POLAND (JTA) – Polish-Canadian historian Jan Grabowski was about to deliver a lecture in Warsaw Tuesday related to his battle against efforts by Polish leaders to suppress uncomfortable truths about the history of antisemitism in the country before and during the Holocaust.
    https://twitter.com/i/status/1663838091222691840
    But before Grabowski could get started, a far-right Polish lawmaker with a record of antisemitic statements stormed the speaker’s podium, smashing the microphone, knocking over loudspeakers, and yanking cables, according to Notes from Poland, an independent local outlet. Grzegorz Braun, of the Confederation party, later said he disrupted the event to defend Poland’s good name against Grabowski’s “historical propaganda.”

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    Warsaw-born Grabowski, a professor at the University of Ottawa whose father was a Jewish Holocaust survivor, has been a vocal critic of Poland’s efforts to constrain discussion of the Holocaust there. It became illegal in 2018 in Poland to accuse the country of complicity with Nazi crimes.

    Grabowski recently published an academic study exposing the alleged distortion of Wikipedia articles on the Holocaust in Poland, leading to an unusual intervention by Wikipedia’s top authorities. He has drawn forceful criticism from right-wing nationalists and has even been prosecuted over his research.

    “Nothing like this has ever happened to me, I felt like [I was] in Poland in the 1930s,” Grabowski was quoted as saying following the incident at his lecture.

    When the police arrived at the scene, Braun invoked his parliamentary privilege and refused to leave Warsaw’s German Historical Institute even as the event was called off and the crowd vacated the premises.

    Braun reportedly said he “refuses to leave the building [because] I am protecting the Polish nation against a provocative attack on our historical sensitivity. The Germans will not teach us history in Poland.”

    When the Institute’s director, Milos Reznik, asked Braun to stop damaging the Institute’s property, Braun said he won’t take orders from a German and told Reznik, “Get out of Poland.” Reznik is Czech, not German.

    Outside the institute, participants encountered a protest of the lecture led by Robert Bąkiewicz, a prominent nationalist figure. Ahead of the event, public media outlets dominated by the ruling right-wing Law and Justice criticized Grabowski and the government-run Institute of National Remembrance condemned what it characterized as efforts to blame Poland for German crimes against Jews.

    Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum and Memorial criticized the use of the Auschwitz death camp in a campaign video by Poland’s ruling party, Reuters reported. The video, which was posted on social media, discourages viewers from attending a political opposition rally slated for Sunday.

    The video seizes on language used by a government critic Tomasz Lis, who had tweeted that “a chamber” would be found for ruling party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski and President Andrzej Duda, who is an ally of the party.

    The video presents an image of the front gate of Auschwitz with its infamous slogan, “Arbeit macht frei” and asks, “Do you really want to march under this slogan?”

    Lis said he meant to say “cell,” not “chamber,” and intended no allusion to Nazi gas chambers.

    “The instrumentalization of the tragedy of people who suffered and died in the German Nazi Auschwitz camp – on either side of the political dispute – is an insult to the memory of the victims,” the Auschwitz museum said on Twitter. “It is a sad, painful and unacceptable manifestation of the moral and intellectual corruption of the public debate.”


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    11 Comments
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    Yitz
    Yitz
    10 months ago

    A picture is worth a thousand words

    Sol
    Sol
    10 months ago

    This is not defending numerous instances of Polish collaboration, but the opposite is also true. There are more honoured Poles as Righteous Gentiles at Yad Vashem who helped save Jews than any other European occupied country.
    The Ukes & Romanians were far worse.

    Educated Archy
    Educated Archy
    10 months ago

    Was Poland really so anti semetic? Lets focus on pre war poland specifically between the two world wars. Didn’t polish jewery thrive then? I believe many Russian jews who were being oppressed moved there. R Meir Shapiro z”l and many others were prestigious legislators/ representatives in the polish parliament. Now did the poles cash in during the war and engane in all kinds of hate? yes But I don’t see that they were worse than the Ukrianains , Russians or Hungarians. Of couuse esav hates yakov and the turth only comes out once times are bad and the poritz is riled up.
    I know this comment isn’t PC and many will down vote me. But I think its crucial that before we go about yelling everyone is or was an anti semite and causing strife that we get facts straight. Otherwise, its useless to go after the real anti semites.