T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
632.1 | | SPIDER::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:58 | 24 |
| re > 623.38 from ROSENBLUH
>
> So it was a necessity that the death camps be set up and
> staffed in places where the local populace could be counted upon, and
> Poland fit the bill.
This is of course nonsense.
On the other hand, anti-semitism did increase dramatically in Poland
before the WWII after the death of Pilsudski and long before Hitler and
Stalin took over Poland.
In my opinion, most of the world events that included increase OR
decrease of anti-semitism in various countries/regions can be largely
and directly attributed to the government policies and to a smaller
extent to the "historical tendency" of the local cultures. Of course,
if a ruling establishment practices anti-semitism for decades or even
centuries, it will contribute the "local tendency".
I do not know how many of you heard of recent experiments in schools
that illustrate the development of racism via "pretend" games. It does
not take very much for a game to get out of hand in a matter of days --
so gullible is human nature. So please drop the "all xxx are racist"
crap. Many of us would do unspeakable things after proper conditioning.
|
632.2 | | CSG::ROSENBLUH | | Fri Jan 27 1989 15:00 | 24 |
| re .-1
Are you really characterising my recent longer note on Polish anti-semitism
in this century as being in essence 'all xxx are racists crap' ???
Well, maybe you meant someone else, and merely forgot to make clear
to or of whom you were speaking. Just bad luck on my part, you might say.
You seem to have a pretty incredible understanding
of history and culture, in which there is apparently such a thing as
'local culture' which is somehow an entity completely distinct and
largely isolated from local (or otherwise) power structures, institutions,
ideas and governments. Oh yes, and 'ruling establishments'.
I feel it inappropriately hostile to go around dismissing half-baked
silly ideas I sometimes find in this notesfile as 'nonsense', so let's just say,
'pretty darn amazing incredible'...
If you do bother trying to reread what I wrote, you will notice that
I nowhere address the question of factors contributing to Polish anti-semitism
in modern times (meaning roughly 17th c. onwards), I merely objected strongly
to Piotr's attempts to deny it's existence.
So how you can decide that you have a contrary view of the origins of
anti-semitism to mine, is a mystery to me.
|
632.3 | please quote when you write | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Fri Jan 27 1989 15:34 | 14 |
| > 632.2 ROSENBLUH
>
> If you do bother trying to reread what I wrote, you will notice that
> I nowhere address the question of factors contributing to Polish anti-semitism
> in modern times (meaning roughly 17th c. onwards), I merely objected strongly
> to Piotr's attempts to deny it's existence.
Kathy,
Would you please show us where I attempted to deny its existence?
I simply tried to show as fully as possible the complexity of the
historical situations the BAGELS readers attempt to discuss...
Piotr
|
632.4 | | LDYBUG::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri Jan 27 1989 16:16 | 32 |
| re .2
> Just bad luck on my part, you might say.
Sorry, the "crap" business was not in reply to your specific note, and
I should have been more clear that only the first sentence was meant as
a reply, yet not even to your complete note (which I did read in its
entirety and I do agree with many points there), but to the quoted
sentence, which I take issue with.
> You seem to have a pretty incredible understanding
>of history and culture,
Thank you! :-)
> in which there is apparently such a thing as
>'local culture' which is somehow an entity completely distinct and
>largely isolated from local (or otherwise) power structures, institutions,
>ideas and governments. Oh yes, and 'ruling establishments'.
I did not say "entity completely distinct", but I insist that they are
different! I used Pilsudsky as an example where the absence/presence of
a "presidential" figure of certain beliefs has drastically affected the
ethnic relations in Poland.
> So how you can decide that you have a contrary view of the origins of
>anti-semitism to mine, is a mystery to me.
I hadn't. Just bad luck on your part, I might say (re-using your
phrase).
Alex
|
632.5 | Why the Germans Built the Death Camps in Poland ? | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Fri Apr 28 1989 12:14 | 9 |
| I am still waiting to hear a documented response to the note 632.0.
For now I would like to alert the more serious readers of BAGELS to
a drama to be shown on PBS that will re-create the infamous German
meeting so central to this note's topic:
"Hitler's Final Solution: The Wannsee Conference" (W.German; 1987)
Monday, May 1, 1989 at 9:00 PM, Channel 2-Boston, 11-New Hamshire.
Piotr
|
632.6 | Who is "serious"? | TAZRAT::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Fri Apr 28 1989 12:39 | 11 |
| re: -1
What are you trying to imply by "the more serious readers of BAGELS"?
Yes I plan to watch & tape the Wannsee conference, and we are 100%
aware of which country planned the "final solution", but this does
not excuse the Polish people's role (excluding the Poles
who were exemplary in saving Jewish lives) during the war. I'm
sorry Piotr, I just can't buy the standard anti-communist line of
"the commies did it, not us".
David
|
632.7 | | SPIDER::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri Apr 28 1989 13:50 | 10 |
| re .5,6
David, you missed Piotr's point:
Somebody suggested that Germans built concentration camps in Poland
beacuse of Polish anti-semitism. Piotr brought evidence in .0
suggesting that Poland was chosen by Germans for logistical reasons
that did not include Polish sentiments if any.
Alex
|
632.8 | | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Fri Apr 28 1989 14:35 | 6 |
| re .5,.6,.7
Thank you, Alex.
Piotr
|
632.9 | film vs. film? | TAZRAT::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Fri Apr 28 1989 15:30 | 6 |
| re: .7
Ok I'll accept that point, but how do you react to the local Pole's
responses in the movie Shoah?
David
|
632.10 | | LDYBUG::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:01 | 5 |
| re .9
I am at a disadvantage having not seen the film.
Alex
|
632.11 | shame | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:02 | 8 |
| re: .9
David,
I react with great disappointment both for him and for Mr.Lanzmann...
Piotr
|
632.12 | confused! | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:42 | 22 |
| reply to: < Note 632.11 by TALLIS::KOZIOL "Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika" >
> -< shame >-
>
> re: .9
>
> David,
>
> I react with great disappointment both for him and for Mr.Lanzmann...
>
> Piotr
Shame for "Shoah"??
Shame for David Cherson??
Disappointment in "Shoah"?
I'm confused.
/don feinberg
|
632.13 | What happened? | LDYBUG::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:57 | 4 |
| re Shoah
I am familiar with neither the movie nor the events around it,
could somebody explain or point me to some info?
|
632.14 | And I Thought We Jews Liked To Ramble On and On.... | FDCV01::ROSS | | Fri Apr 28 1989 17:02 | 13 |
| MILD Flame ON:
Really, the last few replies (except Don Feinberg's) have been
less than edifying.
Can people be a little more verbal in what they're asking/saying?
It's not as if we're getting charged by the word here. This is not
the Classified section in the Globe.
Flame OFF.
Alan
|
632.15 | Shame? | SETH::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Mon May 01 1989 09:54 | 6 |
| re: .9
I'm a little confused, why should Claude Lanzmann have any shame?
In my humble opinion he did a service to humanity by producing SHOAH.
David
|
632.16 | shame | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Mon May 01 1989 10:44 | 12 |
| re: .15
Because the witnesses to the Holocaust Mr.Lanzmann focuses in his
movie on were POWERLESS to change what was going on around them.
On the other hand he DELIBERATELY misses an opportunity to point
his finger at the great and powerful of the world who could have
done something to stop the German crimes... Did you learn anything
from SHOAH who THESE people were? If so, please tell some NAMES...
Piotr
|
632.17 | not quite "on" the mark | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Mon May 01 1989 13:40 | 58 |
| reply to: Note 632.16 by TALLIS::KOZIOL
> re: .15
>
> Because the witnesses to the Holocaust Mr.Lanzmann focuses in his
> movie on were POWERLESS to change what was going on around them.
>
> On the other hand he DELIBERATELY misses an opportunity to point
> his finger at the great and powerful of the world who could have
> done something to stop the German crimes... Did you learn anything
> from SHOAH who THESE people were? If so, please tell some NAMES...
Piotr,
I think that your note distorts things in several ways:
A) The people who he focusses on ARE relatively ordinary
people. But two things come out:
- First, you must listen to the attitudes of the interviewees.
They wouldn't have done anything even if they could have.
- Second, at the time, there _were_ people who DID DO a great
deal, even though they could be called, as you want to say,
"powerless". In Israel, they're called the "Righteous
Gentiles". There were many such in Germany, Poland, the
Ukraine, Holland, and other countries. Despite what you
want to call "powerlesness", they did manage to save quite a
few thousands of Jews.
B) There IS now some focus on the "Great and Powerful". There's
a new book -- by a non-Jewish scholar -- called "The Abandonment
of the Jews". It is a shocking and horrifying expose of the
inaction and prejudice in the American and British governments,
and of the media, of the time. It is, kind of, "your worst
fears, realized".
One cannot read this book and be unmoved. (If you ever had any
admiration for FDR, perhaps you should think twice before
reading...).
BUT: That the American and British governments acted like a
bunch of SOBs does not reduce the seriousness of the situation
in Poland. Blaming the Americans for their inaction and
anti-semitism does not reduce or absolve the cooperative
Poles (And/or Germans. And/or Austrians. And/or French.
And/or ...).
I don't think that Lanzmann DELIBERATELY "missed" this. I think
that, in Shoah, one of his primary intentions was to focus on very
direct, personal attitudes -- regardless of the the attitudes
of the governments -- as a major contributor to the suffering in the
Holocaust. And, I think that his secondary goal was to show
that many of those repulsive attitudes have not changed over
the time in-between. That IS horrifying. That IS embarassing.
don feinberg
|
632.18 | exactly | TAZRAT::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Mon May 01 1989 14:08 | 21 |
| re: .17
Don, you took the words right out of my mouth (or fingers in this
case).
re: .16
I don't wish to belabor this debate any further, but I want to point
out that anti-semitism and it's often violent accompaniment, pogroms,
etc., existed in Eastern Europe long before the Nazis came to power.
My mother and her family were the sole survivors of their town in
the Ukraine following a pogrom committed by native Ukrainians, not
Nazis. That's about the most personal example that I can give you.
The Nazis didn't have to work too hard to find volunteers for the
einsatzgruppen.
I like to reemphasize the fact of righteous Gentiles that Don had
mentioned in .16, that's a fact also.
David
|
632.19 | shame | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Mon May 01 1989 17:11 | 59 |
| > 632.17 CURIE::FEINBERG
>
> - Second, at the time, there _were_ people who DID DO a great
> deal, even though they could be called, as you want to say,
> "powerless". In Israel, they're called the "Righteous
> Gentiles". There were many such in Germany, Poland, the
> Ukraine, Holland, and other countries. Despite what you
> want to call "powerlesness", they did manage to save quite a
> few thousands of Jews.
>
> I don't think that Lanzmann DELIBERATELY "missed" this. I think
> that, in Shoah, one of his primary intentions was to focus on very
> direct, personal attitudes -- regardless of the the attitudes
> of the governments -- as a major contributor to the suffering in the
> Holocaust. And, I think that his secondary goal was to show
> that many of those repulsive attitudes have not changed over
> the time in-between. That IS horrifying. That IS embarassing.
>
Don,
Obviously there is no reason to explain why I felt shame after
anti-Semitic responses of Lanzmann's interviewees. This is not
a topic we need to discuss, as I know everybody is in agreement.
Why am I disappointed with Mr.Lanzmann ? Because "Shoah" omitted
the people "who DID DO a great deal" from his SELECTION into the
movie. He does not show many Polish "Righteous Christians", does
he ? Do you know that there were about 400 hours of interviews ?
It is obviously his right as an artist to do what he wants with
the material, but in my judgment a selection of 2% (~8 hours)
of the WHOLE can be done so many DIFFERENT ways that it can
support ANY statement about humanity... I therefore am not
convinced that "Shoah" is an objective statement on "Witnesses
to the Holocaust". It is NOT A DOCUMENT, and it should not be
treated as such by people who have seen it.
Why does it matter that "Shoah" forgets the Western allies ?
The book that you mentioned is certainly not the only one that
tells the truth about the Western democracies. But I was not
complaining about the lack of sources for such information.
The impact of any book is minimal compare to the impact of any
movie, and especially a movie as powerful as "Shoah". That is
exactly why I am so sensitive to not only what is IN "Shoah",
but also to what is MISSING from it.
Even though we both agree that some important names (like FDR)
are missing from "Shoah", I think their omission WAS deliberate.
It allowed Mr.Lanzmann to skip over the efforts of the Polish
underground to alert the conscience of the World. Aren't such
efforts reflecting on "very direct, personal attitudes" and
thus worthy of showing too ?
Do you know what President Roosevelt had to say to Jan Karski
after he asked FDR what he should tell the Polish people now
that the U.S. knew about the Holocaust ? He said "Tell them that
we will WIN the war "! But this also is missing from "Shoah"...
Piotr
|
632.20 | can't agree with you | SETH::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Mon May 01 1989 20:02 | 14 |
| re: .19
Unfortunately I can't agree with your argument that Lanzmann was
obligated to include interviews with righteous Polish gentiles,
he had his reasons for editing the film as he did. The subject
of rescue of Jews by righteous gentiles should be the subject of
an entire film and should include interviews with gentiles from
all over Europe, not just Poland.
As for Jan Karski, I must say that he was a very unusual representative
of the Polish underground. The history of the polish home army
is very checkered in regards to their relations to the Jewish people.
David
|
632.21 | Pardon the intrusion.... | ANT::PKANDAPPAN | | Mon May 01 1989 23:24 | 18 |
| After having seen the movie, I got the distinct impression that Mr.Lanzmann was
not out to make a documentary of the actions and consequences of the Polish
nation or the Western world at that time. I personally felt that he was
trying to capture in a very simple but effective way the attitudes of the
lay person in those areas - what they felt, why they felt so, what they did
and why they did those things.
It seemed to me an [sadly] eloquent way of exposing to us all the
myraid reasons that the dastardly deeds could go on; and how little it
affected those who did not care enough to let it affect them.
And how little has changed, if any. Sadly!
In that sense, I fail to understand why Mr.Lanzmann has to bear any
"shame" for omitting certain things. For he probably never set out to capture
those things. He was after the common man; not the Polish resistance, not
the "great powers". The common man; and how callous he can be.
thank you
-parthi
|
632.22 | Several asides | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Tue May 02 1989 06:09 | 26 |
| Several asides:
re. the book: "The Abandonment of the Jews" was written by David Wyman,
Professor of History in ? (Harvard?). Since it would really shake up
some dormant consciences, I'm afraid you'll never see it on the
bestsellers list. As was said before, it is sickening to read it.
Unbelievable, how cynically the decision was made on the death or life
of millions of people.
re. Polish Antisemitism: antisemitism is not a Polish invention, nor is
it a Polish particularity. It exists everywhere and always has (as I
was taught in a different topic of this conference). This includes the
US of A. Without having seen the film, I'd forward my conviction that
interviews of the sort described can be made anywhere in the world.
You'll always find 'average' people who will tell you that they are
anti-semites. As a matter of fact, the more literate and educated a
person is, the less this person will be inclined to conform with
anti-semitic views.
Furthermore, if it has been rightly said that righteous Gentiles
existed everywhere, the opposite must be accepted, as well. If ONLY
Polish persons with anti-semitic convictions have been heard, ONLY
Polish Righteous Gentiles should have been interviewed, as well. This
would have avoided the impression that anti-semitism is particularly
strong in Poland. It might be, by the way, but should be presented
more objectively, then.
|
632.23 | Mans inhumanity to manking | MOSSAD::GREG | I'd rather be home in Hawaii... | Tue May 02 1989 09:03 | 5 |
| I agree with Parthi, what it showed was WHO made such things possible. The Great Satans
whether it was at Wansee or elsewhere could not have made their sick plans into reality
where it not for an underlying mass of henchmen who MADE it happen. In this case they
found a ready supply of such s*b's, which certainly wsan't the case in Denmark!
greg
|
632.24 | ??? | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Tue May 02 1989 11:24 | 3 |
| re. Denmark: it wasn't the case in Botswana, either. What is it
that you're trying to say?
|
632.25 | Wansee | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Tue May 02 1989 12:25 | 5 |
| As far as Wansee, there was a program on WGBH (Boston) last night in
German with english subtitles about the meeting. Did anyone else catch
it (I tuned in late and missed the beginning)?
Eric
|
632.26 | The King wore a yellow star | VAX4::RADWIN | | Tue May 02 1989 12:29 | 6 |
| re .24
Botswana wasn't occupied by the Nazis, as far as I know; Denmark
was but the king and other leaders still resisted the anti-Jewish
measures imposed on them.
|
632.27 | | MOSSAD::GREG | I'd rather be home in Hawaii... | Tue May 02 1989 12:44 | 2 |
| Thanx Mr. Radwin, you saved me the reply 8^}
greg
|
632.28 | hurt | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Tue May 02 1989 13:00 | 100 |
| > 632.9 CHERSON
>
> Ok I'll accept that point, but how do you react to the local Pole's
> responses in the movie Shoah?
I would like to remind everybody the note that got us to switch
the discussion to "Shoah". As you can see the original question
posed to me by David, I can only interpret it as "but how do YOU
react to... ". I STILL can only repeat what I said in .11, that
"I react with great disappointment for BOTH him and Mr.Lanzmann".
> 632.23 GREG
>
> I agree with Parthi, what it showed was WHO made such things possible.
> The Great Satans whether it was at Wansee or elsewhere could not have
> made their sick plans into reality where it not for an underlying mass
> of henchmen who MADE it happen. In this case they found a ready supply
> of such s*b's, which certainly wsan't the case in Denmark!
Now THIS note brings us BACK to the topic, which I repeat here:
<<< Why the Germans Built the Death Camps in Poland ? >>>
I watched the "Wannsee Conference" on TV last night and would
like to get back to the real topic of this note. Here are the
three transcripted excerpts from the minutes of that meeting
that I found fundamentally important to this discussion, as
they fully support what was presented in the base note 632.0:
********************************************************************************
********************************************************************************
Heydrich:
(his right hand pointing to an area North of Kiev,
just behind the Eastern front)
"To be brief, our task forces following hard on the heels of our
troops have practically eliminated this concentration of Jews in
one swoop. With some prodding, we used the anti-Semitism of the
local population".
********************************************************************************
Race & Settlement Office representative:
"Solving the Jewish problem is one thing. The reorganization of
Europe is another. We're right in the middle. In Poland what has
happened? Liquidations! Polish intelligentsia, teachers, clergy,
nobility, etc... have been eliminated to a large extent. This
will continue in cooperation with the local authorities. What is
planned?
1) Population exchange.
Open up western Poland to 10 million Reich and repatriated
Germans. The rest of Poland, ditto, for future German resettlement.
2) Germanization.
The Race and Settlement Office sorts Poles into four categories.
The majority will vanish alongside the Jews. A minority will be
used as a labor force for those construction projects with which
the F�rer will imprint forever the stamp of German culture on
the new Europe.
3) Finally, annihilation.
Birth control will strike at the roots of what's left so that
they wither and die. Finis Poloniae..."
********************************************************************************
Hans Frank's representative:
"I've already pointed out the problem. 2� million Polish ghetto
Jews. Disease, crime. The Polish economy is threatened. Can't we
attend to our Jews first? Few transport problems".
Heydrich:
"Certainly. Polish Jews first".
Hans Frank's representative:
"The Governor General will be pleased. We must try to avoid alarming
the Polish population."
Heydrich:
"It's a matter of camouflage and speed. We'll do a good job."
********************************************************************************
********************************************************************************
Greg,
Please be careful when you use such words as s*b's.
Whom did you have in mind?
As to the other readers, I hope to have provided some facts from
which one should be able to understand why the Poles feel so hurt
when people who never experienced what happened there make quick
and emotional judgments...
Piotr
|
632.29 | | BOSTON::SOHN | Can't get out of the game... | Tue May 02 1989 13:49 | 14 |
| re: < Note 632.25 by NSSG::FEINSMITH "I'm the NRA" >
> As far as Wansee, there was a program on WGBH (Boston) last night in
> German with english subtitles about the meeting. Did anyone else catch
> it (I tuned in late and missed the beginning)?
I knew it was coming, so I taped it (Beta only, sorry). I'll see it
tonight.
Also, there was a related program on WENH (?) last night about the
March of the Living (?), which was a tour of, among other places,
Auschwitz, Maidanek and Treblinka. Powerful stuff.
also eric
|
632.30 | VHS taping of GBH program | PERVAX::WAKY | Onward, thru the Fog... | Tue May 02 1989 15:42 | 10 |
|
re: < Note 632.25 by NSSG::FEINSMITH "I'm the NRA" >
> As far as Wansee, there was a program on WGBH (Boston) last night in
> German with english subtitles about the meeting. Did anyone else catch
> it (I tuned in late and missed the beginning)?
I also taped it, on VHS! Send mail if you'd like to borrow...
Waky
|
632.31 | Nice try | MOSSAD::GREG | I'd rather be home in Hawaii... | Wed May 03 1989 04:12 | 23 |
| Re. 28
> Please be careful when you use such words as s*b's.
> Whom did you have in mind?
I thought I was being extremely clear and careful, the s*b's I had/have in mind are the
hundreds of thousands who not only collaborated but sometimes exceeded the germans in the
atrocities they committed. This did not by any means only include poles, but ukranians, latvians
etc...
> As to the other readers, I hope to have provided some facts from
> which one should be able to understand why the Poles feel so hurt
> when people who never experienced what happened there make quick
> and emotional judgments...
Gimme a break, my whole family on my father's side perished in Poland. There were several
countries which were invaded by the germans yet I doubt that you would have found the
anti-semitism which was and continues unabatted in Poland.
That Poland was a victim of aggression is clear and beyond doubt, that a sizeable portion of
the population took advantage of the situation is also beyond historical doubt. Can you
explain the murder of dozens of Jews in the 1950's? As I recall the germans were kicked out
in 1944. But then perhaps they were just being loyal communists right?
I ain't saying YOU specifically, but don't cover this up under the guise of "gee folks, we all
suffered"!
|
632.32 | Being tough in typing's easy... | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Wed May 03 1989 05:51 | 1 |
| I see a HUGE rathole coming along... Busy days for Gavriel.
|
632.33 | Stay on the topic or start a new note... | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Wed May 03 1989 15:41 | 65 |
| > 632.31 GREG
>
> I thought I was being extremely clear and careful, the s*b's I had/have in
> mind are the hundreds of thousands who not only collaborated but sometimes
> exceeded the germans in the atrocities they committed. This did not by any
> means only include poles, but ukranians, latvians etc...
>
Please read Nechama Tec "When Light Pierced the Darkness -
Christian Rescue of Jews in Nazi-Occupied Poland" and then you
might be less tempted to put all these nationalities into one
basket. The Poles were NOT Nazi allies, there were NO Polish
units fighting under Hitler. But most of the other nations in the
region WERE (with the exception of the Czechs)! The cases when
the Poles DID take advantage of the Jews cannot be discussed
without including the Poles who RESCUED the Jews... You're wrong
when you say "hundreds of thousands" of collaborators, as this is
NOT true for Poland. Where are your figures from ?
As far as the number of Polish rescuers of Jews is concerned,
their number IS documented, and is in THOUSANDS (see Nechama Tec)!
You probably don't know it, but hundreds of Polish blackmailers of
Jews, and other Poles who collaborated with the Germans (there were
even a few Jews among them!) were executed by the Polish Home Army
underground units for their crimes (read Nechama Tec)!
If you read the few excerpts from the Wannsee Conference in .28 you
might notice that Heydrich refers to the Ukraine when he mentions
the cooperation of the local population in mass killings. As far
as the Poles were concerned, not only were the Germans NOT planning
on their cooperation in the Final Solution, they explicitly stated
"avoid alarming the Polish population" and "[use] camouflage."
>
> Gimme a break, my whole family on my father's side perished in Poland. There
> were several countries which were invaded by the germans yet I doubt that you
> would have found the anti-semitism which was and continues unabatted in Poland.
>
As one of the participants in this conference sadly remarked, there
would be many finalists, if we tried to find the most anti-Semitic
country in the World. Do you blame the Poles that your family died
IN Poland ? Be more specific. There were MANY Jews that were killed
in many OTHER countries that were invaded by the Germans. If you
mention Denmark again, let me remind you that 3,000,000 Christian
Poles died during the War. How many Danes were killed by the Nazis ?
>
> That Poland was a victim of aggression is clear and beyond doubt, that a
> sizeable portion of the population took advantage of the situation is also
> beyond historical doubt. Can you explain the murder of dozens of Jews in the
> 1950's? As I recall the germans were kicked out in 1944. But then perhaps they
> were just being loyal communists right?
>
Greg,
What murder in the 1950's ? What are you talking about ???
Once again you are OFF the topic. Ever since I started this note,
I have been trying to prove that the Germans did NOT include the
attitude of the Poles towards the Jews when they decided to place
the majority of the Death Camps on the Polish territory. CLEAR ?
Please re-read the facts in the base note .0 and in the relevant
excerpts from the Wannsee Conference (note .28). Then see if you
have something pertinent to say on that topic. OK ? Or else please
start off another topic... Be specific what you want to discuss.
Piotr
|
632.34 | | CARTUN::FRYDMAN | wherever you go...you're there | Wed May 03 1989 16:29 | 27 |
| I think Greg is alluding to the anti-semitic "pogroms" which occurred
AFTER the war in Poland.
I spent last Monday evening at the Young Israel of Brookline. Rabbi
Joseph Polak (the BU Hillel Rabbi who is also a survivor) spoke about
his recent trip to Poland. He spoke about the Polish tour guide who
seemed to relish his descriptions and cold death statistics as he
"guided" the group around Auschwitz. Another survivor and Auschwitz
alumnea was among the group and had to push the guide to take them to
parts of the camp that showed example to the humanity of the Jews vs.
parts of the camp that tended to dehumanize them.
Rabbi Polak made mention of the Carmellite Convent that had been built
on the site in utter disrespect and disregard for the memory of the
primary victims of that place and a special marker in the basement of
one of the buildings memorializing a priest (who Rabbi Polak noted for
his rabid anti-semitism) who died in the camp and has recently been
beatified by Pope John-Paul.
He also mention that for all intents and purposes Poland is
"Judenrine". The average age of the few hundred Jews of Poland is 75
and that most had married gentiles.
I'm certain that he will be writing and speaking more about this trip in the
future.
|
632.35 | How true to life? | ABACUS::RADWIN | | Wed May 03 1989 18:03 | 19 |
| < Note 632.28 by TALLIS::KOZIOL "Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika" >
> I watched the "Wannsee Conference" on TV last night and would
> like to get back to the real topic of this note. Here are the
> three transcripted excerpts from the minutes of that meeting
> that I found fundamentally important to this discussion, as
> they fully support what was presented in the base note 632.0:
Point of information:
Do you know, for sure, that the TV program was based on actual
transcripts of what was said at Wannsee? My impression was
that only sanitized notes were kept of this conference, which
is one reason that its been difficult for historians
to pin down the Nazi's decision to implement a "final solution."
Unless the TV program faithfully mirrored the acutal conference,
the excerpts you cite are irrelevant.
|
632.36 | I would say much more than the US produced TV... | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Wed May 03 1989 18:28 | 15 |
| re: .35
Lucy Dawidowicz in "The War against the Jews 1933-1945" quotes the
same statements as in the "Wannsee Conference" movie. As far as one
can tell from the "atmosphere" during the meeting, the Germans were
not very worried about "sanitizing" the transcripts. After all, if
they were afraid of what was said then, wouldn't they be even more
afraid of what was about to get DONE ???
If you have any doubts, maybe you can learn something directly from
the historical advisor of the "Wannsee Conference" movie. This was
Professor Shlomo Aronson from the University of Jerusalem.
Piotr
|
632.37 | Lucy Davidowicz, revisited... | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Wed May 03 1989 21:59 | 42 |
| reply to: Note 632.36 by TALLIS::KOZIOL
> Lucy Dawidowicz in "The War against the Jews 1933-1945" quotes the
> same statements as in the "Wannsee Conference" movie. As far as one
> can tell from the "atmosphere" during the meeting, the Germans were
> not very worried about "sanitizing" the transcripts. After all, if
> they were afraid of what was said then, wouldn't they be even more
> afraid of what was about to get DONE ???
>
Did you, by any chance, hear the interview of Lucy Davidowicz
that was aired on "All Things Considered" this afternoon? She
spoke for a while about the incredible depth and extent of indigeneous
anti-semitism in Poland. I wish I could post that interview
in here!
One specific comment I cannot forget was: she was so
certain of the virulence of the anti-semitism of the Poles in
all walks of life -- including doctors, lawyers, etc. -- that
she believes firmly that the Polish Jews would have been murdered
by the Poles in 1939 onward, quite independent of anything
the Germans would have done, or did. The interviewer asked
pointedly if she didn't think that the more educated Poles
would have been less Anti-semitic. She emphatically replied
"No" -- that most Poles received their lessons in anti-semitism
from the day of their birth, and that formal education had
little to do with it. She (eyewitness) recounts incidents such
as medical students, in their medical clothing, participating in
violent demonstrations against Jews.
This was one of those segments from A-T-C that really
rivets you to the radio (for example, "Children of Nazis").
What she had to say was quite upsetting, to say the least.
[She went to Vilna in 1938 - 1939 (!) to study and record the
Jewish culture of the time in Poland. She has just released
a new book, "From That Place And Time...", studying the
destruction of the Jewish community there.]
Next best thing: I will order a transcript or a cassette
from NPR tomorrow morning.
don feinberg
|
632.38 | | MOSSAD::GREG | I'd rather be home in Hawaii... | Fri May 05 1989 04:07 | 31 |
|
> You probably don't know it, but hundreds of Polish blackmailers of
> Jews, and other Poles who collaborated with the Germans (there were
> even a few Jews among them!) were executed by the Polish Home Army
> underground units for their crimes (read Nechama Tec)!
They were probably excecuted more for collaborating with the Germans than for betraying Jews
> What murder in the 1950's ? What are you talking about ???
> Once again you are OFF the topic. Ever since I started this note,
> I have been trying to prove that the Germans did NOT include the
> attitude of the Poles towards the Jews when they decided to place
> the majority of the Death Camps on the Polish territory. CLEAR ?
WHAT murders? I'd suggest a history refresher course. As was stated by Mr. Feinberg, I beleive,
pogroms existed in Poland BEFORE the Germans got there and after they left.
As to the 3 million Poles who died, a great many died at the hands of the Russian bear, not
least was the misleading of the polish communist resistance who was left to die whilst the
Russians watched...
I would agree that the REASON of *why* the camps were put there was to keep it out of the
spotlights of the international community (not that these people {FDR, Churchill...} concerned
themselves much with the problem once they knew) more than with whether the Poles were
anti-semitic.
On the more global topic (rathole) of Polish attitudes towards Jews, one can't but draw one's
conclusions after seeing Shoah and the interviews with the Poles they showed in the villages
which used to be primarily jewish before the war, and which are now Judenrein. That there were
hundreds of Righteous Gentiles in Poland can be seen at Yad Vashem, that there were thousands
of others...
|
632.39 | one more comment | TAZRAT::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Fri May 05 1989 09:24 | 10 |
| You know the more this debate gets dragged out, the less cheshek
I have for participating in it.
I just want to make one more comment and that is about the Polish
Home Army. They did not have such a brave and illustrious history
(at least in regards to anti-semitism) as theo and others would
have us believe. Yes they did fight the Nazis, but I wouldn't put
them on a par with Tito's partisans or the Maquis in France.
David
|
632.40 | Look Before 1939 | SOLKIM::HORWITZ | Beach Bagel | Fri May 05 1989 11:25 | 34 |
| Why is it that nobody responding here references anything prior
to 1939?
Piotr, I am sorry to say that there is indeed a long history of
Anti-Semitism in Poland. But it is not uniquely Polish. It Coincides
with the equally vehement hatred in the Ukraine and other Slavic
territories commonly refered to as the PALE (Pale of Settlement).
The creation of the Pale hundreds of years ago by the Russian Tzar
created much of the modern era anti-semitism in this region.
The Pale basically formed an arc, starting around (what is now)
central Poland, sweeping south and east through the Ukraine.
The Tzar proclaimed that Jews were (with a few exceptions) only
allowed to live within the Pale, and forced resettlements took place.
Further, the Russian aristocracy decided that although Jews were
not allowed to own land, they were well fit to manage it, and serve
as agents. Quite simply, the Jew became "the messenger we all love
to shoot". The peasants (serfs) in this area could not strike back
at the Boyars (aristocrats), but could easily reach the Jews, who
collected the rents, the taxes, etc.
I know the above may seem very simplistic, but it is the way it
happened.
Without going into it (potential rat-hole) in depth, during this
era, the Russian Church was not above anti-semitic statements/actions.
I think everyone in this discussion has to look art the long term
history of the region to understand the more recent history.
Note: To those Jews who have heard tales of the "old country" from
family members who lived through progroms, were the progrom-niks
referred to as Poles? Ukranians?....How about COSSAKS?
Rich
|
632.41 | Black and White | LDYBUG::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Fri May 05 1989 11:47 | 69 |
| re .38
Please try to use 80 col width. Now to the business.
You and some others exhibit a simplistic view of the overall East
European issue of anti-semitism. Not everything is black and white. No
anti-semitic violence or acts can be justified. None. However, the Jews
in E.Europe have not always been foresighted enough to do their best in
trying to resolve ethnic problems. For example, consider the case of
the Ukrainian Jews. They tended to side with the stronger power in the
region: either Poles or Russians, both of whom, exhibited anti-semitic
behavior to a significant extent. This could not have possibly improved
Ukr.-Jewish relatioins. In other examples, the anti-semitic behavior in
the Polish-Ukr. region was less based on ethnic hatred and more on
class relations (read .40 also for a more detailed discussion).
Don't get me wrong, the Jews did not choose to be money lenders and
merchants (as primarily visible to poor peasants). But this was the
perception of ignorant peasants in the region. Ignorance is not an
excuse for violance, I reiterate. The point is that the majority of the
Poles and Ukr-s were also in the less than perfect position to apply
logic to the situation (read .40 again).
As to refresher course in history. You will benefit from one too.
Did you know that during Khmelnitsky's war for Ukrainian independence
from Poland, the retreating Polish armies evacuated and thus saved
thousands of Jews from the advancing Cossack armies?
Did you know that during the Russian Civil war 1918-21 most of the
pograms and other anti-semitic acts were perpetrated by Russians,
not Ukrainians?
Did you know that the much hated Petlyura was not an anti-semite, and
that Zhabotinsky and Petlyura have conducted successful negotioations
regarding improvoment of Jewish-Ukr. relations? Much of the atrocities
against Jews were pinned on Petlyura by Communists who had to discredit
Ukr. movement for independence.
Did you know that a political union of Jewish parties and Polish
Socialists won important victories in some major minicipal elections
in 1938?
You also exhibit historic ignorance in suggesting that among
> the 3 million Poles who died, a great many died at the hands of
> the Russian bear
It is true that Soviets killed thousands (less than 100K) of Poles
for various political reasons, and never ethnic reasons like those
pursued by the Nazis.
. . .
Yes, there was and there is anti-semitism among Poles/Ukr./Russ-s.
But, I repeat, not everything is black and white. We must consider
our goals. Are we going to say that anti-semitism in E. Europe (the
subject area) is eternal, and pogroms will happen again and will
never stop? If so, this whole discussion is worthless. Or are we
going to assume an iota of hope that the situation will imporve?
If so, everybody needs to do more to learn from the past and to
understand all points of view.
Eli Weisel(sp) said that he is not in a position to judge, and much
less prosecute (perhaps implying that only G-d is). But he is a
witness. I think that he meant that optimistically. Am Israel has
not simply survived through millenia to find contentment in (be it
justified) finger pointing.
Alex
|
632.42 | Jew-hatred is endemic | LDP::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO4 | Fri May 05 1989 12:21 | 18 |
| Perhaps this is not the most appropriate place for this but...
I have just finished a book called "Why the Jews?", by Prager and
Telushkin. It describes in some detail why the authors believe Jews
have been hated through time, starting before Egypt. I would recommend
this book to anyone who would like a better understanding of
Jew-hatred. It has histories of all the major historic events and
movements (Christianity, Islam, enlightenment, etc.), and includes
chapters on the Nazi and post war era, and it has copious references
and footnotes. All in all, one of the best books on the subject I have
ever seen. Without giving the entire book away, the bottom line is that
the authors believe all of the common excuses for Jew-hatred (money
lending, etc) have nothing to do with it. It is simply a case of people
hating Jews, and finding a reason to support it. The book is in
paperback, and should be easy to obtain (I got it a Walden).
Jack
|
632.43 | prejudice can be broken... | TALLIS::KOZIOL | Perestroika+Glasnost=Destroika | Mon May 08 1989 18:32 | 113 |
| > 632.37 FEINBERG
> Did you, by any chance, hear the interview of Lucy Davidowicz
> ...
> she believes firmly that the Polish Jews would have been murdered
> by the Poles in 1939 onward, quite independent of anything
> the Germans would have done, or did. The interviewer asked
>
Don,
The Jews in Poland did NOT feel they were in imminent physical
danger from the POLES. How else can one explain that anti-Semitism
there didn't cause exodus ? When Lucy Dawidowicz concludes from HER
impressions what was about to happen, she only speculates, and such
"extrapolation" makes NOT a good historical analysis tool. I firmly
believe that quantifiable facts steer discussions away from ratholes.
I therefore would like to supply you with a few facts that disprove
this emotional remark by Lucy Dawidowicz (I doubt she as a historian
would ever want to put it in writing).
I would like to quote from "The War against the Jews 1933-1945"
the figures for Jewish emigration from:
GERMANY 1933-1939 300,000 of 500,000 total, or 60.0%
AUSTRIA 1938-1939 126,000 of 185,000 total, or 68.1%
As there are no emigration figures for Poland there (she mentions
the "official government policy of <<evacuating>> the Jews from
Poland"), I got my figures from the Polish Statistical Yearbook
of 1939. Obviously 1939 is missing, as Poland ceased to exist...
On the other hand it includes 1931-1932 Great Depression years,
so it errs on the high side for the sake of above comparisons.
POLAND 1931-1938 168,600 of 3,300,000 total, or 5.1%
Americans like the expression of "voting" with one's feet.
Above "voting" FACTS contradict Lucy Dawidowicz's BELIEFS...
>
> 632.38 GREG
> They were probably excecuted more for collaborating with the Germans
> than for betraying Jews
Greg,
All I can say is please read Nechama Tec. Stop SPECULATING...
>
> 632.39 CHERSON
> I just want to make one more comment and that is about the Polish
> Home Army. They did not have such a brave and illustrious history
> (at least in regards to anti-semitism) as theo and others would
> have us believe. Yes they did fight the Nazis, but I wouldn't put
> them on a par with Tito's partisans or the Maquis in France.
Dave,
The Polish Home Army was a mass organization, numbering several
hundreds of thousands. As a matter of fact, it was the most
powerful underground force in all of German-occupied Europe.
Even the Communists admit it numbered up to 350,000 fighters.
With ANY organization of this size one could find instances when
a particular fighter might have been of anti-Semitic persuasion.
And there were OTHER underground organizations outside of the
Polish Government-in-Exile's control, representing the extreme
left and right fringes...
>
> 632.40 HORWITZ
> I think everyone in this discussion has to look at the long term
> history of the region to understand the more recent history.
>
Rich,
Thank you. And let me remind others that the history of Poland
does not easily yield to over-simplifications...
>
> 632.41 ALLISTER
> Did you know that during Khmelnitsky's war for Ukrainian independence
> from Poland, the retreating Polish armies evacuated and thus saved
> thousands of Jews from the advancing Cossack armies?
When Chmielnicki besieged the city of Lvov, he issued an
ultimatum to its Polish defenders to give his troops gold AND
the Jews who fled the massacres and were now protected there.
The city refused and saved the Jews. Chmielnicki went away...
>
> Did you know that a political union of Jewish parties and Polish
> Socialists won important victories in some major minicipal elections
> in 1938?
You refer to a coalition of the Socialists with Bund and some
Jewish parties of the left. There were probably as many Jewish
political parties in pre-1939 Poland's parliament as there are
now different parties in Israel !!!
> Yes, there was and there is anti-semitism among Poles/Ukr./Russ-s.
> But, I repeat, not everything is black and white. We must consider
> our goals. Are we going to say that anti-semitism in E. Europe (the
> subject area) is eternal, and pogroms will happen again and will
> never stop? If so, this whole discussion is worthless. Or are we
> going to assume an iota of hope that the situation will imporve?
> If so, everybody needs to do more to learn from the past and to
> understand all points of view.
>
Alex,
I couldn't be more in agreement. I would also like to emphasize
the value of first-hand experience. But even this is too often
colored by one's DESIRED interpretation...
In my understanding, prejudice is like another biblical sword:
"who fights with a sword, dies from a sword." And we can help
ourselves only if we understand each other's experiences. Our
own are NOT enough...
Piotr
|
632.44 | misinterpretation | TAZRAT::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Mon May 08 1989 19:45 | 11 |
| re: emigration figures
I'm sorry Theo, but comparing emigration figures from Germany to
that of Poland does not wash with me. Germany went one step further
than the Poles in forcing it's Jews to emigrate, while Polish Jews
were faced with various prohibitions, but not that. You're taking
a certain historical trait of our people (remaining in the burning
house until your clothes catch on fire) and using to prove the goodwill
of the pre-war Polish gov't.
David
|
632.45 | OTT | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Tue May 09 1989 12:00 | 6 |
| re. endemic anti-semitism:
Mind taking that back? I'm a living proof of the opposite, in all
modesty.
Chris
|
632.46 | What proof? | HPSTEK::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Thu May 11 1989 19:53 | 9 |
| I'd like to mention that a "living proof" is no proof at all. Having
lived in the Soviet Union for 30 years I know about strong
anti-Semitism in the Ukraine first hand. My friend's brothers were
given away to the Nazis by their Ukrainian wives and were killed. On
the other hand in 1942 my father was saved from the Nazis by people in
a Ukrainian village. The whole village knew about a hiding Jew and
nobody said a word to the Germans. What do these examples prove?
Leo Simon
|