Izrael deportuje Murzynów lub zamyka ich w więzieniu jeśli nie chcą wyjechać
Afrykańscy uchodźcy ogłaszają strajk głodowy. Nie chcą być wydalani z Izraela. Co by było jakby z Polski wyrzucano Murzynów? Czy byłyby oskarżenia o rasizm i ksenofobię? Jak to jest, że jedno mogą a inni nie mogą?
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Israeli Survivors Respond to Polish Legislation: 'No Law Can Wipe Out the Memory of the Holocaust for Us'
Israeli Shoah survivors are outraged by Polish move to outlaw any mention of the Polish nation's complicity with Nazi Germany. 'Poland was always a very anti-Semitic place,' charges one man
Israeli Holocaust survivors from Poland expressed outrage on Sunday over the passage of Polish legislation that seeks to outlaw any mention of the country’s complicity in atrocities perpetrated by Nazi Germany against the Jews.
The
Quint, who recently published a book about her experiences during the Holocaust, called “A Daughter of Many Mothers: Her Horrific Childhood and Wonderful Life,” spent several years in a forced labor camp before ending up in Bergen-Belsen. She said her failed postwar attempts to reclaim property owned by her family in Poland have strengthened her conviction that most Poles were happy to be rid of their Jewish neighbors.
Shimon Redlich, a retired history professor from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be’er Sheva, has both lived through the Holocaust and studied the Holocaust as an academic. Born in the Eastern Galician town of Brzezany, he was able to survive the war by hiding in the home of a Ukrainian woman.
Retired
Shmuel Atzmon, a well-known Yiddish theater actor, said the proposed legislation was actually a far greater threat to the Polish people than to the Jewish people. “There is no law that can wipe out the memory of the Holocaust for us. But by trying to erase from the record what bad Poles did back then, the government is committing an injustice to good Poles today,” he warned. “It is not educational and they are simply hurting themselves.”
Atzmon has played an active role over the years in promoting cultural ties between Israel and Poland. “Ten of the best years of my life were spent in Poland before the war broke out,” he said, “and it is important to me that good relations between our two countries prevail.”
Born