Poland President Duda ‘will sign’ controversial Holocaust bill

Poland President Andrzej DudaImage copyright
Reuters

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President Andrzej Duda says Poland has the right “to defend historical truth”

Poland’s president says he will sign a controversial Holocaust bill, despite angry protests from Israel and the US.

Andrzej Duda defended the legislation, which will make it illegal to accuse Poland of complicity in such Nazi crimes committed under occupation.

The Polish government says it aims to stop the Polish nation or state being blamed for the atrocities.

But Israel and the US have raised concerns it could lead to Holocaust survivors facing criminal charges.

In a speech on Tuesday, Mr Duda acknowledged that individual Poles did commit crimes against Jews during World War Two.

But he said the Polish state bore no responsibility because it ceased to exist following the invasion by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. He said there had been no systematic collaboration of Polish institutions.

In a gesture to Israel, Mr Duda said he would send it to the Constitutional Tribunal to check whether its regulations comply with the Polish constitution.

But that will happen after he has signed the bill into law.

What does the bill state?

It says that “whoever accuses, publicly and against the facts, the Polish nation, or the Polish state, of being responsible or complicit in the Nazi crimes committed by the Third German Reich … shall be subject to a fine or a penalty of imprisonment of up to three years”.

But it adds the caveat that a person “is not committing a crime if he or she commits such an act as part of artistic or scientific activities”.

Poland’s Senate approved the bill last week.

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Getty Images

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Poland has long objected to phrases which suggest shared responsibility during Nazi occupation

The country has long objected to the use of phrases like “Polish death camps”, which suggest the Polish state in some way shared responsibility for camps such as Auschwitz.

The camps were built and operated by Nazi Germany after it invaded Poland in 1939.

What has Israel said?

Israel is furious about the bill, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described as an attempt to rewrite history and deny the Holocaust.

Deputies from across Israel’s often fractious political spectrum have united to denounce it.

On Monday, Israel’s education minister said Poland had cancelled a scheduled visit because he refused to back down from condemning the bill.

“The blood of Polish Jews cries from the ground, and no law will silence it,” Naftali Bennett said in a statement.

“The government of Poland cancelled my visit, because I mentioned the crimes of its people. I am honoured,” he added.

Now, Israeli MPs are backing a bill that would expand Israel’s existing Holocaust denial laws to include a five-year jail sentence for anyone denying or minimising the role of Nazi collaborators, including Poles, in crimes committed during the Holocaust.

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AFP

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he strongly opposes the bill

The amended law would also give legal aid to any Holocaust survivor telling their story who is prosecuted in a foreign country.

The US state department had also urged the Polish government to rethink the bill.

What about in Poland?

Polish politicians have expressed bafflement at the Israeli response.

Deputy Justice Minister Marcin Warchol said it was wrong to suggest the bill would stop people researching Polish history.

“Poland is a democratic state of law which respects the freedom of public debate, scientific research, and the right to criticism,” he said.

Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said his country was committed to combating lies about the Holocaust.

“The camps where millions of Jews were murdered were not Polish. This truth needs to be protected,” he said.

Poland is governed by a nationalist party, Law and Justice (PiS), which is keen to show the world how Poland was ruthlessly victimised by its German and Soviet neighbours in the war.

What happened in Poland in WW2?

Poland was attacked and occupied by Nazi Germany. Millions of its citizens were killed, including three million Polish Jews in the Holocaust.

Six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust overall.

More Poles have been honoured by Israel for saving the lives of Jews during the war than any other nation.

However, historians say others were complicit by acts such as informing on Jews in hiding for rewards, and participating in Nazi-instigated massacres including in Jedwabne where hundreds of Jews were murdered by their neighbours.

A historian and well-known “Nazi-hunter” at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Efraim Zuroff, says the number of collaborators runs into “many thousands”.

“The Polish state was not complicit in the Holocaust, but many Poles were,” Mr Zuroff told the Times of Israel.

Poland President Duda ‘will sign’ controversial Holocaust bill