POLISH-JEWISH RELATIONS 
  Jewish collaboration with the Soviets provoked an outpouring of condemnation by the Polish people. They  accused
  the Jews of conspiring with the Soviets to destroy Poland. When the newly-created Polish Army was relocated from
  Russia to the Middle East, thousands of Polish Jews, who had enlisted, deserted the army en masse.  Though 
  General Anders granted them all amnesty,  it is not surprising that resentment within the army ranks grew - but
  not for reasons of anti-semetism.  This desertion was a betrayal of Poland, on the very eve of battle.  But with the
  establishment of the Jewish Ghettos, Polish opinion began to transform from one of hatred and anger to that of
  sympathy and deep compassion.  Poles who had themselves been victims of German bestiality knew with what
  anguish the Jews suffered.  They were witness to the horrors of the ghettos and the sentence imposed upon its'
  victims - slow starvation and the deportations to death camps.  Many Poles felt compelled to act on the grounds of
  decency and humanitarianism, overlooking past resentments, betrayal, even anti-semetism, to come to the aid of
  the Jews.  At great risk to their own lives, Polish men, women and children tossed bundles of food over the ghetto
  walls.  Polish families opened their homes to Jews fleeing Nazi persecution.  Many Poles even constructed secret
  bunkers beneath their basements, or erected fake wall partitions, for the purpose of hiding as many Jews as
  possible.  Elaborate means were used to smuggle  food, clothing and medical care to the Jews in hiding, so as not 
  to arouse public suspicion.
  Poland was the only occupied country in which the Germans issued a decree warning that anyone helping the Jews
  would be executed.  In house-to-house searches, the Nazis often found Jews hiding there, and shot them along
  with the Poles ( and their families ) who sheltered them.  That the Germans even issued such a decree  is
  indicative of the fact that Polish assistance to the Jews was widespread.  Many Poles were so traumatized that
  they chose to remain neutral for fear of their lives.  Our perception of them as passive or indifferent is unwarranted.
  Considering the circumstances theirs was not a decision influenced by anti-semetism.  But even with the threat
  of discovery, and German reprisals, many Poles continued in their mission to shelter and hide Jews.
  German and Soviet propaganda distorted and magnified the facts in order to inflame Polish-Jewish hostilities
  Among the countless incidences staged by the Nazis was one in which Germans in Lodz destroyed a statue of the
  Polish patriot Kosciuszko, and blamed it on the Jews.   The Germans forced a group of Jews to stand in front of the
  rubble and photographed it  as "evidence".  Immediately thereafter, the Germans burned down a synagogue and
  accused the Poles for having done so in retaliation.  In Warsaw, on Passover, the Germans staged a riot which
  lasted, ironically, for eight days.  They recruited a thousand Polish youths to destroy Jewish homes and shops while
  German soldiers were nearby filming the entire onslaught.  The sole objective of Nazi propaganda was to bring
  about Poland's self-destruction by playing on Polish fears of being conquered by the Soviets.  Moreover,  the
  suspicion that Britain and the US had abandoned the Poles and was about to betray them to the Soviets were
  reasons enough for some Poles to collaborate with the Nazis.   Any illusion of acquiring special protection or
  benefits by collaboration, quickly vanished, as the German terror on Polish underground continued unabated.
  The Polish Underground waged a continuous battle using counter propaganda of its own to demoralize and disrupt
  the German rank and file.  More importantly, the Underground sought to influence Polish attitudes by instructing
  them to resist German propaganda and enticements to collaborate with them.  The Nazis made numerous
  concessions to the Polish people including re-opening Polish theatres and museums, and elminating the
  requirement of passes for Poles using the trains.  The Germans sometimes succeeded in luring members
  of the AK out of hiding, only to deport them to concentration camps, or execute them.
  While the majority of the Poles complied with the directives of the Polish Underground, others did not.  Poland
  endured a siege of German terror and brutality that over time contributed to the increase in delinquency, especially
  in the youth.  No morals or laws prevailed other than that which ensured Nazi supremacy.  Every kind of depravity
  was encouraged by the Nazis to erode the moral fabric of Polish society.  The Poles who collaborated with the
  Germans represented only a fraction of the Polish population.
  In the political sphere, the most rabid element was the ONR ( Oboz Narodowo Rady Kalny ), a radical-nationalist
  party which produced much of the Polish anti-semetic propaganda.  They accused the Jews of starting the war,
  and claimed that the Jews were collaborating with the Nazis and the Soviets in order to destroy Poland.  This
  political party was not represented in the Polish Underground State, nor in the Polish Government-in-exile, in
  London.
  Little or no attention has been given to the sacrifices made by heroic Poles - the men, and women who made
  daring attempts to shelter Jews, under extraordinary circumstances.   Catholic nuns frequently sheltered Jewish
  children in their convents, teaching them Catholic prayers, and catechism, so that they could pass the scrutiny of
  German interrogation.  Among the religious orders that gave assistance to the Jews were:  the Sisters of Maria's
  Family ( in Otwock, Pludy and several other Polish towns), the Ursuline Sisters ( in Warsaw-Powisle, among other
  provincial convents), the Franciscan Sisters, in Lasku, the Sisters of the Lady Immaculate ( in Warsaw, Szymanow,
  and Niepokalanow), the Sisters of Charity ( in the hospitals of Warsaw), and the Polish Relief Council in Otwock.
  At the start of the war, there were Poles who were anti-semetic but who had changed their outlook because of the
  Nazi atrocities committed against the Jews - men such as Stanislaw Piasecki, Adolf, Nowaczynski, Kozidkiewicz,
  Witold Rudnicki, among many others.  There are thousands of Poles who risked their lives and died in the process
  of helping the Jews.  Only a few of them have been documented and are honoured by Yad Vashem, in the
  Righteous Among Nations.  None have gained so much attention as the selfless act of one individual, Father
  Maximillian Kolbe, a Franciscan monk.  He was a Polish prisoner in Auschwitz, number 16670, who volunteered
  to die instead of the fifteen Jews selected for death by slow starvation.  The first victims of the gas chambers at
  Auschwitz were 300 Poles and 700 Soviet POWs.   Until 1942, Poles constituted 90% of the inmates of Stutthof. 
  Jan Karski, a national hero of the Polish Underground, was the first to report the news of German atrocities to the
  Allied nations.  He embarked on a gruelling mission through several occupied countries, transporting secret
  microfilm to the Polish Government-in-exile in London - on it was documented evidence of the crimes committed
  by the Germans - photographs, decrees, and statistics.
  The most  elaborate covert operation in saving the Jews was an organization called Zegota.  Although its officical
  name was Council for Aid to the Jews, it had to have been referred to in code in order to protect the organization 
  from blackmailers and informers.  Zegota members represented a wide cross-section of Polish society.  It was
  an enormous network which overlapped with organizations in the Polish Underground State, Home Army, and
  a countless array of individual Poles from every profession and trade.  All were devoted to helping the work of
  Zegota.  The major scope of activity dealt with finding safe houses in which Jews could be hidden, the provision of
  food, clothing, and whenever possible, medical care.  They produced thousands of fake documents, such as birth
  certificates, and passports,  to conceal the true identity of the Jews.   Many Jews were able to live on the Aryan side
  (outside the ghettos) because their features were not semetic.  They were the lucky few.  Many others whose
  appearance was obviously semetic, had to be hidden at all times, otherwise they would risk their death and the
  death of the Poles sheltering them.  Because of  this risk, many Poles had no choice but to refuse to help them.
 The largest source of aid to the Jews, which far surpassed Zegota, and the spontaneous efforts given randomly by
  groups or individuals, was the Polish Underground State.  Its' organization, along political, military and civilian
  divisions, was devoted to the restoration of Polands freedom and independence.  Among its activities was the
  mission to provide the Jews with a means of escape and shelter from Nazi persecution.
  In 1940-41, the Polish government-in-exile and the Underground State were the first to report the news of the
  persecution of the Jews in Poland.  Initially, the British government received the reports with a great deal of 
  skepticism, believing that the Poles may have exaggerated.  It was difficult for the British to comprehend how 
  German Kultur could descend to such depths of depravity.  Irregardless of British stonewalling, Polish interventions
  were immediately set into motion.  Diplomatic meetings were held in Britain, and the U.S., resolutions were drawn up
  and submitted to the United Nations.  Ambassador Papee made several visits to the Vatican, meeting with 
  Secretary of State Cardinal Maglione, and Monsignor Tardem and Montini.  He presented them with a memo from
  Prime Minister Sikorski, in which he discussed the persecution of the Poles and Jews under Nazi occupation, and
  requested the intervention of Pope Pius XII.  Issues of the Black Book were also submitted.  Papee also met with the
  General of the Jesuit Order, Father Wlodzmierz Ledochowski to discuss using the Church and its agencies to
  shelter Poles and Jews in Poland.
  The Polish Foreign Office published a White Book entitled, " The German Occupation of Poland ", printed in
  English, French and Spanish.  There were also two Black Books; Volume I " The German Invasion of Poland "
  described the September Campaign.  Volume II, " The German New Order in Poland " described the German
  administration in Poland and the Soviet-German war of June 1941.  It provided details concerning the fate of the
  Jews, German regulations, descriptions of German atrocities, the burning of synagogues, locations of burials and
  names of victims, confiscation of Jewish property, loss of freedom and rights, forced labor, ghettoes, and
  death camps.  Included were 30 photographs illustrating in graphic detail, life in the ghetto, as well as copies
  of German decrees.  This book was widely distributed in Great Britain and the US.  Copies were sent to press
  agencies and newspapers around the world.
  Prime Minister Sikorski made several visits to the US as well as to London, and the Polish Embassy in Washington,
  D.C.  A flurry of telegrams between London and Warsaw document the extent of Polish efforts in pressuring the
  Allies for military assistance.  In 1941-42, Sikorski asked for an American declaration condemning German
  oppressive policies against the Poles and the Jews.  The US was unresponsive.  As time passed, the situation\
  grew more ominous, Sikorskis appeals became more frequent and urgent.  Poles and Jews demanded that 
  Britain execute Germans in reprisal for Nazi atrocities committed against the Polish nation.  The British refused
  to intervene because it was not within the scope of their political objectives.
  The American Jewish Congress and the World Jewish Congress were receptive to Sikorskis arrival in the US,
  and expressed hope for the liberation of Poland, but they quickly resorted to a litany of accusations of Polands 
  pre-war administration.  They accused the Polish military of anti-semetism and referred to the periodical issued by
  the ONR, entitled " Jestem Polakiem " ( I am Polish), that was radically nationalistic.  Its circulation lasted only from
  August 4, 1940 to May 15, 1941, at which time the Sikorski govenment called a stop to its publication, declaring it
  to be detrimental.  Sikorski tried to assure the Allies that the governments position was strongly opposed to
  anti-semetism and considered it foreign to its government.   He stated that " the common suffering has created a
  community of spirit between Poles and Jews"
  The Jewish Morning Newspaper did acknowledge that the Sikorski government was moderate, but instead chose
  to focus entirely on the fact that a few of its members were National Democrats.  Many criticisms were made
  purely on hearsay - as one by Jozef Tennenbaum, President of the American Federation of Polish Jews.  He 
  claimed that tens of  thousands of Poles helped the Germans to exterminate the Jews - it is completely
  unsubstantiated.   Jews were frequently at odds even with each other over the issue of anti-semetism.  Rabbi Z.
  Babad, who represented the Polish Agudists in Great Britain, condemed the Jews who made irresponsible
  generalizations about Polish actions towards the Jews.  He was a loyal supporter of the Sikorski government,
  and he criticized foreign Jews, especially Zionists, for interfering in Polish internal affairs.  Ludwik Grosfeld, a
  Polish Jew, was appointed Minister of Treasury by Prime Minister Mikolajczyk.  Grosfeld was severely criticized
  by the Jews who accused him of being an " assimilationist "
  After the Germans invaded Russia, the attacks on the Jews intensified.  The Polish government  countered German
  propaganda by issuing a Declaration, entitled, " Instruction No. 2 ", dated June 23, 1941.   It read as follows:
           " The government lays great stress on the necessity of warning the nations not to give in to German
           baiters and not to adopt an active anti-Jewish attitude in the territories freed from Soviet occupation.
          This is imperative for reasons of principle and political ones such as actions would be bound to make
          it terribly difficult for the government to profit from the situation in the international field. "
  On Jan 13, 1942, Sikorski attended an inter-allied conference of nine countries ( which had been occupied by
  Germany ), including delegates from Britain and the US.  A resolution was made calling for the prosecution of
  Germans who violated international law by committing violent crimes against civilians. Britain and the US
  refused to sign it on the grounds that there was no verification that the reports were true.
  The Polish Underground reported on the increase in German killings.  One of many memos read as follows:
      
         " I inform that the news about the murder of several thousand Jews in eastern Galicia is true.  Mass
         murder of Jews were also committed in the Wilno province, in Byelorussia, and in the Lublin province.  In
         Wilno alone, about sixty thousand Jews were murdered....  Delegate, April 8, 1942 "
  As the massacres began to spread throughout eastern Poland into the General Gouvernement, Prime Minister
  Sikorski sent dispatches to the Allied govenments reporting that :
          " Extermination of the Jewish population is taking place at an unbelievable extent...mass slaughter
          of  tens of thousands of Jews is being carried out.  In the ghettos of Warsaw and Krakow, mass
          executions are being carried out every day.  Jews ill with typhus are being shot.  The Jews of Poland
          are suffering the most terrible persecution in the entire history..."
Alex Lech Bajan
RAQport Inc.
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
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