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The Jedwabne Tragedy...

Discussion in 'Concentration, Death Camps and Crimes Against Huma' started by sniper1946, Dec 29, 2010.

  1. sniper1946

    sniper1946 Expert

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    Jedwabne Tragedy


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    The Jedwabne Tragedy

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    English version of Rzeczpospolita's map [SIZE=-1]In the Fall of 1939, Jedwabne (pron: Yedvabneh], a small town with a population of almost 3,000 in northeastern Poland, came under Soviet occupation. The day following the June 22, 1941, German attack on the Soviets Union, Jedwabne came under German occupation. On July 10, 1941, some members of the Polish population of Jedwabne participated in the slaughter of several hundred of the town's 900 to 1600 Jews. After the war, a number were tried, convicted and served prison terms for having done so.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]Jan Tomasz Gross, a Polish-born New York University historian, has investigated the slaughter and authored a book, Sąsiedzi (Neighbors) detailing it. The book stimulated widespread debate in Poland's press with over 750 articles. This page seeks to provide English language readers with access to the discussion within Poland by presenting translations of articles which appeared in Poland's leading newspapers.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]Time-wise, the discussion can be divided into three periods. The first group of articles began to appear in May of 2000, soon after the publication of the Polish version of Gross's book, and continued through the Fall. The magazine Więź has posted English translations of a score of those articles on the Internet.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]The debate took on added intensity in the Spring of 2001, a period broadly coinciding with the scheduled April 1st publication of the English version of Gross's book. The translations posted below come mainly from that period.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]A third group of articles, represented by seven entries in gold/green type below, appeared in a period broadly antedating or coinciding with the 60th anniversary of the tragedy and the July 10th memorial service that tool place in Jedwabne. [/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]The last two entries, present respectively the Final Findings of the judicial investigation by Poland's Institute of National Memory and the subsequent remarks of Poland's President, Aleksander Kwaśniwski (the banner at top of the page is a link to Jedwabne page of the Warsaw-based daily, Rzeczpospolita which features more than 145 articles.) [/SIZE]

    [SIZE=-1]Poland's Institute for National Remembrance undertook the full fledged judicial investigation of the facts pertaining to the slaughter on August 31, 2000. Among the facts it sought to determine were the following: who specifically were the perpetrators, the identity of any still alive and liable to prosecution, and the extent to which the slaughter was result of orders or instigation by the German occupiers. [/SIZE]
    On July 10, 2002 the Institute for National Remembrance issued a press release summarizing the Final Findings of the investigation. Two volumes of documents, inquiries and analyses resultiing from the Institute's Jedwabne inquiry are to be published in due course.
    Jedwabne: History - 60 Years Later
    as recounted in Rzeczpospolita by Maciej Łukasiewicz
    1175 words
    Poland's President on the subject of Jedwabne
    an interview with Aleksander Kwaśniewski
    1073 words
    Living in Truth
    special statement by Prime minster Jerzy Bużek
    334 words
    Poland's Institute of National Memory
    Official Statement and interview with Prof. Leon Kieres, its head.
    850 words
    Jedwabne: Guilt Justly Acknowledged
    an address by Józef Cardinal Glemp, Primate of Poland
    1225 words
    Trivializing Barbarity
    Article by Archbishop Józef Życiński
    2082 words
    The Need for Atonement
    by Jan Nowak-Jeziorański
    1884 words
    Remembering the righteous ten
    Article by Professor Antoni Gryzyk
    1344 words
    Open Letter regarding Jedwabne
    to member and sympatizers of the Polish Democratic Left
    655 words
    Bishop Gądecki about Jedwabne
    "I agree with Rabbi Schudrich"
    565 words
    Jedwabne shoud be a symbol of reconciliation
    A conversation with Michael Schudrich, Rabbi of Warsaw and Łódź
    2339 words
    We Trusted Each Other:
    Jedwabne Rabbi Jacob Baker
    2549 words
    Poles and the Jews: How Deep the Guilt?
    by Adam Michnik, Editor of Gazeta Wyborcza, Poland's largest circulation daily
    2565 words
    The Germans were forcing Poles to take part in the murders
    in the opinion of the historian Prof. Tomasz Strzembosz
    547 words
    Readers doubt credibility of war crime account by Polish-Jewish historian.
    A report by the Polish Press Agency
    1023 words
    Were the Jews in Jedwabne killed by the Gestapo?
    Testimony in the Ludwigsburg archives
    1022 words
    The Jedwabne Matter
    Did Gross Commit a Crime? ... The prosecutor's office in Sejny has refused...
    617 words
    To the Moskals Friends
    A column by Marek Zieleniewski
    756 words
    A Monument Made of Words
    Article by Dr. Dariusz Stola
    9095 words
    Goldhagen for Beginners
    by Prof. Norman G. Finkelstein
    2111 words
    Regret without Guilt
    by Prof. Michał Wojciechowski
    1555 words
    Jedwabne, that's the new name of the Holocaust
    by Rev. Stanisław Musiał, S.J.
    1100 words
    Hell's last circle
    article by Ignacy Matuszewski
    first published on December 5, 1941
    1019 words
    Sixty Years Ago . . .
    Remarks by President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
    Jedwabne, July 10, 2001
    1206 words
    Jedwabne, 10th July, 1941
    An interview with Prof. Paweł Machcewicz, Director
    Office of Public Education, Institute of National Memory
    3289 words
    Jedwabne: Final Findings
    of Poland's Institute of National Memory
    July 9, 2002 - 1370 words
    We, Poles, have a special duty ...
    President Alexander Kwaśniewski on July 17, 2002
    at Georgetown University
    330 words
    Polish Crimes Against Jews Detailed
    President Alexander Kwaśniewski on July 17, 2002
    Associated Press News Report of November 2, 2002
    530 words
     

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