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Comments on the article: Waking a Polish demon

21/01/2008

Jan Tomasz Gross has taken on the difficult task of removing blind spots in Polish history. His new book "Fear" has sparked an emotional debate in the country of his birth, where anti-Semitism is not a popular subject. By Jakub Kloc-Konkolowicz

 
sweettooth
(1 comments)
registered on 13/05/2008
Young Polish University Student of Jewish Studies
In a recent conversation with a Polish University student in a Jewish Studies program, I heard all the arguments which Gross aimed to combat in his book. The young Pole sought to explain to me, (and in this order): 1) that Poles aren't antisemitic, 2) that Poles don't like Jews because a) Jews never assimilated well-enough into Polish society, and b) that after the Nazi occupation, Jews were supporters of communism and therefore oppressed the Poles.

Jan Gross' book deals with these topics in particular, and deconstructs them in detail. For these reasons, Gross' book has a important significance in Poland today.

But, will the book get past the barriers set by the extreme nationalists and the defensiveness of Polish moderates?

Poland's Jewish Cultural Festivals and civil society since the end of the Cold War don't necessitate progress on these issues. As mentioned above, the young Pole I spoke with was a student in a Jewish Studies program. His eyes may have teared up in the Shoah museum, reading the stories of murdered Jewish families. He might have a positive feeling towards Jews. But this hadn't prevented him from spitting out the standard rationalizations for Polish persecution of Jews.

This is to say that polish attendance to the Jewish Cultural festivals, or their participation in torah courses and Hebrew lessons don't address the issue. Philosemitism is not a sufficient response to antisemitism, but rather, an inversion of it.

The "dangerous demons" that Lech Walesa fears will be "awakened" by Gross' book, can't be kept at rest forever. Poles who are genuinely concerned will have to face the fact that the future is intimately bound to the past, and will be determined by how the past is dealt with.

As Gross' book conveyed, the hostility of Poles towards the returning Jews was not just a material conflict over property (as Jakub Kloc-Konkolowicz's article argues), but also a way of avoiding their own complicity in the Shoah. Gross writes, "Wherever Jews had been plundered, denounced, betrayed, or killed by their neighbors, their reappearance after the war evoked this dual sense of shame and contempt, which could only be overcome by mourning. And as long as Polish society was unable to mourn its Jewish neighbors' deaths, it had either to purge them or to live in infamy." (page 258, paperback edition)

While the young Polish student of Jewish studies might find himself teary-eyed in front of a Shoah exhibit, just two steps out the door he's spitting out justifications for poles' "dislike of the Jews."

Mourning can't happen in an abstract sense -- it needs the details, and this is why Gross' book is so important. I wasn't the target of the young student's defensiveness, me being a descendant of Polish Jews in the company of a non-Jewish Pole, discussing Polish-Jewish history. He was raised in the friendliness economy of contemporary Poland's philosemitic attitude towards everything Jewish. It was Gross who was attacked, for addressing the details.

Yiddish songs might be celebrated by ecstatic crowds of dancing Polish youth at Krakow's annual Jewish Cultural Festival. But take a walk across the river and you'll find the site of the former ghetto, and a short walk beyond it, the site of a former concentration camp. If the future of Polish-Jewish relations is to be anything other than a klezmer fest and wooden dolls of orthodox jews holding bags of money, the proud civil society of post-communist Poland will need to be put to use. In such a sphere, it will be the concrete details of Polish antisemitism revealed in Gross' and other's work, that will need to be grappled with.
Created on 13/05/2008 | Reviewed on 13/05/2008
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