Become a Member

ByYehuda Bauer and Havi Dreifuss, Yehuda Bauer and Havi Dreifuss

Analysis

Poles' Shoah law is antisemitic

In this exclusive article for the JC, leading Holocaust historian Professor Yehuda Bauer, with his colleague Professor Havi Dreifuss, warns that this legislation is “a return to Bolshevik methods of suppressing freedom of thought”.

February 24, 2017 17:00
FILE PHOTO: A Jewish cemetery in Wysokie Mazowieckie, Poland desecrated with anti-Semitic graffiti, March 2012
3 min read

The current Polish government, led by the right-wing Law and Justice Party (PiS), is about to pass a legal amendment that threatens to prosecute anyone in the world who accuses Poles or the Polish nation of participating — even partly — in the crimes committed by Germans on occupied Polish soil during the Holocaust.

Such a person, who, according to the amendment, will contradict “facts”, will face three years in prison. The new law includes a paragraph exempting “a perpetrator” committing the act “within the framework of his or her artistic or scientific activity”.

Yet, the “exemption” of academics is hardly watertight, not only because “truthful facts” will be determined by the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), a government institution; nor because of the very thin line between academics, educators, journalists and others.

The “exemption” was far from convincing because even before the amendment was accepted, Polish authorities were trying to limit academic discourse.