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Fear: Anti-Semitism in Poland after Auschwitz

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Fear - Anti-Semitism in Poland after Auschwitz is a book by Jan T. Gross, published by Random House in 2006. In it, Gross explores the question of post-war Polish-Jewish relations.

Content

Gross starts by illustrating the horrors suffered by Poland during World War II including the initial partition of the country between Stalin and Hitler, the subsequent Nazi crimes and the Katyn massacre of Polish army officers by the Soviets; the Warsaw uprising of 1944, as well as the Soviet decision to postpone their advance until the German army had defeated the Polish Armia Krajowa, which resulted in the destruction of Warsaw "reduced to a pile of rubble." And finally, the abandonment of Poland to half a century of Soviet communist domination prescribed by Britain and America at the Yalta Conference.

Gross estimates that 250,000 Polish Jews returned home at the end of the war. Often, they found their property taken over by squatters or taken over by the communist government (which was nationalizing much of the Polish economy). He discusses the alienation, hostile atmosphere and even violence experienced that Jews experienced in postwar Poland, and failure of Polish elites to prevent them. Gross makes additional claims about Kielce pogrom (see article for a more balanced analysis) arguing that the pogrom was initiated not by a mob of citizens, but by the police, and involved people from every walk of life except the highest level of government officials in the city (Fear, pp. 83-166). According to Gross, this served to frighten the Polish Jews who survived the Nazis and returned home. Another one of Gross' far-reaching allegations is that the Poles who were later regarded by the rest of the world as heroes for hiding Jews, begged them not to speak of their own sacrifice for fear of reprisals by their neighbors.

The book ends with the conclusion that the cause of postwar anti-Semitism in Poland was the wartime participation of Poles, especially in rural areas and small towns, in the Nazi effort to annihilate and despoil the Jews.

Reception

Piast Institute, a Polish-American think tank, has carried out an analysis of the reception of Fear. It has concluded that "the reviewers in major newspapers such as the New York Times, The Baltimore Sun and the Los Angeles Times, none of whom has any expertise in Polish or East Central European history, have reacted to the book and its thesis with uncritical acclaim and considerable anti-Polish rhetoric".

Fear has caused much controversy in Poland (where it was published in 2008). It got mixed media reception nevertheless it contributed to a debate about the incidents of antisemitism in post war Poland. It has been welcomed by media such as "Gazeta Wyborcza" but at the same time sharply criticized in other papers and by historians accusing Gross of coming up with conclusions before completing full research, ignoring sources which did not confirm his own views, neglecting the wider context of the event, misinterpreting data (for example counting a traffic accident death as an antisemitic attack), using inflammatory language and propaganda tools in labeling all of postwar Polish society as antisemitic.

Polish historians from the Institute of National Remembrance pointed out that due to its serious methodological mistakes including the use of epithets the book does not stand a chance of being accepted (even conditionally) among the scientific community.

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Symposium: Analysis of Fear - Summary of the Essay
  2. Symposium: Analysis of Fear - Introduction
  3. Craig Whitlock, A Scholar's Legal Peril in Poland, Washington Post Foreign Service, Friday, January 18, 2008; Page A14
  4. Marek Jan Chodakiewicz: People’s past has to be reviewed critically on individual basis, Rzeczpospolita, January 11, 2008 Template:En icon
  5. Piotr Gontarczyk, Far From Truth, Rzeczpospolita, January 12, 2008 Template:En icon
  6. Template:Pl icon Konrad Piasecki, "Gross to wampir historiografii," interview with historian Janusz Kurtyka, RMF FM, 10 January 2008
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