Wladyslaw Bartoszewski died yesterday.
Wladyslaw Bartoszewski was a world-class hero. We,
Polonia, should have created school curricula where every school child in
America knew his name. We did not.
What did we do instead?
Most Polonians don't know about world-class heroes like
Bartoszewski. If they are engaged in any Polish-related activities at all,
those activities are limited to pierogis, polka, and celebrating Polish
victories in soccer matches.
Those Polonians who do care about advancing Polish
culture are all too often fractious and focused on taking down perceived
enemies, rather than advancing Polish authors, artists, poets, and scholars.
Polonians are currently circulating a petition to get FBI
director James Comey fired. Polonians have recently tried to squash
"Ida," a black-and-white, slow-moving, Polish-language art film that
would only ever be seen by very few people.
Both of these protests are misguided. Polonia will not
advance by trying to sabotage others. Polonians will advance by supporting their
own authors, artists, storytellers and poets.
Too many Polonians who do care about advancing Polish
culture fall back on anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. I received this email
the other day. "Jewish and Soviet influence on film, anti-Polish themes,
story-lines, characterisations, and ethnic portrayals…those powers that be out
there, who hide behind elaborate chains of ownership, changed names (lots of
that in Poland and elsewhere) and shell companies can pull strings and set
policies that are absolutely undetectable – which is exactly how they want it.
So, don't under-estimate nor over-estimate Jewish influence in all manner of
global activities – but certainly Do Not Deny it is happening."
What can one say to this man? Jews are 0.2 percent of the
world population – maybe 13 million people. There are tens of millions of
Poles, not to mention one billion Catholics. And Jews have often been the ones
telling our story in a sympathetic way.
I have been working on the Brute Polak stereotype for
over 25 years. I've published. I give talks, including to Jewish groups at
Jewish institutions. The Kosciuszko Foundation says it is concerned with
negative stereotypes of Poles. I have written to the Kosciuszko Foundation
repeatedly offering my services. I receive no reply.
The other day I gave a talk on a college campus. The talk
was well received. There were two Jewish American scholars present. They were
interested, respectful and engaged. I am surrounded by heavily Polish
communities, including Wallington and Greenpoint. No Polish-Americans showed up
to the talk.
I reviewed Wladyslaw Bartoszewski's book
"Samaritans: Heroes of the Holocaust" eight years ago. I posted the
review on my blog, on Amazon, on Polish discussion lists. I begged Polonians to
buy, read, review, and share Bartoszewski's book. I visited the Amazon page for
the book today and I see there are still only two reviews. It also appears to
be out of print.
Polonia, you don't need to peek nervously under your bed
for the secret Jews you fear are tormenting you. You do need to organize, advance
your own heroes, support your own artists, writers, and poets, and tell your
own story.
Below please find a summary of an article by Wladyslaw
Bartoszewski, and a review of a book he wrote.
The information, below, is from Wladyslaw Bartoszewski's
1989 article, "The Founding of the All-Polish Anti-Racist League in
1946."
After WW II in Poland, pogroms broke out. In towns like
Kielce, Polish Catholics murdered Polish Jews. These Jews were Holocaust
survivors. Bartoszewski organized reaction against these pogroms. Quotes below
are from his article revisiting this history of Polish resistance to hate. Even
though many are eager to speak of crimes committed by Poles, almost no one
knows of Polish Catholic organized resistance to hate.
"There are no accounts in histories of Poland after
the Second World War of the All-Polish Anti-Racist League, founded in 1946 … it
is a waste of time to search scholarly works for even a brief mention of the
League, its origins and public activities, or the contents of the League's
publication, Prawo Czlowieka (The Rights of Man.) …scholars have not been
interested in its existence" (243).
After WW II, the Soviet Union invaded Poland. Poland
experienced something like a civil war. "Acts of repression, violence, and
terror, mass arrests, deportations, bloody confrontations claiming thousands of
dead and injured, were an everyday occurrence, particularly in the first year.
Through ruthless political and police methods, a new political order and system
was introduced, which was rejected by a significant part of society … the
tragedy of the genocide of the Jews was, after all, a great psychological shock
for many Poles" (244).
"Both in the Polish press and on the radio at that time
there was no lack of voices to oppose these tragic incidents, and the recent
suffering and extermination of Jewish society in Poland were also mentioned.
Articles, memoirs, and references to the subject can be found in the first
post-war dailies Robotnik, Dziennik Ludowy, Gazeta Ludowa, Kurier Codzienny, in
the weeklies Nowa Epoka, Odrodzenie, and particularly in the Krakow Tygodnik
Powszechny" (247).
"An initiative was taken during the first weeks of
1946 by former members of the occupation Council for Aid to the Jews. This was
to establish a loosely structured, all-Polish society to discuss the problem
for the moral and political danger for Poland and the Poles of actions dictated
by anti-Semitic views and anti-Jewish prejudices, whatever their causes.
[Former members of Zygota] Were unanimous in recognizing the importance of
using their own authority and enlisting the public support of others of
importance in the struggle against the degrading chauvinism in Poland, against
manifestations of national, religious, and racial hatred, and, above all,
against all unsympathetic or hostile attitudes towards Jews who had survived …
a group met in Warsaw on 30 March, 1946."
In April 1946 a pamphlet was published and appeals
appeared in many national and local dailies, calling for the establishment of
an Organization committee for the All Polish Anti-Racist League.
[from pamphlet]
"On 30 March 1946 a group of social and political
activists, representing all circles of Polish social and political thought,
prompted by deep moral feelings and sharing the conviction that the interests
of the Polish nation required nationwide action in the struggle against racism,
have established an Organizational Committee for the All-Polish Anti-Racist
League, based in Warsaw."
The pamphlet lists ten officers. The majority were former
members of Zegota. There was a socialist, a journalist, a philologist, members
of the Home Army, a theater worker, and a member of the union of rural youth
(248).
Their program:
"The whole of the evil and barbarity of Nazism can
be summed up in the slogan: racism, anti-semitism, pogrom. Here, writ large,
was all that is worst in man, everything expressing crime and darkness and
depriving human society of its right to live, simply because it is alive. Under
this banner, man's lowest instincts take precedence over a thousand years of
Christian spiritual civilization. The degradation of humanity, the numbing of
man's sensitivity to the pain and suffering of his neighbor, the corrupting of
human conscience – this is the work and sin of racism. The fight against this
evil in Poland is not only the concern of a handful of our Jewish
fellow-citizens: the fight against evil is the concern of man, of every man,
and is a question of the nation's moral honor."
"The most important task now in Poland is the
reconstruction of social and economic life, destroyed by the Germans. No less
crucial is the need to rebuild the spirit of the nation, to educate people in
the spirit of brotherhood. In this momentous work we should follow the ideals
of Kosciuszko and Mickiewicz, Czacki and Lelewel, Orzeszkowa and Konopnicka,
Zeromski and Strug. We shall follow the great truths of humanism and humanity.
An example to us should be the all-Polish action of the Council
for Aid to the Jews which led the way in helping the victims of racism and
anti-Semitism during the occupation, when responsible people from all sections
of society, the intelligentsia, workers and peasants, whatever their political
affiliations, socialists and populists, members of the PPR and SD, Catholics
and free thinkers, rushed to help the victims of racism. In the name of human
conscience, in the name of Polish culture and the vital interests of the state,
this work is being continued by the All-Polish Anti-Racist League."
The Anti-Racist League was careful to list, as quoted
above, Polish heroes, male and female, who struggled for justice (249).
The establishment of the league was noted sympathetically
in the American, British, and French press (250).
League members strenuously protested the pogrom in
Kielce, in July, 1946. League members called the murderers "scum"
(250-51).
Bartoszewski mentions the signatories of the condemnation
of the Kielce Pogrom. They include a Catholic priest (252).
The anti-racist league appealed to the Catholic church
hierarchy. The league received no reply (253).
Bartoszewski himself was falsely accused by the
communists and sent to jail. The communists took control of, and distorted, the
League's publications. They were no longer to talk about anti-Semitism; rather,
they were to talk of "'American and British imperialists' persecuting
Negroes and other colored peoples."
Wladyslaw Bartoszewski's and Zofia Lewin's "The
Samaritans: Heroes of the Holocaust" is one of the most thrilling, moving,
and profound books you will ever read. It is one of the top ten books I've read
in my entire life. I hope never to forget the lessons it teaches.
In a sense, the stories "Samaritans" contains
are simple; their details are the details of concrete choices made in
face-to-face human encounters. No one here commands a battleship, great armies,
or the attention of the masses. Average people, very much like you and me -- children,
blue collar laborers, office workers, a gang of drunks out on a spree -- simply decide to exercise the limited powers
they have to make a positive difference in one human life. In doing simple,
common things, the real people in these pages display a heroism that is
overwhelming in its purity.
On a dirt road, an imprisoned Jew begs Maria Kobierska, a
small Polish Catholic girl, for water as, nearby, Nazis guard the transport . .
. a Warsaw man must determine a way to dispose of the bodily waste of the many
Jews he has hidden in the attic of his apartment building, unbeknownst to his
fellow apartment dwellers . . . Dominican Mother Superior Anna Borkowska
instructs Jewish resistance fighter and her "right hand," Abba Kovner,
in the use of the grenades she brings him . . . carriage maker Staszek
Jackowski continually extends an underground bunker in which he eventually
hides 32 Jews just two blocks away from Gestapo headquarters . . . secret agent
Stefan Korbonski cannot understand why the BBC will not publish the war news he
has been sending, at great risk, from occupied Poland . . . finally he is told
. . . The Brits refuse to believe Korbonski's report of the Nazi genocide of Jews.
"Samaritans" is an anthology of short accounts
of Poles who saved Jews during World War Two. The accounts range from one to
several pages. Some are told by the rescued; some by rescuers; a few are told
by third parties.
Because they are first-person accounts, some written
shortly after the war, some written during the war, reading them requires
attention and patience. It's as if you are reading the private diaries of
dozens of separate people. You may be a paragraph or two into an account before
you are fully oriented -- before you know exactly what town you're in, how old
the main characters are, or even their gender. Be patient. These accounts,
unmediated and unedited as they are, display raw power. These accounts convey
an immediacy and an urgency that more carefully edited versions of the
Holocaust do not.
It's exactly because the stories involve average, obscure
people in everyday settings in which you can imagine yourself that they have so
much power. This book isn't about Hitler or Eisenhower or Roosevelt. It's about
a drunk stumbling home across a short-cut, and stumbling onto an escaping
family in need of help. The drunk could ignore the people he's stumbled across;
he could turn them in and make a tidy fortune for himself; or he could help
them.
You can imagine yourself in these scenes. When was the
last time you saw someone in need on the shoulder of a highway? Did you stop?
Or did you just ignore the needy person, hoping someone else would take care of
it? In short, these stories, about an epochal event in a country far away, are
also about our everyday lives, and our everyday choices. Are we the kind that
looks away and assumes that someone else will take care of it? Are we the kind
that profits from someone else's misfortune? Are we the kind that risks, and
that helps? When we are offered the opportunity to be heroes, what do we do?
"Samaritans" is an invitation. It proclaims:
the only thing separating a hero from you or me is simple human choice. Experts
insist that we are all selfish Darwinian wind-up toys, that ideals are silly
fantasy only a fool believes in, that focus on pleasuring the self is the only
good. The selfless heroism of these Samaritans incinerates cynicism. Driven by
faith -- "Because I was a
Catholic" -- by political ideals --
"as a Socialist" -- by loyalty
-- "He was my friend" -- by personal integrity -- "I knew I could
never live with myself otherwise" -- these Samaritans risked torture and
death. With people like this in the world, we have to acknowledge that there is
such a thing as goodness, and that we can exercise it whenever we so choose.
No one featured in "Samaritans" was solely
responsible for the salvation of an individual Jew or a group of Jews. As
historians point out, it took only one traitor to betray a Jew to the Nazis,
but it took several people, perhaps even an entire village, to protect one Jew.
Again and again, Jews on the run encounter person after person who can't take
responsibility for their entire safety, but who can give shelter for the night,
a new suit of clothes, counterfeit documents, or even just a glass of water.
As small as these gestures were, Poles were tortured and
killed for them. Maria, the Polish girl who provided water to a thirsty Jew,
was arrested and damaged for life. Other Poles featured here were beaten to
death, put in concentration camps, and burned alive. Children as young as three
were shot to death.
It is a sin and a crime that this book is so little
known. While other, important books detail the crimes we committed during World
War Two, a book that proves the reality of human goodness is out of print. By
letting this book go out of print, we have let humanity down. Buy it, read it,
stock libraries with it: the least we can do.
Thank you for writing this Danusha!
ReplyDeleteKim thank you for reading and commenting.
DeletePoland needs an active and well organized Polonia. When polish authorities protest - it has little effect. It's easy to ignore voices coming from some distant country. When angry voices are coming from your own backyard- it's a different situation.
ReplyDeleteIf things continue as they're going, Polish-American relations will continue to deteriorate.
Lukasz I could not agree with you more.
DeleteAnd thank you again for alerting me to his passing.
You're welcome. I wasn't sure if american media will notice that sad news. After all he was a Pole.
DeleteLukasz I have seen zero coverage in American media. I get my news from Google news, and from the radio, and from what others around me say. I don't know if anyone is covering it.
DeleteHe was a zionist jew and a trator. Good riddance!
ReplyDeleteBartoszewski was born Bartman.
ReplyDelete