Poland Marks 70th Anniversary Of World War II

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RYAN LUCAS and DAVID RISING | 09/ 1/09 01:20 PM | AP

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A general view of ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the beginning of WW II at the Monument of Westerplatte Defenders, in Gdansk, northern Poland, Tuesday early morning, Sept. 1, 2009.( AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

GDANSK, Poland — On a wind-swept peninsula where shells lobbed from a German battleship ignited World War II 70 years ago, European leaders vowed Tuesday never to forget the lessons of the 20th century's bloodiest conflict.

Evidence of continued animosity was not far from the surface, however, as Poland pushed for greater acknowledgment from Russia of its role in starting the war, while Russia sought to minimize the impact of Moscow's 1939 pact with Berlin.

At dawn on Gdansk's Westerplatte peninsula, Poland's leaders marked the hour the German battleship Schleswig-Holstein shelled a tiny Polish military outpost housing the navy's arsenal. It was the war's opening salvo.

Red and white Polish flags fluttered in a breeze as the officials opened the ceremony at 4:45 a.m. (0245GMT). Later, Poland's president, prime minister and others placed wreaths at the foot of the towering granite monument to the defenders of Westerplatte as an honor guard looked on.

The blitzkrieg on Poland launched nearly six years of war that engulfed the world and left more than 50 million people dead as the German war machine rolled over Europe.

Poland alone lost 6 million citizens, half of them Jews. During the German occupation, the country was used as a base for the Nazis' genocide machinery: It was home to Auschwitz, Majdanek, Sobibor and other death camps built by the Nazis to annihilate Europe's Jews.

"Remembering the cruelty, remembering the extermination of peoples and nations, is perhaps the most important and most effective shield against the danger of another war," Prime Minister Donald Tusk said in a solemn afternoon ceremony with European and American officials along the waterfront on Westerplatte.

"Nobody in the world who will remember the events here in Gdansk in 1939 and the horrible events around the world in the years that followed ... will ever do anything to allow that nightmare to return."

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A Polish sailor bugled Taps as a wreath decorated with the red and white of Poland's flag was placed in memory of the war's victims.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel apologized for her nation, saying that remembering the war and its victims was its "everlasting historical responsibility."

"There are no words that can even approximately describe the suffering of this war and the Holocaust," Merkel told dignitaries, including Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, French Premier Francois Fillon, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband, and U.S. National Security Adviser James Jones, as well as Tusk and Poland's president, Lech Kaczynski.

"I bow before the victims."

Many historians see the signing of the Nazi-Soviet pact a week before the hostilities began as a critical development in Berlin's march to war.

The pact, formally a treaty of nonaggression, was signed Aug. 23, 1939, in Moscow by Vyacheslav Molotov and Joachim von Ribbentrop, the foreign ministers of the two countries.

In addition, the treaty included secret protocols that divided eastern Europe into German and Soviet spheres of influence. The Soviet Union attacked Poland from the east sixteen days after the Nazis invaded from the west.

Putin sought to downplay the treaty's importance, saying it was only one factor to be considered in the context of the western powers' appeasement of Hitler, along with agreements signed by other countries with the Nazis, including a Polish-German nonaggression pact.

"All of these acts brought about this tragedy, the start of World War II, and naturally we need to admit such mistakes," Putin said. "Our country has done so. ... Our parliament has condemned the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and we are right to expect that other countries that made deals with the Nazis should do the same."

Kaczynski defended Poland's nonaggression treaty, saying that it had also signed one with the Soviet Union, and that neither could be "compared in any way" to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.

He said that Poland has a right to "access the truth" about its history – including the murder of some 22,000 Polish officers by the Soviets in the Katyn forest during the war.

"You cannot adopt the principle that only those who were defeated must speak of their darkest episodes, and the victors do not," he said. "There is one truth."

Tusk, who met with Putin earlier in the day, took a softer approach, acknowledging the Red Army's defeat of the Nazis in Poland and vowing his nation and Russia would investigate together the "painful elements of our common history."

"If, in the past, it was possible for the Poles and the Germans and the Russians and the Germans, for God's sake, why isn't it possible for the Poles and the Russians?" he said.

At the height of the war, the European theater stretched from North Africa to the outskirts of Moscow, and pitted Germany and its allies, including Italy, against Britain, France, the Soviet Union and the United States, along with a host of other countries, including Polish forces in exile.

The war in Europe ended May 8, 1945, with Germany's unconditional surrender.

President Barack Obama, who was not at Tuesday's ceremonies, sent a message noting that today, as a NATO member, Poland is protected by a treaty that says an attack on one is an attack on all.

"We celebrate together the determination of the people of Poland to fight authoritarianism and to choose democracy and freedom," Obama said in the message to Poland. "Today, we live in a different era in which the United States and Poland are close allies, partners in meeting global challenges to our security and prosperity, and in supporting fundamental human rights around the world."

GDANSK, Poland — On a wind-swept peninsula where shells lobbed from a German battleship ignited World War II 70 years ago, European leaders vowed Tuesday never to forget the lessons of the 20th ...
GDANSK, Poland — On a wind-swept peninsula where shells lobbed from a German battleship ignited World War II 70 years ago, European leaders vowed Tuesday never to forget the lessons of the 20th ...
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So many people suffered from this war. It is something that should never be forgotten. I'm currently reading a book about this called Abandoned and Forgotten (author Evelyne Tannehill). She was a 9 year old girl at the time who lived in East Prussia. It stresses the point of what war does to people and how it impacts the innocent civilian population who want no part of war, who just want to live their lives in peace, but who have no say in the decisions of their government but who are powerless citizens. It is a story about the suffering that war brings about and is still happening in many parts of the world right now. Here's the book website if anyones interested: http://www.abandonedandforgotten.com/synopsis/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 AM on 09/04/2009
- rblackbird I'm a Fan of rblackbird 12 fans permalink

These posts contain a lot of bad history, incomplete history, irrelevant history and imitation history. We should remember the principal reason for the commemorations at Westerplatte: the extraordinary heroism of the Polish soldiers. 182 soldiers and 27 civilians fought off 3400 German troops and marines, 47 dive bombers, a battleship shooting at point blank range, armored cars, flame throwers and heavy artillery. The Poles had one field piece, two anti-tank guns. some mortars and machine guns. The fighting lasted a week, delaying German invasion of the rest of the Polish Baltic coast. The casualties? German dead and wounded were 200-400, exact number unknown. Polish losses were 15-20 dead and 53 wounded.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Westerplatte

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 09/02/2009
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The complaint about "bad" history. Followed by a cut-and paste hack job from open Wiki entry,
Funny stuff.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 PM on 09/03/2009
- rblackbird I'm a Fan of rblackbird 12 fans permalink

Since you condemn Wikipedia articles as "cut and paste hack job[s]," I believe you did not lower yourself to read the article I referenced before you posted your reply. I'm right, aren't I? So, you do not have a basis to dispute the article.

But if you did read it, why, specifically, do you call THIS article a "cut and paste hack job"? Or do you apply this remark to all Wikipedia articles whether you read them or not?

As to the points I made based on the article, which one[s] are incorrect? For example, did Germany invade Poland in 1939? Did the Battle of Westerplatte actually occur? Did the Poles have more troops than stated? Did the Germans have fewer troops than stated? What, if anything, is wrong with the casualty figures? Do you deny that the German battleship opened fire without warning? Do you deny that the ship was in Danzig/Gdansk on a "courtesy" visit? Do you deny the Germans used dive bombers, or armored cars, or flame throwers or heavy artillery against the Poles?

You respond only by sniggering at a Wikipedia article. No substance. Your earlier posts demeaned other persons who posted. Your "history" was irrelevant, referring to past events that had noting to do with Germany's invasion of Poland. It reflected personal animosity towards Poland and its people. As to your statements about the Soviet invasion of Poland, you seem to know nothing about the Molotov/Ribbentrop Pact. Try reading some history books.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 AM on 09/05/2009
- LMPE I'm a Fan of LMPE 74 fans permalink

Too bad that Poland - one of the least imperialistic countries in Europe - suffered the most in that war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 09/01/2009
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Poland was a very agressive country if one bothers to look up basic history books. Especially in the eastern direction.
It tried to subjugate Ukrainian- Russian lands for centuries.
The battles with Ukrainian cossacks were epic,
Also:Poland invaded Russia in 1919 and won,
Another fact only known to history buffs-- Poland successfully invaded Russia and in fact occupied Moscow!
Also look up Polish Lithuanian Empire.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 09/02/2009

Poland only went after russia ( with the help of others ) only because they sought to secure territories it had lost at the time of partitions.
1919 Russo-Polish War -(4/19) Poland invaded Russia in April, after demanding a return to the boundaries of 1772. The Poles were intially very successful, capturing Kiev and much of the Ukraine. The Soviets counterattacked, driving off the Poles and advancing toward Warsaw. The Poles, however, received vigorous aid from the French, and were able to repulse the Soviets. Under the Treaty of Riga, the final frontiers between Poland and the Soviet Union were set.

"Poland was a very aggressive country if one bothers to look up basic history books."

if one bothers to look up basic history books they know that Poland was never a aggressor , they just wanted their land back...... They never wonted problems with anyone... They had horses when Germans and Soviets had tanks.

Poland was a very aggressive country when? 1600 ? 1700? LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 09/02/2009
- USA2Sense I'm a Fan of USA2Sense 6 fans permalink

Don't forget the annihilition of 90% of the Polish Officer Corps - and 99% of all of the Polish Cavalry - no one wins a war with horse-cavalry against tanks......one of the saddest incidences of WWII.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 09/01/2009
- oxi I'm a Fan of oxi 5 fans permalink

"President Barack Obama, who was not at Tuesday's ceremonies, sent a message noting that today, as a NATO member, Poland is protected by a treaty that says an attack on one is an attack on all."

That's it? How pathetic!

NATO is the world's most corrupt and law breaking alliance, no wonder Poland speaks so negatively about the Russians, the U.S. is actually speaking, not Poland...

NATO is the new Warsaw Pact...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 09/01/2009
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Based on your posts on this thread, oxi,you have proven to be grossly misinformed on the subject. Please get a basic primier on 20th century hstory and go away,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 PM on 09/01/2009
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The invasion of Poland was unfortunately not a hard sell to Germans at that time considering that the universally accepted fact that the treaty of Versailles was forced on Germany at the end of WWI with provision completely contradictory to the Armistice. Poof, since 1795 there was no such thing as Poland and all of a sudden it is created out of, for a large, Germany. Regaining territory under an illegitimate treaty and the fact that Hitler gave an ultimatum to Poland to have a corridor to connect Germany to Danzig and East Prussia made it easy to invade when they refused. I think there is a good chance that the US would do the same if opposing powers dimembered us where we would have California on one side and in the middle was Arizona, New Mexico, parts of Texas all being part of a newly created State of Mexican background simply because the areas were part of Mexico 150 years before. You make a bad treaty and force it down someones throat...don't expect anyone to honor it down the road. This is a good example to see what happens in Europe in 50 or a 100 years with the stripping of Kosovo from Serbia against its will with its historical ties since the 14th Century.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 09/01/2009
- oxi I'm a Fan of oxi 5 fans permalink

Stealing Kosovo from Serbia, that great U.S. and NATO mistake has taught the world to follow, Georgia was next as payback so who is next folks?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 09/01/2009
- raaf I'm a Fan of raaf 25 fans permalink
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There were pogroms in Poland long before the Nazi's invaded Poland and there were also pogroms after WWII when Jews who fled Poland returned, but somehow Poland is the victim here, sure whatever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 09/01/2009

What does this article have to do with pogroms? And to put things in context: how many people died in pogroms in Poland (1000?) and how many Polish people (including Jews, who were Polish citizens just like Jews in the U.S. are US citizens) died during the war (6000000?) - six thousand times more.

Here is an article to put pogroms in perspective:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pogrom

And what insane logic are you applying here? If some Polish citizens who happened to be Catholic killed some other Polish citizens who happened to be Jewish, then the country of Poland cannot be a victim of an attack?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 PM on 09/01/2009

Wonder if that HAMAS leader believes any of this?? You know..the guy who won't allow the Holocaust to be taught to Arab kids in that open society in Gaza!! He called teaching the Holocaust...how ironic.."a war crime"!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 09/01/2009
- Spencaa I'm a Fan of Spencaa 14 fans permalink

My local paper has a whole section about Canada and our part in joining the war. I dunno, I'd feel bad right now to be American and to think this was when the war started, yet you weren't even there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 09/01/2009

Such a tragedy, remember 60 million people of all religions died in WWII. and the Poles suffered greatly under Hitler.

No one group has a monopoly on suffering from WWII

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 09/01/2009
- rudolph I'm a Fan of rudolph 11 fans permalink

They suffered longer under Stalin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 09/01/2009
- Spencaa I'm a Fan of Spencaa 14 fans permalink

Religions? You mean people, right? It has nothing to do with religion. Okay, so maybe it did at some aspects like with Jews and other religions, but it's not like thats the defining factor of why they died.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 09/01/2009
- Macready I'm a Fan of Macready 64 fans permalink

It must have been horrible . . but quite frankly . . . . we are still living with the aftermath of WWII . . . . and it doesn't seem as though we have learned anything from that war . . wars are still raging across the globe . . . . and the Palestinians are paying for the holocaust . . . . maybe it is time we commemorated WWII with peace and not more wars . . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 09/01/2009
- oxi I'm a Fan of oxi 5 fans permalink

Obama cites NATO and guess what? NATO is the one attacking other nations lately!

The U.S. and NATO is the threat to global stability...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 09/01/2009
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Palestinains are paying for their idi0tic refusal to accept U.N. Partition. Deal with it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 09/01/2009
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What a dark day it must have been 70 years ago today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 09/01/2009
- JerryLevy I'm a Fan of JerryLevy 54 fans permalink
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Several critical aspects of WWII should always be studied---not dwelt upon but studied and taught:

1. Russia and Germany had a pact to invade and take Poland and this was purely and imperialistic move as Poland posed no threat to anyone. Hitler and Stalin made a secret deal to invade and Russia did not fight the Nazis until Germany invaded them also.

2. Many Poles including some high level officials in the Catholic church collaborated with the Nazis to murder their fellow Polish Jewish citizens to get their property. Some of the atrocities against the Polish Jews were not committed by the Germans but by Polish partisans.

These two facts are often overlooked when teaching Polish history.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 09/01/2009
- GO-BAMA I'm a Fan of GO-BAMA 13 fans permalink

Where are you getting point #1?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 AM on 09/01/2009
- JerryLevy I'm a Fan of JerryLevy 54 fans permalink
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Basic knowledge of history

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 09/01/2009

He's right..and GO-GATORS!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 09/01/2009
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On point 1. Yes, Germany and Soviewr Union ( Please stop saying Russia) devided Poland.
But you need to become familair with the historical context.
Fact: During RussianCivil War Poland took advantage of the situation anf grabbed parts of Ukraine and Belorus. 1919 Russian-Polish war. Poland won and kept the territory acquired by conquestl. Under dictator Marshal Pilsudski, Poland was a sworn enemy of Soviet Union.Therefore, Stalin felt he was getting back the territory lost to Poland in 1919 and elimiating one enemy from its borders. Of course, in 2 years he was proven wrong--the enemy he placed on Soviet borders was far, far worse the petty Polish dictator.
Next subject,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 PM on 09/01/2009

I agree with you, but there are many other facts that are overlooked when teaching Polish history.

For example, many Poles, including my wife's grandmother, risked their lifes to help fellow Jews:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_Righteous_among_the_Nations

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 PM on 09/01/2009

I agree with you, but there are many other facts that are often overlooked when teaching Polish history. For example, many Poles, including my wife's grandmother, risked their lifes to save fellow Jews.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_Righteous_among_the_Nations

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 09/01/2009
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There were heroes in every country who helped each other during this terrible period. And there were plenty of villains. Poles not excepted. This is the human condition.
About JJewish ghetto Warsaw apprising,

"Sometimes the wind from burning houses
would bring the kites along
and people on the merry-go-round
caught the flying charred bits.
This wind from the burning houses
blew open the girls' skirts
and the happy throngs laughed
on a beautiful Warsaw Sunday."

Czeslaw Milosz

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 09/03/2009
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We acknowledge our mistakes, and learn from them, and we move forward. We make brand new mistakes and so long as we remember that they are God's way of helping us grow, we can always learn from them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 AM on 09/01/2009

"God's way of helping us grow"??? Pathetic! No God would allow this!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 09/01/2009

There is no God then?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 AM on 09/02/2009
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