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Menachem Rosensaft

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The "Polish Death Camps" Uproar: Unwarranted Outrage When a Simple Correction Would Have Sufficed

Posted: 06/04/2012 9:27 am

Any objective observers reading the Polish prime minister's and foreign minister's overreactions to an innocent phraseological error -- and that is all it was -- by President Obama could only have been left scratching their heads in amazement. Prime Minister Donald Tusk charged that the President had perpetrated a "distortion of history" as a result of "ignorance, lack of knowledge, bad intentions." Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski said that the President was guilty of "ignorance and incompetence."

The cause for this public display of indignation? A slip-up by President Obama when, in posthumously awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Jan Karski, a heroic member of the Polish anti-German underground during World War II, he referred to "a Polish death camp" rather than to a German death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

At the White House ceremony on May 29, which I was privileged to attend, President Obama spoke glowingly of Karski:

Fluent in four languages, possessed of a photographic memory, Jan served as a courier for the Polish resistance during the darkest days of World War II. Before one trip across enemy lines, resistance fighters told him that Jews were being murdered on a massive scale, and smuggled him into the Warsaw Ghetto and a Polish death camp to see for himself. Jan took that information to President Franklin Roosevelt, giving one of the first accounts of the Holocaust and imploring to the world to take action.

Poles are understandably sensitive when Nazi annihilation and concentration camps are referred to as "Polish" just because they, well, happened to have been located in Poland. They do not want anyone anywhere to have any doubt whatsoever that Germans, not Poles, were responsible for death camps such as Auschwitz, Treblinka, Majdanek and Sobibor, where millions of Jews were murdered during the Holocaust. The fact is that thousands of Polish political, religious and intellectual leaders were also killed by the Germans during World War II. Between 70,000 and 75,000 non-Jewish Poles are estimated to have perished at Auschwitz alone.

Let's be clear. Calling Auschwitz, Treblinka and Majdanek "Polish" camps is geographically accurate. So is calling Bergen-Belsen, Dachau and Buchenwald "German" camps, or referring to Mauthausen as an "Austrian" camp. Still, the Poles have a valid historiographical point.

Six years ago, I publicly supported the Polish Government's request that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization formally change the name of the site of the most notorious of the World War II camps on UNESCO's World Heritage List from "Auschwitz Death Camp" to "former Nazi German Auschwitz-Birkenau Death Camp."

The Polish government's reasoning, I noted on that occasion, is "absolutely legitimate. The death factory of Auschwitz-Birkenau, where more than 1,000,000 Jewish men, women and children were murdered, was a German camp, conceived by the Nazi-German government and operated by Germans."

To its credit, the White House was quick to acknowledge the error. Immediately following the May 29 ceremony, a White House spokesman explained that, "The President misspoke. He was referring to Nazi death camps in Poland. We regret this misstatement, which should not detract from the clear intention to honor Mr. Karski and those brave citizens who stood on the side of human dignity in the face of tyranny." Since then, President Obama has written to Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski expressing "regret" for "inadvertently" using "a phrase that caused many Poles anguish over the years and that Poland has rightly campaigned to eliminate from public discourse around the world."

Messrs Tusk and Sikorski would also be well-advised to remember that President Obama has spoken publicly about the extent of Polish suffering at the hands of the Nazis during World War II, and he has repeatedly paid tribute to the bravery of Poles who fought against Hitler's Third Reich.

In this context, the Polish officials' harsh condemnation of President Obama's unintentional reference to the camp to which Karski had borne witness as Polish rather than German or Nazi was not just over the top but petty, especially since the President was hardly the first to make such a mistake.

In his book, Chutzpah, for example, Professor Alan Dershowitz referred to "the giant Polish extermination camps at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Treblinka, Belzec, Chelmno and Sobibór."

A February 28, 1986, Associated Press article about the deportation of Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk from the United States to Israel referred to Treblinka as a "Polish death camp;" the headline of an April 19, 1993, AP article in the Spokane, Wash., newspaper, the Spokesman-Review, about a commemoration at Treblinka read, "Tears spill once more at Polish death camp;" a July 14, 2000, article in New York's Jewish Week mentioned "a recent United Synagogue Youth tour of Israel and Polish death camps;" and an April 4, 2008, article in the London Jewish Chronicle referred to "the Polish death camp" of Auschwitz.

On December 20, 2009, an article in the British newspaper, The Independent, referred to Auschwitz as a "southern Polish death camp" where "Some 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, perished;" the headline of an August 10, 2010 AP article about a fire at Majdanek, carried by Fox News among many other media outlets, read, "Fire at barrack of Polish death camp destroys as many as 10,000 shoes of Nazi victims;" and articles in both the April 26, 2010, New Jersey Jewish News and the November 17, 2011, issue of Columbia University's daily student newspaper, the Columbia Spectator, similarly referred to Majdanek as a "Polish death camp." Earlier this year, the Los Angeles Times apologized for referring to Auschwitz as a "Polish concentration camp."

In March of 2011, after the New York Times cautioned its reporters in an entry to the newsroom's stylebook "to avoid misleading phrases like 'Polish concentration camp,'" Eileen Murphy, Vice President for Corporate Communications at The New York Times Company, wrote to the Kosziuszko Foundation that such references "however unfortunate, are simply mistakes, and it is wrong to suggest that they reflect any malice or deliberate distortion."

The same holds true for President Obama. For Prime Minister Tusk and Foreign Minister Sikorski to turn an inadvertent mistake into an international incident was unseemly, and at least some appreciation on their part for the fact that the President of the United States had just honored a Polish national hero would have been appropriate.

Menachem Z. Rosensaft is vice president of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants. He teaches about the law of genocide and World War II war crimes trials at the law schools of Columbia, Cornell and Syracuse universities.

 
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Any objective observers reading the Polish prime minister's and foreign minister's overreactions to an innocent phraseological error -- and that is all it was -- by President Obama could only have bee...
Any objective observers reading the Polish prime minister's and foreign minister's overreactions to an innocent phraseological error -- and that is all it was -- by President Obama could only have bee...
 
 
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01:41 PM on 06/11/2012
While the words of the Polish politicians were a little harsh, they proportionately reflected the outrage by Poles around the World, and it appears this was need to get our leftist elite to "scratch their heads" and stop using phrases that are remnants of Soviet anti-Polish propaganda. The fact that others have used this phrase does not minimize the sin this omission represents. As a voting Democrat I was very happy to vote for Obama and am very open about this. I do believe that many attacks on Obama are subtly rascist. Nonetheless I was horrified when he made this error because there has been a lot of effort by Poland and even Israel in fighting this phrase, especially in the last few years. The fact this was not picked up on shows that he does not have ethnically Polish advisors, and this needs to be addressed.
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falonia
Atheistic Socialist
01:50 PM on 06/10/2012
Over 300 comments about one word. I am sure Obama was aware of who ran the death camps and who the victims were. Why is it necessary to beat him over the head for a simple error? Does anyone really think he did not say "German" because he did not want to alienate the Germans? He was honoring a hero who fought tirelessly against the Germans. Why would he not understand this situation? I know words can hurt but lets get real, It was a simple error and does not reflect anything more than that.
08:15 PM on 06/11/2012
Because there are ignorant people who will misunderstand, and there are many, including amongst those posting, who claim out of ignorance or hate that the camps were Polish because the Poles were culpable for them. The pattern with the American leftist elite is to honor individual Poles, but slander the whole nation these heros came from. Enough is enough!
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10:50 PM on 06/11/2012
Indeed.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
10:29 AM on 06/10/2012
You forget that unwarranted outrage is much more fun.  It's how Fox Opinion and AM talk radio pundits make a living.
10:01 AM on 06/10/2012
The murder camps were German designed and German administered but geographically
located in Poland. The attempt by Polish authorities to emphasize this fact, while totally understandable, was done in a truly awkward and insipid manner. Their remarks give
the appearance of "protesting too much". A mild "correction" would have been much
more effective.
07:50 PM on 06/08/2012
Let's be clear. Calling the bomb that fell on Hiroshima "Japanese" is as geographically accurate as calling Majdanek a "Polish" camp. But would Mr Rosensaft use the phrase "Japanese Nagasaki and Hiroshima bombs"? I doubt it.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
12:45 AM on 06/10/2012
wrong -- there were nazi sympmathizers in poland, like the vichy they saw opportunity. i don't think anyone in hiroshima sent a map for the best ground zero.
02:37 AM on 06/10/2012
Unfortuntely, you're wrong. While a proportion of Poles held antisemitic views (which is a shame of course), no one in occupied Poland - with the exception of a few dozen pre-war lunatics who saw Hitler as a hero (their leader, BTW, ended up in a concentration camp) - SYMPATHIZED with the Nazis, or Germans, to put it more correctly. Also, you seem to be claiming that it was the Poles who suggested to the German occupying authorities to build camps in Majdanek, Treblinka or Auschwitz (incorporated into Germany proper, BTW) - by contrasting Poles with the residents of Hiroshima who didn't send "a map for the best ground zero." This is sheer ignorance. Need to read more on the subject.
05:10 PM on 06/11/2012
Read up on who received the Germans joyfully when they first occupied Poland.
What opportunity did the Polish people see as 5.820,000 of them were murdered?
11:43 AM on 06/08/2012
As a person who spent some time in Soviet imposed Communist Poland, I have noticed the overlap of anti Polish Soviet propaganda with the glaring omissions and distortions of WW II Polish history in the Western press which was allowed to take seat while Poland was occupied and unable to defend herself. Interestingly, posts about the involvement of Jews in the persecution of ethnic and pro Polish Jews in the territories occupied by the then ally of Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, are rarely publicized, as well as the point that some Jews also collaborated with the German Nazis, while inflammatory and unsupported allegations of alleged Polish complicity with the German Nazis are allowed to appear rather freely.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
01:05 AM on 06/10/2012
those histories aren't allowed in Holocaust speak. One of the points I always try to stress is Poland wasn't just Poles -- as the ethnic Poles were rounded up and slaughtered -- the most complete genocide of the war. Nobody learns that in history class. Lots of people in Poland that weren't ethnic Poles saw opportunity and money, and they went for it. I don't know how people can think so black and white, everything has to be all good or all bad for them to understand it, and that is never accurate. I have even had people laugh at me for using the term "ethnic Pole" -- like its akin to Santa's elves, and you can guess who those people might be.
My family is gypsy, so I know how you can scream and not be heard over the chant "holocaust, holocaust, holocaust". One of the few things I agree with that Obama has done is open the board of the Holocaust Musuem to include representatives of many peoples that have suffered ethnic cleansing and genocide.
08:22 PM on 06/11/2012
Presently there are no ethnic Poles on the board. A well respected Charles Chotkowki was suggested by the Polish community but nothing was done.
10:33 PM on 06/11/2012
F&F for the truth
11:10 AM on 06/06/2012
I do not think that Poles were totally innocent during the war, but at the same time they suffered horribly. In regard to Mr Rosensaft claim that "Polish Camps" is geographically true is not accurate either. During the time of the war, the area of Auschwitz was under the the jurisdiction of the general government which was a state wholly controlled by the Reich. By his logic, am I to refer to Constantinople as a Turkish city?
10:57 AM on 06/06/2012
Interesting thing is that `Polish death camps` are often used in German news papers!
05:22 AM on 06/08/2012
I'll bet it is! Doesn't take a genius to figure out why.
10:42 AM on 06/10/2012
Yes, and given that the camps were in Poland, were they not in some limited sense, "Polish"? If you've lived in central Europe, where nations are mostly homogenious in terms of race and ethnicity, with some limited exceptions, yes, I know, e.g. there is a Vietnamese community in the Czech Republic, but for the most part it's an area of the world where the population is not among the most progressive in terms of consciousness about racsim, etc. I dare say it was a classic example of the Poles leaping to grab an excuse to pile on our African-American president for something they would have let slide has our president been of a different race.
11:13 AM on 06/11/2012
If Obama had an ethnic Polish American as a liaison with the Polish Community, there would have been an awareness that thei ugly, misleading phrase which he used has been fought for some time now, and makes the blood of ethnic Poles boil. As for the homogeny of Poland, that is only the case now. In pre-WW II Poland, Poland was a multi-ethnic and multi-religious society. I will also mention that in 1918, Poland accepted 500,000 Russian Jews into WW 1 devastated Poland, in which there was enormous poverty, and granted them citizenship. The Jews were escaping the Russian civil war where both sides were mistreating the Jews, especially the whites, who were blaming the Jews for the Bolshevik revolution. (The US, meanwhile couldn't accept a boatload of Jews escaping the German Nazis). This, of course created economic tensions, exacerbated by the Polish Bolshevik war and the depression.
11:15 AM on 06/11/2012
To give you another idea of the ethnic situation in Poland I will tell you this story. When Hitler attacked Poland, in a town in southern Poland, a Polish policeman by the name Schneider of German heritage who was a patriotic Poles was shot by an ethnic German who was a member of the German fifth column, but had the name of Adamczyk, a Polish name. In occupied Poland, one could not know which Pole of German heritage would be loyal to Poland, and accordingly, German citizens of Poland, and/or Poles of German heritage were extremely dangerous to the anti-German resistance and did do a lot of damage, and were easily confused with Poles, as many spoke and acted Polish. Poles appear to also have been blamed by the crimes of these so-called "Volksdeutsche", which most Americans have no idea even existed.
05:55 AM on 06/06/2012
Not enough is done to correct disinformation. Maybe the uproars are not loud enough?

Newspapers are often biased and wrong. When John Demjanjuk was convicted, the judge himself said the verdict was not permanent. When JD died before his trial of appeal came up, German law annuled the conviction and he became posthumously: "innocent, no criminal record". (Remember he was proven innocent before).
JD's lawyer is suing the German press over the misleading "convicted...nazi guard dies" title. For it was mimicked all over the world. Ironically one of the few publications that got it right, that he died officially innocent, was Haaretz.
04:19 AM on 06/06/2012
Without doubt many Poles willingly helped deport "prisoners" to the death camps and rightfully Auschwitz and Treblinka are Polish death camps. Denial and blaming only the Germans is convenient and helps hide the lies, because Poles are still anti-semitic and neo-nazism is rampant amongst Europeans. Anyone who denies this is not Jewish nor have they lived many years in Europe outside any "safety" of the US military or US community (as I am and I have)
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06:18 PM on 06/11/2012
F&F great links but I believe most know the truth.
Ethnic slander against Poland is in their blood.
07:26 PM on 06/05/2012
For a man that claims to be so smart and worldly, either the President isn't as smart as he likes to think he is, or he is being poorly served by his State Department aides.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
noodles865
Marco......
12:55 AM on 06/06/2012
That ie a bunch of BS,get over it what a stupid thing to go that nuts over..this man was being honored something this nation did not have to do.while political speeches or words of welcome have plagued every nation and is usually polity made note of..most tell a speech writer the sentiments wanted and a outline many times no outline at all so the speech writer goofed get over it....I am a history buff and love as far as interest WWII,the camps are referred to in that way all the time,it is implied,we all know what it was,who it was so come on and loose your ssh!t over something else not this..way over board considering where the world is now,and the interest this president has in it.The disrespect did not come from the President but it sure did come from them shameful for them to treat our nation that way..
11:29 AM on 06/11/2012
Can you please explain why the leftist British Broadcasting Corporation never referred to the German camp in the occupied British territory of the Channel Islands as BRITISH, or for that matter as "Nazi camp in Britain". Meanwhile, it persistently, in spite of repeated requests not to do so, calls the German camps in German occupied Poland "Polish".
IS IT DELIBERATE POST SOVIET LEFTIST PROPAGANDA? Poles, as opposed to naive westerners who never lived under a repressive regime, have cause to wonder .....
02:05 PM on 06/11/2012
Read up on how many Polish citizens were murdered in the camps.
This will help you understand.
Then read some of the highly prejudice post on it thread against Polish people.
There are people here who completely ignore all the help given to the nazis by members of their own religion and bash Polish Christians.
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12:25 PM on 06/05/2012
P.S. I notice how easily you let through comments that are either completely without merit or downright offensive and defamatory against the Polish people and their history.

While I was ready to overlook it at first, now that I see what kind of comments you let through and what kind you withhold, I'm beginning to consider other motives afoot (as well as a more serious action against HP for allowing this to happen).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
noodles865
Marco......
01:06 AM on 06/06/2012
Are you kidding because people think it is BS to slam a President giving your countryman an honor and a slip or not even a slip they go nuts and you think that is a justifiable reaction?..then huff let this through so what is the issue here.do you think it was a horrible insult to the poles??because if you do you are crazy spoken blunders occur constantly and it is usually politely corrected not made into an international incident..I am a history buff and interested in WWII and in many book it is referred to just as the President did,it is beyond implied...however if I am utterly off base and misunderstood your meaning for that I am sorry...
12:21 PM on 06/05/2012
I hate to disagree with a scholar such as Mr. Rosensaft but there were many Poles who supported and helped accommodate the Nazis in the deportation of Jews to concentration camps. Mr. Obama's "error" was not an error at all but a fact and no apology was necessary in my opinion. It is and remains, as does Hungary, a highly anti Semitic nation. I am reminded of the film Schindlers List. As the transport of Jews in cattle cars pulled out of the train station to eventually die at Auschwitz a little girl looks up at the Jews and makes a motion of slicing her throat. That simple geture speaks volumes. It is true there is a new generation of Poles who want to join us in saying "Never Again" and I commend them for that, however we must, "Never Forget" either.
Peter Loewy Son of Holocaust Survivors. Both my parents are still with me
01:28 PM on 06/05/2012
how many trees in Yad Vashem were planted by Poles? More than 6000. Irena Sendler alone saved around 2500 Jewich children. People are desperate to save their own lives during the war, they can do all evil to save themselves. It easy to judge others, living in a safety...but still there were Poles, who took up the risk.

btw. how you measure antysemtism? when it is low, medium or high level of antysemitism? really curious..
06:03 AM on 06/06/2012
For years, some people from Jewish and Ukrainian communities have been asking Israel to plant a tree in honor of the Ukrainian archbishop Josyf Slypyj. He saved quite a number of Jews in the war and openly defied the Nazis. A prominent Jewish rabbi praised him with saving his life.
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noodles865
Marco......
01:11 AM on 06/06/2012
I agree in every nation there were collaborators and many poles hated Jews but that isn't even at issue,it is completely implied that it was a nazi camp in Poland and they want it from here on out referred to in that huge 6 word manor is nuts..and peter tell them if you will Robin in CT.is glad you are here and that could have only happened in one way..because they survived..God bless
08:54 AM on 06/05/2012
Must be voting time in Poland. Somebody running for re-election?
12:55 PM on 06/05/2012
sth like that, just looking for a substitute topic as gov heats rock bottom, everyone in PL has a good laugh about it, we starting get immune to spin doctors..
10:43 PM on 06/05/2012
No, there is no voting time in Poland. There is voting time in the USA. President Obama used Jan Karski to win the votes of Polish Americans, that's all.
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noodles865
Marco......
01:16 AM on 06/06/2012
Yes it was all a huge plot because we know how many poles in America who would be so offended they wouldn't vote for him...yes the Administration said we gotta get that pole vote and you know how big and powerful the poles are at voting time,so lets plan a honor for someone in that nation to bring them in...please give me a break
06:41 AM on 06/05/2012
Quote: "The fact is that thousands of Polish political, religious and intellectual leaders were also killed by the Germans during World War II. Between 70,000 and 75,000 non-Jewish Poles are estimated to have perished at Auschwitz alone.". Thousands ? In this kind of article written by a Holocaust survival one would expect more honesty. At least 2 million non-Jewish Poles were killed by Germans. And not just the elites either. Vast majority were in fact common people. Like my mother's family and all her neighbours from villages around Kielce that were shipped to Auschwitz to be killed to clear the land for Germans. Jewish and non-Jewish villagers; everyone. There were hundreds of thousands of such people.

To change this into just "thousands" is an act of bad faith !

Professor of Mathematics and a daughter of genocide survivor.
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noodles865
Marco......
01:25 AM on 06/06/2012
Wieslawa,I am so glad you were able to comment here today and the only way that could happen is that she survived,and that is amazing she must be a strong woman you are very lucky..I would understand your anger over the number that is insulting and can only hope it was a missed typo,I do want to ask though why would they react so terribly to an slip,I have two friends that are poles immigrants here about 12 years ago and they think this was really a stupid thing to be angry about and didn't think average poles would care at all..just wondering what you think of the President blooper...take care
08:22 AM on 06/09/2012
I just did a google search on the phrase "german concentration camps" and received 272,000 results. Then another search on "polish concentration camps" and received almost 90,000 results. I searched in quotes to make sure it was the exact phrase. In English, there can be little mistaking the possessive form of the meaning, hence the exactness of the search string. Obama is not just another person visiting Poland. He was not speaking about economic issues. Considering the speaker and the topic we must demand an extreme sensitivity to the topic by the speaker. In light of my google experiment, I would expect Obama to go out of his way to even mention that these were German camps and not Polish ones. It should have been the second most important point of his message about heroism. IMHO, it is not appropriate to suggest that Obama made a mistake. He didn't just get up there and wing it or even speak from memory. He was reading a presidential speech written for him by a professional speech writer who's every word was weighed carefully to convey the message the president was intended to convey. I am very suspicious that all the talk about Obama's choice of words refers a slip. I don't buy it especially because the media is filled with slanderous references to "Polish concentration camps" by leading voices on matters of international policy who would never claim it was a slip. They're still talking about Poland being an antisemitic nation.
02:51 PM on 06/11/2012
F&F
Defiantly a deliberate very prejudiced distortion.
5,800 Million Polish citizens were killed in WW2. 6.72% of the population a percentage much higher than any other country.
As we to often see this is belittled or completely ignored in America.
06:21 PM on 06/11/2012
Typo 16.7%