As the world prepares to mark Yom ha-Shoah on Monday night, April 17, thousands of Jewish visitors have descended on Poland for the annual March of the Living. On Tuesday morning, more than 150 Canadian students and adults—including seven Holocaust survivors—will be taking part in the large silent march between Auschwitz and Birkenau death camps near Krakow.
The commemoration comes amidst a heated debate over the way the Polish government wants its own version of Holocaust history told. Since 2018, a new law has made it illegal for researchers and academics to say that Poles were collaborators with the Nazis, or that they helped hunt down, round up and murder the country’s three million Jews.
According to critics—including Ottawa history professor Jan Grabowksi—Poland’s new “feel-good” narrative downplays its wartime responsibility in favour of a nationalistic fable that portrays Poles as victims who even helped the Jews.
Grabowski joins The CJN Daily to explain his latest battleground against Holocaust distortion: one that’s now taking place on Wikipedia.
What we talked about
- Read more about how Poland sued Grabowski for libel on The CJN
- Read Grabowski’s new study on Wikipedia’s distortion of the Holocaust
- Watch the 2023 March of the Living live in Poland at 8 a.m. on April 18 here
- Read the Yad Vashem statement on Israel and Poland’s renewal of school trips
Credits
The CJN Daily is written and hosted by Ellin Bessner (@ebessner on Twitter). Zachary Kauffman is the producer. Michael Fraiman is the executive producer. Our theme music is by Dov Beck-Levine. Our title sponsor is Metropia. We’re a member of The CJN Podcast Network. To subscribe to this podcast, please watch this video. Donate to The CJN and receive a charitable tax receipt by clicking here.