Related Papers
European History Quarterly
Roman Dmowski Understood': Ethnic Cleansing as Permanent Revolution
2005 •
Gomu Gomu
Revisiting Jewish Role in Polish Security Service, the UB: Between Soviet Communist Rule and a Hard Place 1945-1948
2016 •
batya knebel
Peter Lang
Jew. The Eternal Enemy? The History of Antisemitism in Poland
2018 •
Alina Cała
Ends of War. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Past and New Polish Regions after 1944.
Ends of War. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Past and New Polish Regions after 1944
2019 •
Dorothea Warneck
Reflexionen über die komplexe Frage, wie sich Gesellschaften nach der Erfahrung von Krieg und Gewalt konsolidieren oder gar neu erfinden. Der Zweite Weltkrieg wirkte in Polen wie in anderen europäischen Staaten weit über die unmittelbaren Kampfhandlungen hinaus. Okkupation, Zwangsarbeit, politische und rassistische Verfolgung sowie Grenzverschiebung prägten das Leben der Zivilbevölkerung. Viele der überlebenden Einwohnerinnen und Einwohner der Republik Polen fanden sich nach dem Ende der militärischen Auseinandersetzungen und dem Ende der Shoah unfreiwillig in anderen Regionen, auf dem Gebiet anderer neugebildeter Staaten oder im Exil wieder. Die Beiträge dieses Bandes gehen davon aus, dass es ein Kriegsende weder in Polen noch in seinen Nachbarstaaten gab. In Lublin wurde nach der Befreiung durch die Rote Armee schon 1944 eine sowjetisch gelenkte Übergangsregierung eingesetzt, indessen dauerten Zwangsmigrationen und die Rückkehr von Displaced Persons bis in die frühen 1950er Jahre an. Auf mentaler Ebene prägten die unterschiedlichen Kriegserfahrungen Menschen und ihr Verhalten über Jahre oder gar Jahrzehnte. Die Autorinnen und Autoren dieses Bandes begreifen die unterschiedlichen Kriegsenden als Phasen der Transition und der Neuorientierung. Analytisch kommen historische, museologische, soziologische, rechtswissenschaftliche, linguistische und psychologische Perspektiven zum Tragen.
August Grabski, The Jews and the “Disavowed Soldiers”, [in:] Antony Polonsky, Hanna Węgrzynek and Andrzej Żbikowski (eds.), New Directions in the History of the Jews in the Polish Lands, Academic Studies Press, Brighton MA, 2018, p. 442-461.
The Jews and the "Disavowed Soldiers"
2018 •
August Grabski
The attention paid in recent years to “disavowed soldiers” (żołnierze wyklęci) in Polish historical education has aroused very diverse reactions. On the one hand, the cult of these members of the underground who continued after the Nazi defeat to fight the new communist-dominated government and the Red Army which assisted it has been actively supported not only by the most important institutions in the state, including the president, the prime minister and the speaker of the Sejm (parliament), but also by the main state institution responsible for the investigation of the recent past, the Institute of National Remembrance (Instytut Pamięci Narodowej—IPN). There are no any doubts that the establishment of the National Day of Remembrance for the Disavowed Soldiers was completely at odds with the postwar experiences of Polish Jews and declarations by the leaders of their community, which in the postwar political conflict wholly supported the Communist government.
MA Thesis
HOLOCAUST HISTORY BETWEEN LIBERATION AND SOVIETIZATION: THE PUBLICATIONS OF THE CENTRAL JEWISH HISTORICAL COMMISSION IN POLAND 1945-1947
2017 •
Olga Kartashova
REGION: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia
Jews in Szczecin, 1945-50: At the Crossroad between Emigration and Assimilation Achim Wörn
2017 •
Achim Wörn
Zofia Wóycicka, Arrested Mourning: Memory of Nazi Camps in Poland, 1944-1950, Peter Lang: Frankfurt am Main
Arrested Mourning: Memory of Nazi Camps in Poland, 1944-1950
2014 •
Zofia Wóycicka
Studies in Contemporary History
Veterans, Victims, and Memory: The Politics of the Second World War in Communist Poland
2015 •
Joanna Wawrzyniak
In the vast literature on how the Second World War has been remembered in Europe, research into what happened in communist Poland, a country most affected by the war, is surprisingly scarce. The long gestation of Polish narratives of heroism and sacrifice, explored in this book, might help to understand why the country still finds itself in a «mnemonic standoff» with Western Europe, which tends to favour imagining the war in a civil, post-Holocaust, human rights-oriented way. The specific focus of this book is the organized movement of war veterans and former prisoners of Nazi camps from the 1940s until the end of the 1960s, when the core narratives of war became well established.
Slavic Review
Collaboration in a “Land without a Quisling”: Patterns of Cooperation with the Nazi German Occupation Regime in Poland during World War II
2005 •
Klaus-Peter Friedrich
Astonishingly, we still do not have a history of collaboration in Poland during World War II. Klaus-Peter Friedrich shows that the building blocks for such a history already exist, however. They are scattered throughout the contemporary Polish press and studies on the Nazi occupation regime. Examples include institutionalized cooperation (Baudienst, Polish Police), ethnically defined segments of the population (Volksdeutsche), informal support of Nazi projects on ideological common ground (anti- Semitism and anticommunism), and the stance of the Polish peasantry as well as the Roman Catholic Church. Friedrich concludes that collaboration eludes study because of a mental image according to which ethnic Poles were the foremost victims of the occupiers and heroically resisted them. Questionable views of national self-interest keep Polish society from coming to terms with the past. Nevertheless, debates on “Polish collaboration” continue to recur—as they have since 1939.