Israel denounces Poland's newly passed legislation barring the association of Poland with the Nazi death camps in a proclaimed move to 'defend the truth against slander,' calling it 'an attempt to rewrite history and eschew responsibility.'

Israel's government spoke out Saturday against a bill that was approved by the Polish parliament the day before which seeks to distance Poland from the construction and operations of the Nazi regime's concentration camps.

The bill, approved on the eve of the International Holocaust Remembrance Day, prescribes prison time for defaming the Polish nation by using phrases such as "Polish death camps" to refer to the killing sites Nazi Germany operated in occupied Poland during World War II.

Israel vehemently disapproved of the bill, asking the Polish government to amend the proposal before continuing to advance the legislation.

"No law can change a historical truth," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Several minutes later, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated his strong opposition to the bill, which he called "baseless."

"History cannot be changed, and the Holocaust must not be denied," Netanyahu tweeted, adding that he "instructed the Israeli Ambassador to Poland to meet with the Polish Prime Minister" Saturday evening to express his "strong position against the law."

President Reuven Rivlin responded to the passing of the bill by quoting former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski's May 2000 address to the Knesset.

"One must not falsify history! One must not conceal the truth! Every crime and every roguery should be named and castigated, and circumstances examined and revealed," Rivlin quoted.

Several lawmakers from both sides of the aisle also made sure to express their strong indignation, calling on the Polish government to either revise the proposed legislation or nix it altogether.

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked echoed the assertions of the president and prime minister, calling the bill "an attempt to rewrite history and remove responsibility from the Polish nation," noting that "many Poles, like other nations (Hungarians, Ukrainians, and others), helped Nazi Germany murder Jews," and speaking against their move to eschew responsibility.

Opposition leader MK Isaac Herzog demanded Netanyahu to "call the Israeli ambassador in Warsaw for consultations on a bill that is fundamentally unacceptable." Read more at YNET News