There was no Polish participation, there was no participation of Poles as a nation in the Holocaust,” Polish President Andrzej Duda said on Monday as efforts to contain the crisis between Israel and Poland over controversial Polish legislation on the Holocaust did not show immediate results.


Duda, in a visit to Zory in southern Poland, said there was “no systematic support, from the Polish side, for the Holocaust, only the fight against it – we need to insist on compliance with this basic truth; it is our right as a nation, just as it is the right of the Jews is to combat antisemitism.


“I will never agree, that we as a nation, Poland as a nation, be slandered by untrue historical ‘truths’ and by absolutely false accusations that in the last few days were addressed to our country and our nation, of which there have been many,” he said.

His comments seemed to put a chill on efforts, which started the night before in a conversation between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Polish colleague Mateusz Morawiecki, to contain the crisis. The two agreed to set up teams to reach an understanding on the legislation that would criminalize appropriating culpability to the Poles for the Holocaust and using words such as “Polish death camps.” That legislation has suddenly cast clouds over the relationship between the two countries.

The Foreign Ministry announced that its director-general, Yuval Rotem, will lead Israel’s team to talks with the Poles, but no date for a first meeting has been set.

Soon after the establishment of the teams was announced, however, a Polish government spokeswoman, Joanna Kopcinska, tweeted that Netanyahu and Morawiecki talked about “the current Polish-Israeli relations and historical conditions.” She said it was agreed that there would be a “dialogue between the teams of both countries. However, the conversation will not concern sovereign decisions of the Polish parliament.”

Soon after that tweet, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry said that according to Israel’s understanding, ...read more at JPost