The
Conference didn't pay the
survivors: They said there
weren't any victims anymore --
now they claim all these needy
Holocaust victims have
languished in poverty all
these
years. . . |
Restitutionist
meeting 1.
ON February 27, 2007, twenty leaders of
Jewish restitution groups will convene in
Warsaw, to advance their US$ 65 billion
claim against Poland. Israel
Singer, the general secretary of the
World Jewish Congress, will be there.
Jerzy Robert Nowak, a Polish
professor of history, writes today in one
of the independent papers that Singer's
participation is an "extraordinary
scandal" absent from most of the
media.[i] Singer stated on April
19, 1996 that if Poland does not satisfy
Jewish claims, it will be "publicly
attacked and humiliated". A Polish
publicist, Stanislaw Michalkiewicz
has called Singer's declaration a
"declaration of war against Poland". Even a Jewish publicist in Poland,
Antoni Marianowicz, has objected to
Singer's demands in the April 23, 1996
entry in his book: "This
is simply preposterous; we in Poland
have to reckon with the law and wait
for suitable laws, and they demand
everything right away. Often they are
those who lived comfortably in the US,
while their families were perishing
here in the Holocaust. It's hard to
imagine a more effective incitement of
anti-Semitism."[ii] In a recent interview in a Polish main
paper, Singer said: "Nobody who lost their
house wants to get just a piece of roof, a
couple of windows and doors, but the whole
house!".[iii] The Poles are justifiably furious, for
example, Nowak: "As if the Nazi occupier has
not methodically destroyed Poland --
Jews have received from Germany more
than US$100 billion in compensations --
the Poles themsellves were awarded only
meagre handfulls of Deutschmarks for
slave labourers". Nowak pointed out that in the first
years after WW2, Jews could recover
posessions in Poland fast, owing to
sympathy of predominantly Jewish
authorities, but the Jews usually sold the
properties and left Poland. A few hundred
thousand Jews mainly from the USSR
immediately received apartments free of
charge at the same time. The
US government has intervened on behalf of
world Jewry's restitutions. Stuart
Eizenstat, left, former special
representative of US president and
secretary of state for Holocaust-era
issues, outlines how the US Jewish
community achieved it: "The Jewish community, considering its
small size - only two to three percent of
the population depending on who one
defines as a Jew - has a remarkable impact
on issues relevant to it in the American
political system. Various interest groups
influence the latter by accessing the
Congress, the executive branch, and state
and local governments on subjects
important to their constituency." The 1967 Six-Day War marked the coming
of age of the Jewish community. Since
then, "the entire organized Jewish
community has been
Zionistic."[iv] Eizenstat's involvement in the
restitution process in Eastern Europe
started in 1995 when he was the US
ambassador in Europe, and became US
special envoy for that purpose: "At that
time, Edgar Bronfman, Israel
Singer, the WJC and the World Jewish
Restitution Organization (WJRO) had
already been trying to obtain Eastern
European property restitution -- they had
the critically important wisdom and
knowledge to use the media and political
system -- The WJC and the WJRO knew that
only American intervention in the former
communist countries could lead to
achievements. Bronfman had already
obtained Israeli prime minister
Yitzhak Rabin's support." Later
prime ministers Netanyahu (right)
and Barak didn't give as much
support to Eizenstat, presumably out of
concern for "bi-lateral relationship with
the new post-communist countries.
Perhaps in their hearts they also
wanted their Jewish communities to come
to Israel rather than spend their lives
in Eastern Europe."[v] Singer indicated in 2003 that shows the
restitutionism is also retributionism:
"Yitzhak Shamir, who has a great
distaste for Poland, told me he would
support the WJC claims against eastern
European countries."[vi] Singer
recognized the strategic issues for the
restitutionists to tackle: "The eastern European property
restitution issue from which the
restitution process of the 1990s
started has remained a big failure --
First, these are poor countries.
Second, they are used to being victims.
Third, restitution would require them
to admit all the other wrongs they
inflicted on the Jews during and after
the Holocaust. Their governments try to
deal with the local Jewish communities
which - except for Hungary - are
extremely small and powerless and thus
easier partners than the international
Jewish organizations." So far the restitutionists disregarded
the poverty of the target nation, Poland.
Clinging to "victimhood" by Poles was
solved with lies by "history professor"
Gross on the Jedwabne crime and the
Kielce "pogrom". Pliable "Polish"
statesmen admitted Polish guilt for both
crimes committed by others, including
Communist Jews in the case of Kielce. In the beginning, writes Eizenstat,
restitution efforts focused on "communal
assets such as synagogues and other
buildings". The process in Poland "will
eventually lead to the return of thousands
of pieces of communal property" but has
been slowed by "a lengthy dispute we
helped mediate - between the small Polish
Jewish community and the WJRO -- which
questioned the local community's capacity
to manage the restituted property. The
international and local Jewish community
will share control." Marianowicz above indicated the
local Jews' outrage with the claim.
According to Eizenstat, WJRO also demanded
at least some control over the restituted
properties. While this should be an
internal Jewish matter, WJRO's move means
control over a sizeable part of Polish
real estate by one institution that has
proven extremely hostile to Poles, like
the rest of the Jewish restitution
movement. Also, the Jewish restitution
organizations have been accused of keeping
the awards for themselves, rather than
distributing them to the needy and
eligible Jews. Some ineligible Jews "had falsified
their papers". Germany paid about USD 50
billion, and until 1965 also gave to the
Conference a billion dollars in present
value, but the victims received only 15
percent: "The large chunk of the rest
of it, according to Ronald
Zweig, an expert on the subject,
went to Jewish communities in the Arab
world, such as Iraq, and institutions
such as Yad Vashem in Israel." The Conference didn't pay the
survivors: "They said there weren't any
victims anymore -- now they claim all
these needy Holocaust victims have
languished in poverty all these years,
because the Germans gave them no money."
Some unjustly treated Shoah survivors said
they "trust the German government more
than they do the Jewish
organizations".[vii] Israeli banks deny payments from
accounts of Shoah victims, too. In January
2005, a Knesset committee slammed Israeli
banks for "severe negligence" in handling
some 9,000 accounts totaling NIS 1 billion
and locating the heirs. In the first years
of WW2, the banks managed to ride out mass
withdrawals thanks to the funds deposited
by thousands of European Jews. Some of the
banks misappropriated the funds and
destroyed documents. A bill proposed that
a government corporation would handle the
restitution of bank accounts, real estate,
stocks and other assets. Money without
heirs would go to humanitarian
causes.[viii] Nowak's worst predictions come true. In
1999, he warned about an "anti-Polish
alliance" of polonophobic Jewish, German
and Russian groups: "The most threatening
to us may prove an alliance of very
influential Jewish and German
factions."[ix] Nowak wrote today, alluding to German
restitution claims filed around Christmas
2006 against Poland: "We see a clear
synchronization of Jewish and German
claims. Both are based on a common lie
that seeks to paint WW2 Poles as
executioners, instead of the factual
victims we have been. Some influential
Ukrainian groups suddenly added their
indemnity claims for Operation Wisla,
which was predictable when some time
ago miscellaneous Polish "apologizers"
showed up." In Operation Wisla (1.5.1947 -
16.8.1947) that aimed at fragmentation of
a minority religion, the new Communist
government of Poland transported some
140,000 pre-war Polish citizens of
Orthodox Christian faith, from the eastern
part of the new state to former Eastern
Germany.[x] They were mainly Ukrainians and
followed millions of Poles re-settled from
former Eastern Poland, which the victorius
Allies gave to Stalin "in exchange" for
the Eastern German lands. It is unclear
why Ukraine would advance claims on behalf
of Ukrainians in Poland. Copyright Piotr
Bein 2007 - [i]
Jerzy
Robert Nowak, Nasz Dziennik,
17-18.2.2007, Nr 41
(2754)
- [ii]
Antoni Marianowicz, Polska, (Zydzi i
cykli) sci, Warszawa, 1999, p
86.
- [iii]
An interview with Israel Singer (in
Polish), Rzeczpospolita,
3-4.2.2007.
- [iv]
Jerusalem
Center for Public Affairs, Restitution
Issues and the Activism of American
Jews: An Interview with Stuart
Eizenstat, Post-Holocaust and
Anti-Semitism, No. 18,
1.3.2004
- [v]
Ibid.
- [vi]
Jerusalem
Center for Public Affairs, Restitution:
The Second Round: An Interview with
Israel Singer, Post-Holocaust and
Anti-Semitism, No. 14,
2.11.2003
- [vii]
Viktor
Frölke, Salon Magazine,
30.8.2000
- [viii]
Amiram Barkat, Haaretz, 19.1.2005; Yair
Sheleg, Haaretz, 23.1.2005.
- [ix]
Interview with Nowak, Nasz Dziennik,
21-22.8.1999.
- [x]
Anna Radziukiewicz, Orthodox
Christianity in Poland, Wydawnictwo
Arka: Bialystok, 2001, p
70.
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