Culture ‘Death to Jews,’ Polish nationalists shout at rally while burning book about Jews in Poland

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‘Death to Jews,’ Polish nationalists shout at rally while burning book about Jews in Poland​

By Cnaan Liphshiz November 12, 2021 1:30 pm
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(JTA) — Polish nationalists shouted “death to Jews” as they burned a book representing a historic pact protecting the rights of Poland’s Jews.

The book burning Thursday at a rally in Kalisz, a city of about 100,000 inhabitants situated 120 miles southwest of Warsaw, was part of a series of nationalist events on Nov. 11, National Independence Day, which is the anniversary of when Poland regained its sovereignty in 1918.

Videos and eyewitness accounts on social media show that Wojciech Olszański, a far-right activist, lit a red-covered book that was meant to symbolize the Statute of Kalisz. The document issued in 1264 by Prince Bolesław the Pious regulated the legal status of Jews living in Poland and afforded some protection through penalizing attacks on them. The statute served as the legal foundation for relations between non-Jews and Jews in Poland for centuries later.

Olszański poured a flammable liquid on the book that had been skewered on a sharp metal object, and lit the book on fire as the crowd cheered and shouted, “Death to Jews.” Some also chanted: “No to Polin, yes to Poland.” “Polin” is both the Hebrew-language name for Poland and the name of the main Jewish museum in Warsaw.

“This is a scary and symbolically important event,” said Rafal Pankowski, a leader of Poland’s Never Again anti-racism group. He compared the rally to the burning of books in Nazi Germany, including on the Kristallnacht pogroms in 1938. The pogroms’ 83rd anniversary was Wednesday. “Having monitored antisemitism for more than 25 years, I have never seen anything like that,” Pankowski told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Police are studying the footage, the PAP news agency reported.

“These pictures send shivers down the spine,” Katharina Von Schnurbein, the European Union coordinator for fighting antisemitism, wrote on Twitter.

Other large nationalist events took place across major Polish cities in the past few days. One of the main themes in the marches concerned the current crisis in relations between Belarus and Poland. In recent days, Belarus’ dictator, Alexander Lukashenko, has been encouraging immigrants to cross from his country into Poland and the European Union, allegedly to punish Poland and other countries for harboring Belarussian dissidents.

Poland’s right-wing government is refusing to let in the immigrants, who include Afghan asylum seekers.
 
“These pictures send shivers down the spine,” Katharina Von Schnurbein, the European Union coordinator for fighting antisemitism, wrote on Twitter.
No.
They should not.
People have the right to their free expression and others are free to follow or not.
A lot of people are waking up that not every nation has the best interest of yours at heart. This is personal for Poland who disappeared off the map two times. I hope the youth in Poland are taught this so they do not doom their nation.
Which there is nothing wrong with.
 
Lots of Poles going hard-right Catholic nonsense, probably to cling to national identity in the face of perceived threats to it from the EU and increasing global homogeny. As the article mentions, Jews were welcome in Poland for 800 years. These guys are just country dumbasses.
 
Wojciech Olszański
that's pretty lolzy and I support it, but just FYI this dude is some kind of glowie honeypot/controlled fringe right/lefty false flag type of deal. He used to be an actor, then at age 60 suddenly he became a turbo nationalist activist. He looks, acts and talks like an over the top caricature of a fascist, straight out of antifa propaganda poster. He almost always wears weird pseudo-military uniforms, some of which I am pretty sure he had made for him specifically, with various rank insignias that AFAIK he also made up. I could not find information if he ever was actually in the army, but seeing how he was studying acting, chances are he had managed to avoid the obligatory service.
He is also extremely pro-Russian, virulently anti-USA and NATO, which makes his politics combination extremely unique on the polish political scene (usually only some fringe left and really old commies are pro-Russian in Poland). AFAIK all other alt-right groups disavow him and his little org, and want nothing to do with him
All in all he is rather unpopular and hated by... pretty much everyone else, except for trolls who can appreciate how much salt he generates from every side.
I think he might be a good fit for a lolcow actually.
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In recent days, Belarus’ dictator, Alexander Lukashenko, has been encouraging immigrants to cross from his country into Poland and the European Union
ah, jews being dishonest as alway. Lukashenka has not been merely >>encouraging<< them, he has been flying hundreds of shitskins from middle east to Belarus, and then have belarussian military march them to the border, and keep them form leaving.
 

By Cnaan Liphshiz
November 12, 2021 1:30 pm

(JTA) — Polish nationalists shouted “death to Jews” as they burned a book representing a historic pact protecting the rights of Poland’s Jews.


The book burning Thursday at a rally in Kalisz, a city of about 100,000 inhabitants situated 120 miles southwest of Warsaw, was part of a series of nationalist events on Nov. 11, National Independence Day, which is the anniversary of when Poland regained its sovereignty in 1918.

Videos and eyewitness accounts on social media show that Wojciech Olszański, a far-right activist, lit a red-covered book that was meant to symbolize the Statute of Kalisz. The document issued in 1264 by Prince Bolesław the Pious regulated the legal status of Jews living in Poland and afforded some protection through penalizing attacks on them. The statute served as the legal foundation for relations between non-Jews and Jews in Poland for centuries later.

Olszański poured a flammable liquid on the book that had been skewered on a sharp metal object, and lit the book on fire as the crowd cheered and shouted, “Death to Jews.” Some also chanted: “No to Polin, yes to Poland.” “Polin” is both the Hebrew-language name for Poland and the name of the main Jewish museum in Warsaw.

“This is a scary and symbolically important event,” said Rafal Pankowski, a leader of Poland’s Never Again anti-racism group. He compared the rally to the burning of books in Nazi Germany, including on the Kristallnacht pogroms in 1938. The pogroms’ 83rd anniversary was Wednesday. “Having monitored antisemitism for more than 25 years, I have never seen anything like that,” Pankowski told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Police are studying the footage, the PAP news agency reported.

“These pictures send shivers down the spine,” Katharina Von Schnurbein, the European Union coordinator for fighting antisemitism, wrote on Twitter.

Other large nationalist events took place across major Polish cities in the past few days. One of the main themes in the marches concerned the current crisis in relations between Belarus and Poland. In recent days, Belarus’ dictator, Alexander Lukashenko, has been encouraging immigrants to cross from his country into Poland and the European Union, allegedly to punish Poland and other countries for harboring Belarussian dissidents.


Poland’s right-wing government is refusing to let in the immigrants, who include Afghan asylum seekers.

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These dumb polacks got a lot of chutzpah if they think they can win against the international banking cartels.
 
"The thing about putting your finger on the Pendulum of History, darling, is that it swings back, too."

- Diana Mitford, 1933
 
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