In the mid-1960s, public opinion in Poland turned against the Gomulka regime for a variety of reasons. In an attempt to regain public support and divert attention from the real problems, Gomulka adopted an antisemitic stance. On 19 March 1968 he delivered a speech to party activists in which he divided Jews into three categories: 'patriotic Jews', 'Zionists', and those who were neither Jews nor Poles but 'cosmopolitans', who should 'avoid those fields of work where the affirmation of nationality is indispensable'. In consequence, nearly 15,000 Jews--a very large part of Poland's Jewish community--left for Israel, western Europe, and North America, effectively ending Jewish life in the country for over a decade.

The events of 1968 were long ignored by scholars but in recent years their importance in the process which led to the collapse of communism has become increasingly evident. This volume illuminates the events that triggered the crisis, the crisis itself, and its consequences. Different aspects of this are examined by Dariusz Stola, Jerzy Eisler, and Wlodzimierz Rozenbaum, while the role of the the Polish Military Intelligence Service during 1945-1961 in precipitating the crisis is analyzed by Leszek Gluchowski.

Several contributors consider the background to the crisis in terms of the concerns of the Jewish community. Audrey Kichelewski describes developments in the community between the consolidation of Gomulka's power in 1957 and the outbreak of the Six Day War. Malgorzata Melchior examines how Jews who had survived in Poland during the Second World War responded to the crisis. Joanna Wiszniewicz provides a group portrait of pupils of Jewish origin in Warsaw schools in the 1960s, a milieu from which important elements in the student opposition were drawn. Karen Auerbach sharpens the focus in her consideration of the situation of Yiddish writer Naftali Herts Kon, while Holly Levitsky describes the travails of the Jewish communist writer Sara Nomberg-Przytyk. The book also reprints the testimonies of several people who lived through these painful events: Jerzy Jedlicki, Henryk Dasko, and Miroslaw Sawicki. Bozena Szaynok analyses the rhetoric of the period and examines the role of 'Israel' in the crisis. The controversies which it still arouses are reflected in the exchange between generals Pioro and Jaruzelski concerning the impact of the purge of Jewish officers from the Polish People's Army and in the responses to the publication by Piotr Gontarczyk of a report on the role of Jacek Kuron in 1968.

As in previous volumes of Polin, in the section 'New Views' substantial space is also given to new research into a variety of topics in Polish-Jewish studies. These include a study by Kalman Weiser of the Yiddishist Ideology of Noah Prylucki; an reassessment by Julian Bussgang of the role of Metropolitan Sheptytsky during the Holocaust; an account by Michael Beizer and Israel Bartal of the tragic career of Moses Schorr; an evaluation by Krzysztof Czyzewski of the work of the Polish poet Jerzy Ficowski; and a description of the reception in Poland of Art Spiegelman's Maus.

CONTRIBUTORS Karen Auerbach, Israel Bartal, Michael Beizer, Teresa Bogucka, Julian Bussgang, Wojciech Czuchnowski, Krzysztof Czyzewski, Henryk Dasko, Jerzy Eisler, Leszek W. Gluchowski, Piotr Gontarczyk, Anna Jarmusiewicz, Wojciech Jaruszelski, Jerzy Jedlicki, Audrey Kichelewski, Holli Levitsky, Krzysztof Link-Lenczowski, Tomasz Lysak, Jacek Maj, Malgorzata Melchior, Joanna B. Michlic, Karol Modzelewski, Tadeusz Pioro, Wlodzimierz Rozenbaum, Maciej Rybinski, Dariusz Stola, Bozena Szaynok, Kalman Weiser, Joanna Wisniewicz, Tadeusz Witkowski, Piotr Wrobel, Rafal Ziemiewicz.
Les mer
Poland's antisemitic pronouncements of March 1968 led nearly 15,000 Jews to emigrate. Considering the denouement of this crisis from many angles, this volume shows that these were intrinsic to the eventual collapse of communism.
Les mer

Note on Place Names

Note on Transliteration


PART I: THE 1968 CRISIS AFTER FORTY YEARS

Introduction
leszek W. Gluchowski and Antony Polonsky

 

The Hate Campaign of March 1968: How Did It Become Anti-Jewish?
Dariusz Stola

 

1968: Jews, Antisemitism, Emigration
Jerzy Eisler

 

The March Events: Targeting the Jews
Wlodzymiersz Rozenbaum

 

A Critical Analysis of the Activities of the Polish Military Intelligence Service, 1945–1961
leszek W. Gluchowski

 

‘Israel’ in the Events of March 1968
Bozena Szaynok

 

A Community under Pressure: Jews in Poland, 1957–1967
Audrey Kichelewski

 

Facing Antisemitism in Poland during the Second World War and in March 1968
Malgorzata Melchior

 

Jewish Children and Youth in Downtown Warsaw Schools of the 1960s
Joanna Wiszniewicz

 

The Exile of Sara Nomberg-Przytyk: Polish Jewish Communist
Holli Levitsky

 

The Fate of a Yiddish Poet in Communist Eastern Europe: Naftali Herts Kon in Poland, 1959–1965
Karen Auerbach

 

Domestic Shame: A Conversation with Professor Jerzy Jedlicki
Anna Jarmusiewicz

 

An Interview with Mirosław Sawicki (August 2006)
Joanna B. Michlic

 

Testimony
Henryk Dasko

 

The Controversy Aroused by the Role in 1968 of General Wojciech Jaruzelski: The Purges in the Polish Army 1967–1968
Tadeusz Pióro

 

A Painful and Complex Subject
Wojciech Jaruzelski

 

Reply to General Jaruzelski
Tadeusz Pióro

 

The Controversy Aroused by the 1968 Events in 2006: A Meeting with Jacek Kuron as Reported by Secret Collaborator ‘Return’ (Leslaw Maleszka): A Contribution to the Discussions about the Events of March 1968
Piotr Gontarczyk

 

The Institute for National Remembrance Slanders Jacek Kuron
Wojciech Czuchnowski and Seweryn Blumsztajn

 

I Am, Therefore I Write: Uses and Abuses
Maciej Rybinski

 

Selective Indignation
Rafal Ziemkiewicz

 

Attention, Moczar Lives! An Interview with Karol Modzelewski
Adam Leszczyński

 

Between the Institute for National Remembrance and Gazeta Wyborcza: The Cracked Code
Tadeusz Witkowski

 

‘Gniazdo’—The Moral Bankruptcy of the Security Service (SB)
Teresa Bogucka

 

PART II: NEW VIEWS

The Yiddishist Ideology of Noah Prylucki
Kalman Weiser

 

Metropolitan Sheptytsky: A Reassessment
Julian J. Bussgang

 

The Case of Moses Schorr: Rabbi, Scholar, and Social Activist
Michael Beizer and Israel Bartal

 

You Can’t Do It Just Like That... or, Jerzy Ficowski’s Path to Reading the Ashes
Krzysztof Czyżewski

 

Contemporary Debates on the Holocaust in Poland: The Reception of Art Spiegelman’s ‘Graphic Novel’ Maus
Tomasz Łysak

 

Apollo, Mercury, and Soviet Jews
Piotr Wróbel

 

Obituaries

Father Stanislaw Musial
Józef Andrzej Gierowski
Jerzy Ficowski

 

Notes on the Contributors
Glossary
Index

Les mer
Published for the Institute for Polish—Jewish Studies and the American Association for Polish—Jewish Studies by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781904113362
Publisert
2008-11-27
Utgiver
Liverpool University Press
Vekt
885 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
41 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, 01, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
550

Biografisk notat

Leszek W. Gluchowski is an independent scholar and writer based in Hamilton, Ontario. He received his Ph.D. in 1992 from the University of Cambridge and has published numerous articles and documents, primarily with the Cold War International History Project of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC. He has recently completed a novel, entitled ‘Father, Son, Holy . . . Spy’, based on the defection to the CIA in 1953 of Lt. Col. Józef Sawiatlo of the Polish Ministry of Public Security. Antony Polonsky is Professor Emeritus of Holocaust Studies at Brandeis University and Chief Historian of the Global Outreach Educational Project of the Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Warsaw.