Jump to content

Anti-Polish sentiment

Page extended-protected
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Prejudice against Poles)

German notice in German-occupied Poland, 1939: "No entry for Poles!"

Polonophobia,[1] also referred to as anti-Polonism (Polish: Antypolonizm)[2] or anti-Polish sentiment are terms for negative attitudes, prejudices, and actions against Poles as an ethnic group, Poland as their country, and their culture. These include ethnic prejudice against Poles and persons of Polish descent, other forms of discrimination, and mistreatment of Poles and the Polish diaspora.[3]

This prejudice led to mass killings and genocide or it was used to justify atrocities[4][failed verification] both before and during World War II, most notably by the German Nazis and Ukrainian nationalists. While Soviet repressions and massacres of Polish citizens were ideologically motivated, the negative attitude of Soviet authorities to the Polish nation is well-attested.[citation needed]

Nazi Germany killed between 1.8 to 2.7 million ethnic Poles, 140,000 Poles were deported to Auschwitz where at least half of them perished.[5][6]

Anti-Polish sentiment includes stereotyping Poles as unintelligent and aggressive, as thugs, thieves, alcoholics, and anti-Semites.[7][8][9][10][11]

About 300 Polish prisoners of war were murdered by the soldiers of the German 15th motorised infantry regiment in the Ciepielów massacre on 9 September 1939. Hitler ordered the "destruction of the enemy" beyond military objectives: Nazi Germany classified Poles as "subhuman" and war crimes were committed against them from the outset of the invasion of Poland[12]

Etymology

[[Category:Wikipedia articles needing cleanup after translation from {{{1}}}]]According to Adam Leszczynski, the term antypolonizm was coined by journalist Edmund Osmańczyk in 1946. Osmańczyk condemned anti-Jewish violence in postwar Poland, and concluded:

The growing anti-Polonism in the world has the same source as antisemitism: aversion to weak people, chronically handicapped by the fate of the handicapped, weak people by the difference between the hope of individuals and the poverty of the masses, people living scattered, constantly fighting for their homeland... We are becoming unpopular as a nation and, as with the Jewish people, only individuals are granted the right to be sympathetic.[13]

Features

Forms of hostility toward Poles and Polish culture include:

A historic example of anti-Polish sentiment was polakożerstwo (in English, "the devouring of Poles") – a Polish term coined in the 19th century in relation to the dismemberment and annexation of Poland by Prussia, the Habsburg monarchy and Russia. Polakożerstwo described the forcible suppression of Polish culture, education and religion in historically Polish territories, and the gradual elimination of Poles from everyday life as well as from owning property. Anti-Polish policies were implemented by the German Empire under Otto von Bismarck, especially during the Kulturkampf, and enforced up to the end of the First World War.[14] Organized persecution of Poles raged in the territories annexed by Russia, mainly under Tsar Nicholas II.[15][16] Historic actions inspired by anti-Polonism ranged from felonious acts motivated by hatred, to physical extermination of the Polish nation, the goal of which was to eradicate the Polish state. During World War II, when most of Polish society became the object of genocidal policies of Nazi Germany, anti-Polonism led to an unprecedented campaign of mass murder in German-occupied Poland.[17] In the modern day, among those who often express their hostile attitude towards the Polish people are some Russian politicians and their far-right political parties who search for a new identity rooted in the defunct Russian Empire after the collapse of the Soviet Union.[18]

Anti-Polish stereotypes

In the Russian language, the term mazurik (мазурик), a synonym for "pickpocket", "petty thief",[19] literally means "little Masovian".[20] The word is an example how Vladimir Putin's liberal use of colloquialisms has been gaining media attention from abroad.[21]

The "Polish plumber" cliché may symbolize the threat of cheap labor from poorer European countries to "steal" low-paying jobs in wealthier parts of Europe. On the other hand, others associate it with affordability and dependability of European migrant workers.[22]

Before the Second Polish Republic, 1918

Partitions of Poland, 1795

Anti-Polish rhetoric combined with the condemnation of Polish culture was most prominent in the 18th-century Prussia during the partitions of Poland. However, anti-Polish propaganda begins with the Teutonic Order in the 14th century. It was a very important tool in the Order's attempt to conquer the Duchy of Lithuania which eventually failed because of Lithuania's Personal union with the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland and the Christianization of Lithuania to Catholicism. The first major thinker to openly call for the genocide of the Polish people was the 14th century German Dominican theologian Johannes von Falkenberg who on behalf of the Teutonic Order argued not only that Polish pagans should be killed, but that all Poles should be subject to genocide on the grounds that Poles were an inherently heretical race and that even the King of Poland, Jogaila a Christian convert, ought to be murdered.[23][24] The assertion that Poles were heretical was largely politically motivated as the Teutonic Order desired to conquer Polish lands despite Christianity having become the dominant religion in Poland centuries prior.[25]

Germany, becoming more and more permeated with Teutonic Prussianism[vague][citation needed], continued to pursue these tactics[citation needed]. For instance, David Blackbourn of Harvard University speaks of the scandalised writings of German intellectual Johann Georg Forster, who was granted a tenure at Vilnius University by the Polish Commission of National Education in 1784.[26] Forster wrote of Poland's "backwardness" in a similar vein to "ignorance and barbarism" of southeast Asia.[27] Such views were later repeated in the German ideas of Lebensraum and exploited by the Nazis.[28] German academics between the 18th and 20th centuries attempted to project, in the difference between Germany and Poland, a "boundary between civilization and barbarism; high German Kultur and primitive Slavdom" (1793 racist diatribe by J.C. Schulz republished by the Nazis in 1941).[29] Prussian officials, eager to secure Polish partition, encouraged the view that the Poles were culturally inferior and in need of Prussian tutelage.[27] Such racist texts, originally published from the 18th century onwards, were republished by the German Reich prior to and after its invasion of Poland.

Frederick the Great of Prussia nourished a particular hatred and contempt for the Polish people. Following his conquest of Poland, he compared the Poles to "Iroquois" of Canada.[27] In his all-encompassing anti-Polish campaign, even the nobility of Polish background living in Prussia were obliged to pay higher taxes than those of German heritage. Polish monasteries were viewed as "lairs of idleness" and their property often seized by Prussian authorities. The prevalent Catholicism among Poles was stigmatised. The Polish language was persecuted at all levels.[30]

After the Polish–Russian War in early 1600s, Poland was greatly blamed by the Russians as the cause of chaos and tyranny in Russia. The future House of Romanov, who would found the Russian Empire after taken power from the Rurik dynasty, used a number of distortion activities[vague], describing Poles as backward, cruel and heartless, praising the rebellion against Poles;[31] and heavily centered around the Orthodox belief.[32] When Tsardom of Russia invaded Poland at the Russo-Polish war of 1650s, the Russians caused a number of atrocities, and destroyed most of Eastern Poland, sometimes joining destruction with its Ukrainian ally led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky and the Swedes in the parallel Swedish invasion.[33] The war was held as a Russian triumph[according to whom?] for its attempt to destroy Poland[citation needed].

Sweden, which developed anti-Polish sentiment due to previous Polish–Swedish wars in hope to gain territorial and political influence, as well as dispute with the Polish Crown because of Sigismund III Vasa, launched an invasion known as the Deluge.[citation needed] Swedish invaders, joined force with Russian invaders in the east, together destroyed Poland[citation needed] and took away many of the Polish national treasures[citation needed], as well as committing atrocities against Poles[citation needed]. The Poles were treated very brutally by Swedes, and as a result, Poland lost its wealth and was reduced in its development[vague][citation needed]. Similar to Russia, Sweden hailed the destruction of Poland as a national triumph[according to whom?].[citation needed]

In the 18th century, Russia as an empire attempted to make Poland disintegrate by using liberum veto, creating chaos and prevented reforms, as by Russian accords[vague], was against the ideal of Imperial Russia's future plan to partition Poland.[34] Russia often sent troops and carried out atrocities on Polish civilians.[35] When Poland adopted its first ever Constitution of 3 May 1791, the first Constitution in Europe, Russia sent troops and brutally suppressed Polish people.[36]

19th-century Polish exiles in Siberia (painting)

When Poland lost the last vestiges of its independence in 1795 and remained partitioned for 123 years, ethnic Poles were subjected to discrimination in two areas: the Germanisation under Prussian and later German rule, and Russification in the territories annexed by Imperial Russia.[citation needed]

Being a Pole under the Russian occupation was in itself almost culpable – wrote Russian historian Liudmila Gatagova. – "Practically all of the Russian government, bureaucracy, and society were united in one outburst against the Poles." – "Rumor mongers informed the population about an order that had supposedly been given to kill [...] and take away their land."[15] Polish culture and religion were seen as threats to Russian imperial ambitions. Tsarist Namestniks suppressed them on Polish lands by force.[37] The Russian anti-Polish campaign, which included confiscation of Polish nobles' property,[38] was waged in the areas of education, religion as well as language.[37] Polish schools and universities were closed in a stepped-up campaign of russification. In addition to executions and mass deportations of Poles to Katorga camps, Tsar Nicholas I established an occupation army at Poland's expense.[16]

The fact that Poles, unlike the Orthodox Russians, were overwhelmingly Roman Catholic gave impetus to their religious persecution. At the same time, with the emergence of Panslavist ideology, Russian writers accused the Polish nation of betraying their "Slavic family" because of their armed efforts aimed at winning independence.[39] Hostility toward Poles was present in many of Russia's literary works and media of the time.[40]

"During and after the 1830-1831 insurrection many Russian writers voluntarily participated in anti-Polish propaganda. Gogol wrote Taras Bulba, an anti-Polish novel of high literary merit, to say nothing about lesser writers." — Prof. Vilho Harle[41]

Pushkin, together with three other poets, published a pamphlet called "On the Taking of Warsaw" to celebrate the crushing of the revolt. His contribution to the frenzy of anti-Polish writing comprised poems in which he hailed the capitulation of Warsaw as a new "triumph" of imperial Russia.[42]

In Prussia and later in Germany, Poles were forbidden to build homes, and their properties were targeted for forced buy-outs financed by the Prussian and subsequent German governments. Bismarck described Poles, as animals (wolves), that "one shoots if one can" and implemented several harsh laws aimed at their expulsion from traditionally Polish lands. The Polish language was banned from public use, and ethnically Polish children punished at school for speaking Polish.[43] Poles were subjected to a wave of forceful evictions (Rugi Pruskie). The German government financed and encouraged settlement of ethnic Germans into those areas aiming at their geopolitical germanisation.[44] The Prussian Landtag passed laws against Catholics.[45]

Toward the end of World War I during Poland's fight for independence, Imperial Germany made further attempts to take control over the territories of Congress Poland, aiming at ethnic cleansing of up to 3 million Jewish and Polish people which was meant to be followed by a new wave of settlement by ethnic Germans.[46][47][48] In August 1914, the German imperial army destroyed the city of Kalisz, chasing out tens of thousands of its Polish citizens.[49][citation needed]

Interwar Period (1918–39)

A German National People's Party poster from 1920 showing a Teutonic knight being attacked by Poles and socialists as the caption reads "Save the East"

After Poland regained its independence as the Second Republic at the end of World War I, the question of new Polish borders could not have been easily settled against the will of her former long-term occupiers. Poles continued to be persecuted in the disputed territories, especially in Silesia. The German campaign of discrimination contributed to the Silesian Uprisings, where Polish workers were openly threatened with losing their jobs and pensions if they voted for Poland in the Upper Silesia plebiscite.[50]

At the Versailles Peace Conference of 1919, British historian and politician Lewis Bernstein Namier, who served as part of the British delegation, was seen as one of the biggest enemies of the newly independent Polish state in the British political sphere and in the newly-independent Poland. Namier modified the previously-proposed Curzon line by detaching the city of Lwów from Poland with a version called Curzon Line "A". It was sent to Soviet diplomatic representatives for acceptance. The earlier compromised version of Curzon line which was debated at the Spa Conference of 1920 was renamed Curzon Line "B".[51]

Anti-Polish cartoons were published in Lithuania during interbellum, which depicting the Poles in the bottom east as a lazy, poor and denegerate people

In the politics of inter-war Germany, anti-Polish feelings ran high.[52] The American historian Gerhard Weinberg observed that for many Germans in the Weimar Republic, "Poland was an abomination", Poles were "an East European species of cockroach", Poland was usually described as a Saisonstaat (a state for a season), and Germans used the phrase "Polish economy" (polnische Wirtschaft) for a situation of hopeless muddle.[52] Weinberg noted that in the 1920s–30s, leading German politicians refused to accept Poland as a legitimate nation, and hoped instead to partition Poland, probably with the help of the Soviet Union.[52] The British historian A. J. P. Taylor wrote in 1945 that National Socialism was inevitable because the Germans wanted "to repudiate the equality with the peoples of (central and) eastern Europe which had then been forced upon them" after 1918.[53]

During Stalin's Great Terror in the Soviet Union, a major ethnic cleansing operation,[54] known as the Polish Operation,[55] took place from about 25 August 1937 through 15 November 1938. According to Soviet NKVD archives, 111,091 Poles, and people accused of ties with Poland, were executed, and 28,744 were sentenced to Gulag labor camps, for a total of 139,835 Polish victims. This number constitutes 10 per cent of the officially persecuted persons during the entire Yezhovshchina period, with confirming NKVD documents.[56] The prosecuted Polish families were accused of anti-Soviet activities.[57][58]

Outside the Germans and Russians, the Lithuanians also developed a very strong anti-Polish hatred, partly due to historical grievances. For the Lithuanians, the Polish–Lithuanian War of 1920, which costed the capital Vilnius to be on Polish hand, cemented anti-Polish sentiment. Virtually throughout the inter-war, anti-Polish had been omnipresent in Lithuania, and Polish minority in Lithuania faced a very harsh repression by the Lithuanian authorities.[59] The 1938 Polish ultimatum to Lithuania led to the establishment of relations, but it remained extremely difficult as Lithuania still refused to accept Vilnius as part of Poland.[60]

Ukrainians were also another people with strong anti-Polish hostility. The Polish–Ukrainian War of 1919 resulted in Ukraine crippled militarily and, though Poland did assist Ukraine in the eventual conflict against the Bolsheviks, but was unable to prevent an eventual occupation by the Soviets. This had led to enmity against Poland by Ukrainian nationalists, which resulted in the establishment of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the beginning of Ukrainian problem in Poland.[61] Assassinations of Polish officials by Ukrainian nationalists became increasingly frequent from 1930s onward.[62]

Invasion of Poland and World War II

1939 Soviet poster. A Red Army soldier knocks a caricatured Polish general off backs of peasants armed with rocks

Nazi propagandists stereotyped Poles as nationalists in order to portray Germans as victims and justify the invasion of Poland; the Gleiwitz incident was a Nazi false flag to show that Germany was under Polish attack, and the killing of Germans by Poles in Bromberger Blutsonntag and elsewhere was inflated to 58,000 to increase German hatred of Poles and justify the killing of Polish civilians.[63]

In October 1939, Directive No.1306 of Nazi Germany's Propaganda Ministry stated: "It must be made clear even to the German milkmaid that Polishness equals subhumanity. Poles, Jews and Gypsies are on the same inferior level... This should be brought home as a leitmotiv, and from time to time, in the form of existing concepts such as 'Polish economy', 'Polish ruin' and so on, until everyone in Germany sees every Pole, whether farm worker or intellectual, as vermin."[64]

Historian Karol Karski writes that before World War II the Soviet authorities carried out a discreditation campaign against the Poles and describes Stalin as Polonophobe.[65]

During World War II Poles became the subject of ethnic cleansing on an unprecedented scale, including: Nazi German genocide in General Government, Soviet executions and mass deportations to Siberia from Kresy, as well as massacres of Poles in Volhynia, a campaign of ethnic cleansing carried out in today's western Ukraine by Ukrainian nationalists. Among the 100,000 people murdered in the Intelligenzaktion operations in 1939–1940, approximately 61,000 were members of the Polish intelligentsia.[66] Millions of citizens of Poland, both ethnic Poles and Jews, died in German concentration camps such as Auschwitz. Unknown numbers perished in Soviet "gulags" and political prisons. Reprisals against partisan activities were brutal; on one occasion 1,200 Poles were murdered in retaliation for the death of one German officer and two German officials.[67] In August 2009 the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) researchers estimated Poland's dead (including Polish Jews) at between 5.47 and 5.67 million (due to German actions) and 150,000 (due to Soviet), or around 5.62 and 5.82 million total.[68]

Soviet policy following their 1939 invasion of Poland in World War II was ruthless, and sometimes coordinated with the Nazis (see: Gestapo-NKVD Conferences). Elements of ethnic cleansing included Soviet mass executions of Polish prisoners of war in the Katyn Massacre and at other sites, and the exile of up to 1.5 million Polish citizens, including the intelligentsia, academics, priests and Jewish Poles to forced-labor camps in Siberia.[69]

In German and Soviet war propaganda, Poles were mocked as inept for their military techniques in fighting the war. Nazi fake newsreels and forged pseudo-documentaries claimed that the Polish cavalry "bravely but futilely" charged German tanks in 1939, and that the Polish Air Force was wiped out on the ground on the opening day of the war. Neither tale was true (see: Myths of the Polish September Campaign). German propaganda staged a Polish cavalry charge in their 1941 reel called "Geschwader Lützow".[70]

Ukrainian and Lithuanian nationalists utilized the increasing racial segregation to foment anti-Polonism. Followers of Stepan Bandera (also called Banderovites) committed genocide on Poles in Volhynia at 1943.[71] Lithuanian forces often clash with Polish forces throughout the World War II, and committed massacre on Poles with support from the Nazis.[72]

Bernard Montgomery often assigned blame to the failure of his operations, such as Operation Market Garden, to the Polish troops under his command.[73] Poland's relationship with the USSR during World War II was complicated. The main western Allies, the United States and the United Kingdom, understood the importance of the Soviet Union in defeating Germany, to the point of refusing to condemn Soviet propaganda which vilified their Polish ally.[74] The western Allies were even willing to help cover up the Soviet massacre at Katyn.[75]

Zofia Kossak-Szczucka, the Catholic co-founder of Zegota, the Polish resistance group which risked the German death penalty to save Jews, and who herself was sent to Auschwitz, stereotyped Jews as haters of Poles even as she characterized Poles who remained silent in the face of the Holocaust as complicit:

German concentration-camp badge with letter "P"—required wear for Polish inmates

"The dying Jews are surrounded only by Pilates washing their hands of everything. This silence can no longer be tolerated. Whatever the incentives - it is despicable. Whoever is silent in the face of murder - becomes the murderer's accomplice. Who does not condemn - allows. ...our feelings towards the Jews have not changed. We continue to think of them as Poland's political, ideological and economic enemies. What's more, we are aware that they hate us more than they hate the Germans, that they think us responsible for their tragedy. Why, on what ground - that remains a mystery of the Jewish soul."[76]

Post-war

Memorial to Polish professors murdered by the Germans, Lviv, western Ukraine, with graffiti in Ukrainian: "Death to Poles!", November 2011

Under Joseph Stalin, thousands of soldiers of Poland's underground eg. Home Army (Armia Krajowa) and returning veterans of the Polish Armed Forces that had served with the western Allies were imprisoned, tortured by Soviet NKVD agents (see: W. Pilecki, Ł. Ciepliński) and murdered following staged trials like the infamous Trial of the Sixteen in Moscow, Soviet Union. A similar fate awaited the "cursed soldiers". At least 40,000 members of Poland's Home Army were deported to Russia.[77]

In Britain after 1945, the British populace accepted the Polish servicemen who chose not to return to a Poland ruled by the communist regime in their decision to stay on in Britain. The Poles resident in Britain served under British command during the war,[78] but as soon as the Soviets began to make gains on the Eastern Front both public opinion and the government turned increasingly pro-Soviet.[79] Socialist supporters of the Soviet Union made the Poles out to be "warmongers", "anti-Semites" and "fascists".[80] After the war, the trade unions and Labour party played on the fears among the public of there not being enough jobs, food and housing to incite anti-Polish sentiments.[80]

The myth that Poland had been conducting a genocide against ethnic Germans was invented in 1940 by German nationalist writer Edwin Erich Dwinger [de] by embellishing the events of "Bloody Sunday".[81] In 1961, a book was published in Germany entitled Der Erzwungene Krieg (The Forced War) by the American historical writer and Holocaust denier David Hoggan, which argued that Germany did not commit aggression against Poland in 1939, but was instead the victim of an Anglo-Polish conspiracy against the Reich.[82] Reviewers have often noted that Hoggan seems to have an obsessive hostility towards the Poles. His claims included that the Polish government treated Poland's German minority far worse than the German government under Adolf Hitler treated its Jewish minority.[83] In 1964, much controversy was created when two German right-wing extremist groups awarded Hoggan prizes.[84] In the 1980s, the German philosopher and historian Ernst Nolte claimed that in 1939 Poland was engaged in a campaign of genocide against its ethnic German minority, and has strongly implied that the German invasion in 1939, and all of the subsequent German atrocities in Poland during World War II were in essence justified acts of retaliation.[85] Critics, such as the British historian Richard J. Evans, have accused Nolte of distorting the facts, and have argued that in no way was Poland committing genocide against its German minority.[85]

During the political transformation of the Soviet-controlled Eastern bloc in the 1980s, the traditional German anti-Polish feeling was again openly exploited in the East Germany against Solidarność. This tactic had become especially apparent in the "rejuvenation of 'Polish jokes,' some of which reminded listeners of the spread of such jokes under the Nazis."[86]

"Polish death camp" controversy

The expressions offensive to Poles are attributed to a number of non-Polish media in relation to World War II. The most prominent is a continued reference by Western news media to "Polish death camps" and "Polish concentration camps". These phrases refer to the network of concentration camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland in order to facilitate the "Final Solution", but the wording suggests that the Polish people might have been involved.[87][88][89] The Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as well as Polish organizations around the world and all Polish governments since 1989, condemned the usage of such expressions, arguing that they suggest Polish responsibility for the camps. The American Jewish Committee stated in its 30 January 2005, press release: "This is not a mere semantic matter. Historical integrity and accuracy hang in the balance.... Any misrepresentation of Poland's role in the Second World War, whether intentional or accidental, would be most regrettable and therefore should not be left unchallenged."[90]

In Polish-Jewish relations

There is a stereotype that Jews are anti-Polish.[91] Cardinal Józef Glemp in his controversial and widely criticized speech delivered on 26 August 1989 (and retracted in 1991)[92] argued that the outbursts of antisemitism are a "legitimate form of national self-defence against Jewish anti-Polonism."[93] He "asked Jews who 'have great power over the mass media in many countries' to rein in their anti-Polonism because 'if there won't be anti-Polonism, there won't be such antisemitism among us'."[94]

In November of the same year, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said Poles "drink in (anti-Semitism) with their mother's milk."[95] Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki said that "these blanket statements are the most destructive actions imaginable," and that they "do irreparable harm" to people seeking Polish-Jewish reconciliation.[95] Adam Michnik wrote for The New York Times that "almost all Poles react very sharply when confronted with the charge that Poles get their anti-Semitism 'with their mothers' milk'." Such verbal attacks – according to Michnik – are interpreted by anti-Semites as "proof of the international anti-Polish Jewish conspiracy".[96]

In Rethinking Poles and Jews, Robert Cherry and Annamaria Orla-Bukowska said that anti-Polonism and anti-Semitism remain "grotesquely twinned into our own time. We cannot combat the one without combating the other."[97]

The term "anti-Polonism" is said to have been used for campaign purposes by political parties such as the League of Polish Families (Polish: Liga Polskich Rodzin) or the defunct Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland (Polish: Samoobrona Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej) and organizations such as the Association against Anti-Polonism led by Leszek Bubel, leader of the Polish National Party and a former presidential candidate.[98] Bubel was taken to court by a group of ten Polish intellectuals who filed a lawsuit against him for "violating the public good". Among the signatories were former Foreign Minister Władysław Bartoszewski and filmmaker Kazimierz Kutz.[99]

According to Polish historian Joanna Michlic, the term is used in Poland also as an argument against the self-critical intellectuals who discuss Polish-Jewish relations, accusing them of "anti-Polish positions and interests." For example, historian Jan T. Gross has been accused of being anti-Polish when he wrote about crimes such as the Jedwabne pogrom. In her view, the charge is "not limited to arguments that can objectively be classified as anti-Polish—such as equating the Poles with the Nazis—but rather applied to any critical inquiry into the collective past. Moreover, anti-Polonism is equated with anti-Semitism."[100]

For the 1994 anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, a Polish Gazeta Wyborcza journalist, Michał Cichy, wrote a review of a collection of 1943 memoirs entitled Czy ja jestem mordercą? (Am I a murderer?) by Calel Perechodnik,[101] a Jewish ghetto policeman from Otwock and member of the "Chrobry II Battalion",[102] alleging (as hearsay) that about 40 Jews were killed by a group of Polish insurgents during the 1944 Uprising.[103] Unlike the book (later reprinted with factual corrections), the actual review by Cichy elicited protests,[102] while selected fragments of his article were confirmed by three Polish historians.[104] Prof. Tomasz Strzembosz accused Cichy of practicing a 'distinct type of racism,' and charged Gazeta Wyborcza editor Adam Michnik with 'cultivating a species of tolerance that is absolutely intolerant of antisemitism yet regards anti-Polonism and anti-goyism as something altogether natural'."[105] Michnik responded to the controversy, praising the heroism of the AK by asking: "Is it an attack on Polish people when the past is being explored to seek the truth?".[106] Cichy later apologized for the tone of his article.[107]

Polish historian Adam Leszczyński states that "Antisemitism is an extensive doctrine with racist or religious grounds that led to the Holocaust. 'Antipolonism' is at best a generalized aversion to Poles."[13]

"Polish jokes"

"Polish jokes" belong to a category of conditional jokes, meaning that their understanding requires knowledge of what a Polish joke is. Conditional jokes depend on the audience's affective preference—on their likes and dislikes. Though these jokes might be understood by many, their success depends entirely on the negative disposition of the listener.[108]

Presumably the first Polish jokes by German displaced persons fleeing war-torn Europe were brought to the United States in the late 1940s. These jokes were fueled by ethnic slurs disseminated by German National Socialist propaganda, which attempted to justify the Nazis' murdering of Poles by presenting them as "dreck"—dirty, stupid and inferior.[109] It is also possible that some early American Polack jokes from Germany were originally told before World War II in disputed border regions such as Silesia.[110]

There is debate as to whether the early "Polish jokes" brought to states such as Wisconsin by German immigrants relate directly to the wave of American jokes of the early 1960s. A "provocative critique of previous scholarship on the subject"[111] has been made by British writer Christie Davies in The Mirth of Nations, which suggests that "Polish jokes" did not originate in Nazi Germany but much earlier, as an outgrowth of regional jokes rooted in "social class differences reaching back to the nineteenth century." According to Davies, American versions of Polish jokes are an unrelated "purely American phenomenon" and do not express the "historical Old World hatreds of the Germans for the Poles. However, Hollywood in the 1960s and 1970s imported the subhuman-intelligence jokes about Poles from old Nazi propaganda."[112]

For decades, Polish Americans have been the subject of derogatory jokes originating in anti-immigrant stereotypes that had developed in the U.S. before the 1920s. During the Partitions of Poland, Polish immigrants came to the United States in considerable numbers, fleeing mass persecution at home. They were taking the only jobs available to them, usually requiring physical labor. The same ethnic and job-related stereotypes persisted even as Polish Americans joined the middle class in the mid-20th century. "The constant derision, often publicly disseminated through the mass media, caused serious identity crises, feeling of inadequacy, and low self-esteem for many Polish Americans." In spite of the plight of Polish people under Cold War communism, negative stereotypes about Polish Americans endured.[113]

Since the late 1960s, Polish American organizations have made continuous effort to challenge the negative stereotyping of the Polish people once prevalent in American media.[113] The Polish American Guardian Society has argued that NBC-TV used the tremendous power of TV to introduce and push subhuman intelligence jokes about Poles (that were worse than prior simple anti-immigrant jokes) using the repetitive big lie technique to degrade Poles.[citation needed] The play called "Polish Joke" by David Ives has resulted in a number of complaints by the Polonia in the US.[114] The "Polish jokes" heard in the 1970s were particularly offensive, so much so that the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs approached the U.S. State Department about that, however unsuccessfully. The syndrome receded only after Cardinal Karol Wojtyła was elected Pope, and Polish jokes became passé.[115] Gradually, Americans have developed a more positive image of their Polish neighbors in the following decades.[113]

In 2014, a German speaker joked during the European Aquatics Championships that the Polish team would be coming back home in "our cars".[116]

Today

United Kingdom

Anti-Polish graffiti in Thornton Heath, 2011

Since the EU enlargement in 2004, where ten new countries joined in the single-largest expansion to date (Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia), the UK has experienced mass immigration from Poland (see Poles in the United Kingdom). It is estimated that the Polish British community has doubled in size since 2004; with Poland now having overtaken India as the largest foreign-born country of origin in 2015 (831,000 Poles to 795,000 Indian-born persons).[citation needed][117] Anti-Polish sentiment in the UK is often related to the issue of immigration.[118] There have been some instances of anti-Polish sentiment and hostility towards Polish immigrants.[119] The far-right British National Party argued for immigration from (Central and) Eastern Europe to be stopped and for Poles to be deported.[120][121]

In 2007, Polish people living in London reported 42 ethnically motivated attacks against them, compared with 28 in 2004.[122][123] The Conservative MP Daniel Kawczynski, of Polish origin himself, said that the increase in violence towards Poles is in part "a result of the media coverage by the BBC" whose reporters "won't dare refer to controversial immigration from other countries."[124][125][126][127] Kawczynski voiced his criticism of the BBC in the House of Commons for "using the Polish community as a cat's paw to try to tackle the thorny issue of mass, unchecked immigration" only because against Poles "it's politically correct to do so."[124]

In 2009, the Federation of Poles in Great Britain and the Polish Embassy in London with Barbara Tuge-Erecinska raised a number of formal complaints – including with the Press Complaints Commission – about news articles in the Daily Mail, which the Federation claimed "displayed anti-Polish sentiment". The newspaper denied this was its intention, and the PCC brokered a settlement between the parties.[128][129][130][131][132][133]

The Guardian has been noted for a number of other controversies. On 14 October 2009, Nazi-hunter Efraim Zuroff alleged that: "the second world war narrative [...] has been distorted since independence and the transition to democracy to make it more palatable to their electorate and to minimize the role of local collaborators in Holocaust crimes."[134] On 20 October 2009, The Guardian's Jonathan Freedland said: "We are meant to be friendly towards the newest members of the European Union. But the truth is that several of these "emerging democracies" have reverted to a brand of ultra-nationalistic politics that would repel most voters in western Europe. It exists in Poland". In response to the above articles, Timothy Garton Ash wrote in the same paper on 23 December: "In my experience, the automatic equation of Poland with Catholicism, nationalism and antisemitism – and thence a slide to guilt by association with the Holocaust – is still widespread. This collective stereotyping does no justice to the historical record."[135]

Also in 2008, the Polish ambassador sent an official protest to the Press Complaints Commission about The Times.[136] On 26 July 2008, Giles Coren published a comment piece with the ethnic slur 'Polack' used to describe Polish immigrants. He accused Poland of complicity in the six million Jewish deaths of The Holocaust,[137][138][139] prompting not only an official letter of complaint to The Times, but also an early day motion in the British parliament, followed by an editorial in The Economist.[140][141][142][143][144] The ambassador, Tuge-Erecinska, explained that the article was "unsupported by any basic historic or geographic knowledge," and that "the issue of Polish-Jewish relations has been unfairly and deeply falsified" by Coren's "aggressive remarks" and "contempt".[136][145][146] Coren reacted by telling The Jewish Chronicle: "Fuck the Poles".[146][147][148] The case has been referred to the European Court of Human Rights.[147][149] However, the case was unsuccessful as Poles are not classified as an ethnic minority. The editor of The Jewish Chronicle, Stephen Pollard, commented on 6 August 2009: "There are few things more despicable than anti-Semitism, but here's one of them: using a false charge of anti-Semitism for political gain."[150]

On 6 October 2009, Stephen Fry was interviewed by Jon Snow on Channel 4 News[151][152] as a signatory of a letter to then-Conservative Party leader David Cameron expressing concern about the party's relationship with the right-wing Polish Law and Justice Party in the European Parliament.[153] During the interview, Fry stated: "There has been a history, let's face it, in Poland of a right-wing Catholicism which has been deeply disturbing for those of us who know a little history, and remember which side of the border Auschwitz was on..." The remark prompted a complaint from the Polish Embassy in London, as well as an editorial in The Economist and criticism from British Jewish historian David Cesarani.[154][155][156][157] Fry has since posted an apology on his personal weblog, in which he stated: "It was a rubbishy, cheap and offensive remark that I have been regretting ever since... I take this opportunity to apologize now."[158] On 30 October 2009, the Chief Rabbi of Poland, Michael Schudrich, complained about this new British political row playing on a "'false and painful stereotype that all Poles are antisemitic', whereas the truth was that the problem was around the same there as elsewhere in Europe."[159]

In January 2014, a Polish man, whose helmet was emblazoned with the flag of Poland,[160] claimed he was attacked by a group of fifteen men outside a pub in Dagenham, London.[161] Photos were taken of him and his motorbike. The victim blamed xenophobic speeches of the Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron.[162] During the same month in Belfast there was seven attacks on Polish houses within ten days, in which stones and bricks were thrown at the windows.[163]

Following the British referendum of EU membership, there were more cases of Polonophobic occurrences including anti-Polish leaflets distributed in Huntingdon[164] and graffiti against the Polish Cultural Centre in Hammersmith.[165]

Central and Eastern European pupils, including the Polish ones, have experienced increased levels of xenophobic bullying since the Brexit vote.[166]

Anti-Polish sentiment in the UK has been the subject of an academic study.[167]

Israel

The politician Yair Lapid claimed that his father's grandmother, who was killed in the Auschwitz concentration camp, "was murdered in Poland by Germans and Poles".[168][169] Lapid also wrote that there were "Polish death camps" (see Polish death camps controversy).[170]

In a 2018 interview, Anna Azari, the Israeli ambassador to Poland, said that "We need to work to reduce anti-Semitism, but work is also needed for there to be less anti-Polish sentiment" and "Anti-Polonism occurs not only in Israel, but also in Jewish circles outside Israel."[171]

In February 2019, Poland's prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki canceled plans for his country to send a delegation to a meeting in Jerusalem on Monday after the acting Israeli foreign minister, Israel Katz said, "Poles collaborated with the Nazis, definitely. Collaborated with the Nazis. As (former Israeli Prime Minister) Yitzhak Shamir said — his father was murdered by Poles — he said that from his point of view they sucked anti-Semitism with their mothers' milk. You can't sugarcoat this history."[172] Zvi Bar, an Israeli brigadier general and politician, said that Katz was speaking as a 'student' of Yitzhak Shamir, "the father of Polish genetic theory" and said: "All right, there were Poles and Hungarians who collaborated, there were and are anti-Semitic Poles and Hungarians. But why generalize? Why be racist, why accuse these nations and attribute to them inherent anti-Semitic characteristics?"[173]

On 15 May 2019, Poland's Ambassador to Israel, Marek Magierowski, was spat on and attacked outside the Embassy of Poland, Tel Aviv by a 65-year-old Israeli architect, Arik Lederman,[174] who was arrested following the assault.[175] Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said: "We express our fullest sympathy to the ambassador and our shock at the attack," while the suspect apologized and said he had been provoked earlier by a Polish Embassy employee using an anti-Semitic slur against him.[176] The Polish embassy in turn disputed the man's account, and said it has CCTV evidence to disprove it.[177]

United States

On 14 November 2007, Fox aired an episode of Back to You created by Christopher Lloyd and Steven Levitan called "Something's Up There", which contained a controversial anti-Polish slur. The slur involved Marsh trying to convince the show's lone Polish-American character, Gary, to go bowling after work by saying: "Come on, it's in your blood, like kielbasa and collaborating with the Nazis." Fox later apologised on 20 November 2007. It vowed never to broadcast the line of dialogue again either in repeats and/or syndicated broadcasts. Fox stated that, "The line was delivered by a character who is known for being ignorant, clueless, and saying outlandish things. Allowing the line to remain in the show, however, demonstrated poor judgment, and we apologise to anyone who was offended."[178]

Russia

In August 2005, a series of allegedly organised attacks against Polish diplomats took place in Moscow,[179] which prompted the then-Polish President Aleksander Kwaśniewski to call on the Russian Government to stop them.[180] An employee with the Polish embassy in Moscow was hospitalised in serious condition after being assaulted in broad daylight near the embassy by unidentified men. Three days later, another Polish diplomat was beaten up near the embassy. The following day the Moscow correspondent for the Polish daily Rzeczpospolita was attacked and beaten up by a group of Russians. It is widely believed that the attacks were organized as revenge for the mugging of four Russian youth in a public park in Warsaw by a group of skinheads, several days earlier.[180]

The professional volleyball player Aleksey Spiridonov has publicly repeated extreme Polonophobic statements which have been widely cited in Russia.[181]

Lithuania

The former "Solidarity" leader and Polish President Lech Wałęsa criticised the Lithuanian Government over discrimination against the Polish minority, which included the enforced Lithuanization of Polish surnames and the removal of bilingual Polish language street signs (despite Lithuanian laws not permitting such signs) in municipalities with predominantly Polish-speaking population. In 2011, Wałęsa rejected Lithuania's Order of Vytautas the Great citing the mistreatment of the Polish minority.[182]

Ukraine

In his 2007 book Heroes and Villains, in the context of bitter Polish-Ukrainian relations concerning the mutual massacres during World War II, David R. Marples asserted that (at the time of the writing of the book) there were "no Ukrainian organizations and press organs that specialize in anti-Polish propaganda".[183] However different interpretations of these bitter World War II events have led to a sharp deterioration of the relations between the nations since 2015. In April 2017 the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance forbade the exhumation of Polish victims of the 1943 massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia as part of the broader action of halting the legalization of Polish memorial sites in Ukraine, in a retaliation for the dismantling of a monument to UPA soldiers in Hruszowice, Eastern Poland.[184][185]

Polish President Andrzej Duda expressed his concerns with appointment to high Ukrainian offices of people expressing nationalistic anti-Polish views. The Ukrainian foreign ministry stated that there is no general anti-Polish sentiment in Ukraine.[186] In 2017, Polish Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski announced plans to bar Ukrainians with anti-Polish views, as a reaction to the disrespect to the Polish cemetery in Lviv.[187]

Germany

Following the accession of Poland to the European Union, Germany–Poland relations have improved.[citation needed] In 2016, Martin Schulz, a German Social Democrat, criticized the Duda's government in Poland and referred it as a "coup". This had led to criticism in Poland, although Polish government had downplayed the issue.[188] In 2020, President of Poland Andrzej Duda accused German media of misinterpreting his words and the German government for being Polonophobe regarding coverage about 2020 Polish presidential election.[189]

Netherlands

In February 2012, Geert Wilders's Freedom Party launched a "hotline" to collect complaints about Poles and other Eastern Europeans. The website caused criticism from politicians for being "anti-Polish".[190] The Polish embassy in the Netherlands requested the Dutch government to shut down the website.[191]

A 2015 survey showed that 49% of new Polish arrivals in the Netherlands have had to deal with discrimination.[192]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Ilya Prizel (13 August 1998). National Identity and Foreign Policy: Nationalism and Leadership in Poland, Russia and Ukraine. Cambridge University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-521-57697-0.
  2. ^ Thaddeus C. Radzilowski,, Anti-Polonism Archived 15 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Rudolf Glanz (1955). "The "Bayer" and the "Pollack" in America". Jewish Social Studies. 17 (1): 27–42. JSTOR 4465299.
  4. ^ "Deceiving the Public". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  5. ^ "Poles — United States Holocaust Memorial Museum". www.ushmm.org.
  6. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), Warszawa 2009, ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6. Page 9
  7. ^ Johnny McDevitt. "New figures reveal dramatic increase in hate crimes against Polish people". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  8. ^ "A History of Polish Americans ... Revisited". Cosmopolitanreview.com. 10 February 2009. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  9. ^ "Anti-Polish discrimination continues". Ampoleagle.com. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  10. ^ Pula, James S. (1996). "Image, Status, Mobility and Integration in American Society: The Polish Experience". Journal of American Ethnic History. 16 (1). University of Illinois Press: 74–95. JSTOR 27502139.
  11. ^ Scharf, Rafael F. (19 June 2008). "'The two saddest nations on earth': A Polish Jewish octogenarian looks back and forward". East European Jewish Affairs. 31 (1): 95–100. doi:10.1080/13501670108577939. ISSN 1350-1674. S2CID 162660808.
  12. ^ Sontheimer, Michael (27 May 2011). "Germany's WWII Occupation of Poland: 'When We Finish, Nobody Is Left Alive'". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  13. ^ a b Leszczyński, Adam (2018). "Kaczyński mówi o "antypolonizmie". Badamy zaskakującą karierę tego słowa na prawicy". oko.press. Retrieved 20 December 2020. wzrastający w świecie antypolonizm ma to samo źródło co antysemityzm: niechęć do ludzi słabych, chronicznie przez los upośledzonych, ludzi słabych rozpiętością między nadzieją jednostek a nędzą masy, ludzi żyjących w rozproszeniu, ciągle walczących o swą ojczyznę... Mamy więc antypolonizm zażenowany, podstępny, szczery, nienawistny, pogardliwy, bezwzględny. Stajemy się niepopularni jako naród i tak jak w narodzie żydowskim jednostkom tylko przyznaje się prawo do pozyskiwania sympatii.
  14. ^ Sebastian Conrad, Globalisation and the Nation in Imperial Germany, Cambridge University Press page 171
  15. ^ a b Liudmila Gatagova, "THE CRYSTALLIZATION OF ETHNIC IDENTITY IN THE PROCESS OF MASS ETHNOPHOBIAS IN THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE. (The Second Half of the 19th Century)." Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine The CRN E-book
  16. ^ a b Matthew F. Jacobson, Special Sorrows: The Diasporic Imagination of Irish, Polish, and Jewish ... Page 34, Social Science, Publisher: University of California Press, 2002; 340 pages.
  17. ^ Janusz Gumkowkski; Kazimierz Leszczynski (2001). "Hitler's Plans for Eastern Europe: Poland under Nazi Occupation". dac.neu.edu. Archived from the original on 30 April 2001.
  18. ^ Tomasz Bielecki (3 November 2005). "Rosja w poszukiwaniu zaginionej wielkości" [Russia in search of its lost greatness] (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012.
  19. ^ Russian studies in literature - Google Books. 2005. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  20. ^ Vladimir Dahl, Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language, 1880 and later reprints, entry МАЗУРИК
  21. ^ "The Government's Political Technologist, or the Secrets of Inter TV Channel's Information Policy", Ukrayinska Pravda, Monday, 25 April 2011
  22. ^ Vanessa Quick (September 2007). "Beneficial immigration: Polish immigrants have changed the UK's economy - and the look of Britain's cities". The German Times Online. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013.
  23. ^ Donald Bloxham; A. Dirk Moses (15 April 2010). The Oxford Handbook of Genocide Studies. OUP Oxford. p. 298. ISBN 978-0-19-923211-6.
  24. ^ Caterina Bruschi; Peter Biller (2003). Texts and the Repression of Medieval Heresy. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-903153-10-9.
  25. ^ Jerzy Lukowski; W. H. Zawadzki (6 July 2006). A Concise History of Poland. Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-0-521-85332-3. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  26. ^ (in German) Heinrich Reintjes, Weltreise nach Deutschland, Progress-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1953. Note: Johann Georg Forster became Chair of Natural History Department at Vilnius University in 1784 thanks to generous job offer from the Polish Commission of National Education (Komisja Edukacji Narodowej)
  27. ^ a b c David Blackbourn, Harvard University (2000). "Conquests from Barbarism: Interpreting Land Reclamation in 18th Century Prussia" (PDF). International Congress of Historical Sciences; Oslo. p. 8. Retrieved 7 January 2012. Frederick's own views... were expressed in unflattering New World parallels. They [...he gushed] were like: "Iroquois... a barbarous people sunk in ignorance and stupidity" (note the metaphorical undertones of the French verb "croupir" -sunk in, wallowing in, stagnating). Page 8 of 9.
  28. ^ "H-Net Reviews". 6 May 1996. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  29. ^ Susan Parman, Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment. (Book review) Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Frederick's "the Iroquois of Europe" in Polish liberal thought before 1918 by Maciej Janowski, Central European University Press, 2004, ISBN 963-9241-18-0
  31. ^ "Polish-Muscovite War, 1609-1619".
  32. ^ Friedrich, Karin; Pendzich, Barbara M. (2009). Citizenship and Identity in a Multinational Commonwealth: Poland-Lithuania in Context, 1550-1772. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-16983-8.
  33. ^ Kaganovich, Albert (8 March 2013). The Long Life and Swift Death of Jewish Rechitsa: A Community in Belarus, 1625–2000. University of Wisconsin Pres. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-299-28983-6. russian polish war 1654-1667 anti-polish propaganda.
  34. ^ "Poland-Lithuania and the Liberum Veto". 18 October 2016.
  35. ^ Black, Jeremy (October 2009). War in European History, 1660-1792: The Essential Bibliography. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-246-8.
  36. ^ Kadziela, Łukasz; Strybel, Robert (1994). "The 1794 Kościuszko Insurrection". The Polish Review. 39 (4): 387–392. JSTOR 27920649.
  37. ^ a b Mikhail Dolbilov. "The Civic Identity of Russifying Officials in the Empire's Northwestern Region after 1863" (PDF). Harvard Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2004.
  38. ^ "January Uprising RSCI, The Real Science Index". "Joseph Conrad, March 12, 1857-August 3, 1924"; Contemporary Authors Online, Gale. 2003. Archived from the original on 29 May 2007.
  39. ^ Liudmila Gatagova. "The Crystallization of Ethnic Identity in the Process of Mass Ethnophobias in the Russian Empire (The Second Half of the 19th Century)". ACLS American Council of Learned Societies. Archived from the original (DOC) on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  40. ^ (in Polish) Wasilij Szczukin, "Polska i Polacy w literaturze rosyjskiej. Literatura przedmiotu" (PDF). Retrieved 1 June 2016.[dead link] Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Kraków. See comments by Szczukin to section on literature in the Russian language: "Literatura w języku rosyjskim," pp. 14-22.
  41. ^ Prof. Vilho Harle, The enemy with a thousand faces: the tradition of the other in western political thought and history. 1989, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000, 218 pages, ISBN 0-275-96141-9
  42. ^ Myroslav Shkandrij, Russia and Ukraine: literature and the discourse of empire from Napoleonic to postcolonial times, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2001, 354 pages. ISBN 0-7735-2234-4 Page 69.
  43. ^ "Ogólnopolski Konkurs Internetowy - Historia Strajku Dzieci Wrzesińskich". Archived from the original on 15 August 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  44. ^ "Komisja Kolonizacyjna - Encyklopedia PWN - źródło wiarygodnej i rzetelnej wiedzy". Archived from the original on 1 October 2006. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  45. ^ "The Origins of the Final Solution" by Christopher Browning ISBN 0-09-945482-3 Page 7
  46. ^ Volker R. Berghahn, Germany and Eastern Europe: Cultural Identities
  47. ^ David Stevenson (2014). "War Aims and Peace Negotiations". In Hew Strachan (ed.). The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War: New Edition. OUP Oxford. pp. 206–207. ISBN 978-0-19-966338-5. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  48. ^ Holborn, Hajo (21 December 1982). A History of Modern Germany. Princeton University Press. p. 449. ISBN 978-0-691-00797-7. Retrieved 9 May 2015. Poles.
  49. ^ Flockerzie, Lawrence J. (1983). "Poland's Louvain: Documents on the Destruction of Kalisz, August 1914". The Polish Review. 28 (4). p. 74. JSTOR 25778017.
  50. ^ Anna M. Cienciala, THE REBIRTH OF POLAND at http://web.ku.edu
  51. ^ Norman Davies, "Lloyd George and Poland, 1919–20," Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 6, no 3, Pages 132–1542
  52. ^ a b c Gerhard L. Weinberg, Germany, Hitler, and World War II: essays in modern German and world history Cambridge University Press, 1995, page 42.
  53. ^ Taylor, A.J.P. The Course of German History, Hamish Hamilton 1945 pages 213-214.
  54. ^ "A letter from Timothy Snyder of Bloodlands: Two genocidaires, taking turns in Poland". The Book Haven. Stanford University. 15 December 2010. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  55. ^ "Sommer, Tomasz. Book description (Opis)". Rozstrzelać Polaków. Ludobójstwo Polaków w Związku Sowieckim w latach 1937–1938. Dokumenty z Centrali (Genocide of Poles in the Soviet Union). Księgarnia Prawnicza, Lublin. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  56. ^ McLoughlin, Barry, and McDermott, Kevin (eds). Stalin's Terror: High Politics and Mass Repression in the Soviet Union. Palgrave Macmillan, December 2002. ISBN 1-4039-0119-8, p. 164
  57. ^ "Konferencja "Rozstrzelać Polaków – Ludobójstwo Polaków w Związku Sowieckim" (Conference on Genocide of Poles in the Soviet Union), Warsaw". Instytut Globalizacji oraz Press Club Polska in cooperation with Memorial Society. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  58. ^ Prof. Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski (22 March 2011). "Rozkaz N.K.W.D.: No. 00485 z dnia 11-VIII-1937, a Polacy". Polish Club Online. Archived from the original on 11 November 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2011. See also, Tomasz Sommer: Ludobójstwo Polaków w Związku Sowieckim (Genocide of Poles in the Soviet Union), article published by The Polish Review vol. LV, No. 4, 2010.
  59. ^ Michael MacQueen, The Context of Mass Destruction: Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocaust in Lithuania, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Volume 12, Number 1, pp. 27-48, 1998, [1]
  60. ^ A study of crisis By Michael Brecher, Jonathan Wilkenfeld, page 255 "This was followed by a period of relative harmony between the two states
  61. ^ BUDUROWYCZ, BOHDAN (1983). "Poland and the Ukrainian Problem, 1921-1939". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 25 (4): 473–500. doi:10.1080/00085006.1983.11091753. JSTOR 40868197.
  62. ^ Alexander Motyl. (1985). Ukrainian Nationalist Political Violence in Inter-War Poland, 1921-1939. East European Quarterly, 19:1 (1985:Spring) p.45
  63. ^ "Nazi propagandists convinced some Germans that the invasion of Poland and subsequent occupation policies were justified. For many others, the propaganda reinforced deep-seated anti-Polish sentiment. German soldiers who served in Poland after the invasion wrote letters home, reflecting support for German military intervention to defend ethnic Germans." https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/deceiving-the-public
  64. ^ From Peace to War: Germany, Soviet Russia, and the World, 1939-1941 (1997), by Sheldon Dick ed. Bernd Wegner, p.50
  65. ^ The Crime of Genocide Committed against the Poles by the USSR before and during World War II:An International Legal Study by Karol Karski, Cas eWestern Reserve Journal of International Law, Vol. 45, 2013, section "Conclusion"
  66. ^ Dr. Jan Moor-Jankowski, Holocaust of Non-Jewish Poles During WWII. Archived 16 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Polish American Congress, Washington.
  67. ^ Poland's Holocaust, Tadeusz Piotrowski, MacMillan, 101.
  68. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota (eds.).Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami.Institute of National Remembrance(IPN) Warszawa 2009 ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6 (Introduction reproduced here Archived 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine)
  69. ^ "How Joseph Stalin (Inadvertently) Saved Some Of Poland's Jews". International Business Times. 21 February 2013.
  70. ^ Per Finsted. "Polish Cavalry in World War 2: Myths and realities". Dansk Militærhistorisk Selskab - Chakoten. Archived from the original on 16 August 2004.
  71. ^ "Over 100,000 slaughtered with axes, pitchforks, scythes and knives: The Wołyń massacre started 76 years ago today and lasted for two years".
  72. ^ "Victims of German Nazi massacres in Ponary commemorated".
  73. ^ d'Este, Carlo (24 November 2015). Eisenhower: A Soldier's Life - Carlo D'Este - Google Books. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-1-62779-961-4. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  74. ^ Europe at War 1939–1945 by Norman Davies ISBN 978-0-330-35212-3 Page 182
  75. ^ Peter D. Stachura, Poland, 1918–1945: an interpretive and documentary history of the Second Republic, ISBN 0-415-34358-5 Page 166
  76. ^ Nazi Europe and the Final Solution (2009), edited by David Bankier, Israel Gutman, p.162
  77. ^ Stanislaw Mikolajczyk The Pattern of Soviet Domination, Sampson Low, Marston & Co 1948, Page 2
  78. ^ The Poles in Britain 1940–2000 by Peter Stachura ISBN 0-7146-8444-9 Page 51
  79. ^ The Poles in Britain 1940–2000: From Betrayal to Assimilation by Peter D. Stachura; Routledge, 200 pages, ISBN 0-7146-8444-9 Page 50
  80. ^ a b The Poles in Britain 1940–2000 by Peter D. Stachura, ISBN 0-7146-8444-9 Page 52
  81. ^ Fritzsche, Peter (2016). "The Management of Empathy in the Third Reich". Empathy and its Limits. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 115–127. ISBN 978-1-137-55237-2.
  82. ^ Lipstadt, Deborah Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory, New York : Free Press; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan Canada; New York; Oxford : Maxwell Macmillan International, 1993 page 73.
  83. ^ Dawidowicz, Lucy "Lies About the Holocaust" pages 31–37 from Commentary, Volume 70, Issue # 6, page 32.
  84. ^ Craig, Gordon Alexander (1982). The Germans. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-12436-5. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  85. ^ a b Evans, Richard J. In Hitler's Shadow New York: Pantheon Books, 1989 pages 56–57
  86. ^ John C. Torpey, Intellectuals, Socialism, and Dissent Published 1995 by U of Minnesota Press. Page 82.
  87. ^ "The Government of the Republic of Poland protests against the CTV editorial policy on use of term". Archived from the original on 19 February 2006. Retrieved 1 June 2016. Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Ottawa, 20 August 2004.
  88. ^ "Polish Concentration Camps. Misleading words". Archived from the original on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 20 August 2019. Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum, May 1999.
  89. ^ Witold J. Ławrynowicz; Małgorzata Ławrynowicz (2004). ""Polish Concentration Camps." Zarys chronicznego problemu" ["Polish Concentration Camps" An outline of a chronic problem]. Nowojorski Tygodnik Kulturalny (in Polish). Przeglad Polski on-line. Archived from the original on 7 May 2005.
  90. ^ "Statement on Poland and the Auschwitz Commemoration". Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  91. ^ Michlic, Joanna (2007). "The Soviet Occupation of Poland, 1939-41, and the Stereotype of the Anti-Polish and Pro-Soviet Jew". Jewish Social Studies. 13 (3): 135–176. ISSN 0021-6704. JSTOR 4467778.
  92. ^ Prelate Retracts Controversial Allegation, (1991) at articles.latimes.com
  93. ^ Robert S. Wistrich, Terms of Survival: The Jewish World Since 1945, Routledge, 1995 p. 281.
  94. ^ Joshua D. Zimmerman (2003) Contested Memories: Poles and Jews During the Holocaust and Its Aftermath, Rutgers University Press, p. 276
  95. ^ a b "Shamir's Remarks About Poland Held Up Diplomatic Relations". 8 December 1989.
  96. ^ Adam Michnik, Poles and the Jews: How Deep the Guilt? The New York Times, 17 March 2001.
  97. ^ Robert Cherry and Annamaria Orla-Bukowska, ibidem Page 25.
  98. ^ Cas Mudde (2005). Racist Extremism in Central and Eastern Europe. London: Routledge. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-415-35593-3. OCLC 55228719.
  99. ^ "Poland - Poles sue publisher of anti-Semitic texts". The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism. 28 November 2006. Archived from the original on 10 August 2011.
  100. ^ Joanna Michlic (2004). "The Polish Debate about the Jedwabne Massacre" (PDF). Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism. pp. 6, 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  101. ^ "Spowiedź". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  102. ^ a b (in Polish) Romuald Bury, JAKA "GAZETA", TAKIE PRZEPROSINY... Archived 5 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine, PolskieJutro, Number 243 [1 January 2007]
  103. ^ Strzembosz, Tomasz (5 February 1994). "Polacy - Żydzi. Czarna karta 'Gazety Wyborczej'" [Poles - Jews. Black card of 'Gazeta Wyborcza'] (in Polish). Archived from the original on 15 September 2008.
  104. ^ Antony Polonsky, Joanna B. Michlic. The Neighbors Respond: The Controversy over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland. Princeton University Press, 2003.
  105. ^ David Johnson (3 March 2001). "Johnson's Russia List No. 5129". Center for Defense Information. Archived from the original on 10 March 2001.
  106. ^ American Association for Polish Jewish Studies. Gazeta Vol 3, No 2, 1994. Page 4
  107. ^ ""Wyborcza" kontynuuje swoją "politykę historyczną"" ["Election" continues its "historical politics"] (in Polish). foxx.salon24.pl. 23 April 2008. Archived from the original on 26 April 2008.
  108. ^ Ted Cohen, Jokes: Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters - Page 21. University of Chicago Press, 1999. ISBN 0-226-11230-6.
  109. ^ Tomasz Szarota, Goebbels: 1982 (1939-41): 16, 36–37, 274; 1978. Also: Tomasz Szarota: Stereotyp Polski i Polaków w oczach Niemców podczas II wojny światowej; Bibliografia historii polskiej - 1981. Page 162.
  110. ^ Christie Davies, The Mirth of Nations. Page 176.
  111. ^ Davies, Christie (12 August 2002). The Mirth of Nations. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7658-0096-1 – via Google Books.
  112. ^ Christie Davies. ibidem. Page 177.
  113. ^ a b c Dominic Pulera, Sharing the Dream: White Males in Multicultural America Published 2004 by Continuum International Publishing Group, 448 pages. ISBN 0-8264-1643-8. Page 99.
  114. ^ "Commentary on "Polish Joke"". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  115. ^ Yale Richmond, From Da to Yes: Understanding the East Europeans Intercultural Press, 1995 - 343 pages. Page 65.
  116. ^ td (20 August 2014). "Pływackie ME: Niemiecki spiker zadrwił z Polaków. "To było wyjątkowo niesmaczne"". Onet Sport. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  117. ^ Burrell, Dr Kathy (28 December 2012). Polish Migration to the UK in the 'New' European Union: After 2004. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4094-9169-9.
  118. ^ FITZGERALD, IAN; SMOCZYNSKI, RAFAL (2015). "Anti-Polish Migrant Moral Panic in the UK: A Response". Czech Sociological Review. 51 (3): 380–386. doi:10.13060/00380288.2015.51.3.183. ISSN 0038-0288. JSTOR 24642799.
  119. ^ "Poles and Prejudice". LSE Research News.
  120. ^ Devlin, Kayleen (11 July 2017). "The anti-immigration party trying to recruit immigrants". BBC News. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  121. ^ "BNP advances on Middle England to exploit 'fear' of Polish migrants," Andrew Norfolk, The Times, 23 April 2007
  122. ^ "BBC blamed for attacks on Poles". BBC News. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  123. ^ Wiktor Moszczynski (9 January 2009). "Hate crime rises in economic slump - Federation of Poles". orla.fm. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  124. ^ a b BBC denies MP's anti-Polish claim BBC News, 4 June 2008.
  125. ^ "Daniel Kawczynski: Poles in the UK are under attack. It's got to stop". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  126. ^ "British MP "sick and tired" of alleged anti-Polish bias (Roundup)". monstersandcritics.com. 4 June 2008. Archived from the original on 12 July 2010.
  127. ^ "How Britain can help Poles". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  128. ^ Brook, Stephen (5 August 2008). "Daily Mail makes up with Poles". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  129. ^ "Federation of Poles in Great Britain vs Daily Mail". Press Complaints Commission. 2009. Archived from the original on 8 February 2009.
  130. ^ "Daily Mail coverage prompts Poles to make PCC complaint". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  131. ^ "Letter to PCC from Daily Mail" (PDF). Federation of Poles in Great Britain C.I.O.[dead link]
  132. ^ "Daily Mail coverage prompts Poles to make PCC complaint". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  133. ^ "Poles accuse 'Daily Mail' of defaming community". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  134. ^ Zuroff, Efraim (14 October 2009). "Eastern Europe's long-buried truths". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 2 May 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  135. ^ "As at Auschwitz, the gates of hell are built and torn down by human hearts". The Guardian. London. 23 December 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  136. ^ a b Conlan, Tara (8 August 2008). "Giles Coren Times article prompts Polish complaints to PCC". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  137. ^ Tara Conlan. "Giles Coren Times article prompts Polish complaints to PCC". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 9 August 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  138. ^ Coren, Giles (26 July 2008). "Two waves of immigration Poles apart". The Times. London. Retrieved 25 April 2010.[dead link]
  139. ^ Wiktor Moszczynski (6 March 2009). "Poles could make UK legal history in Europe". radio-orla.com. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012.
  140. ^ "Early day motion 2529". UK Parliament. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  141. ^ "December 2008 - Krakow Post". Krakow Post. 29 December 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  142. ^ Stephan Pound (22 November 2008). "British MPs prepare Early Day Motion protest in PCC decision on Giles Coren". orla.fm. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  143. ^ "Unacceptable prejudice". The Economist. 14 August 2008. Archived from the original on 6 December 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
  144. ^ Coren, Giles (2 August 2008). "The winner's version of history. That's original". The Times. London. Retrieved 25 February 2009.[dead link]
  145. ^ "Polands role in the Holocaust". The Times. London. 31 July 2008. Archived from the original on 3 December 2008. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  146. ^ a b "Coren launches his own assault on Poland". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  147. ^ a b "Poles Take The Times and Coren to European Court". orla.fm. 25 February 2009. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  148. ^ Daniel Tokarczyk (19 August 2008). "Giles Coren: F*** the Poles!" (in Polish). Leeds-Manchester.pl. Polish Express. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  149. ^ Coren, Giles (16 May 2009). "The Duke of Cumberland". The Times. London. Archived from the original on 19 May 2009. Retrieved 28 May 2009.
  150. ^ "False charges of anti-semitism demean the accuser not the accused". The Daily Telegraph. London. 10 November 2009. Archived from the original on 12 November 2009. Retrieved 12 October 2010.
  151. ^ "Fry's fears over Tories' anti-gay links". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 9 October 2009. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  152. ^ "Poland". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  153. ^ Charter, David (16 July 2009). "Right-wing Polish MEP Michal Kaminski becomes Tories controversial EU leader". London: Times Newspapers Ltd. Retrieved 9 October 2009.[dead link]
  154. ^ "Unoccupied Britain". The Economist. 15 October 2009. Archived from the original on 19 October 2009.
  155. ^ Cesarani, David (12 October 2009). "Stephen Fry's Auschwitz blunder". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  156. ^ Day, Matthew (8 October 2009). "Stephen Fry provokes Polish fury over Auschwitz remark". London: Telegraph Media Group. Archived from the original on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  157. ^ "Complaints: Fry 'slandered' Poland over Auschwitz". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 12 October 2009. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  158. ^ "Poles, Politeness and Politics in the age of Twitter". stephenfry.com. 19 October 2009. Archived from the original on 22 October 2009. Retrieved 19 October 2009.
  159. ^ Mulholland, Hélène (30 October 2009). "Miliband defiant as Cameron demands he retract accusations against Kaminski". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  160. ^ "UK Poles in Downing Street anti-discrimination protest". Polskie Radio dla Zagranicy. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  161. ^ Exclusive Mark Shales (22 January 2014). "Gang of 15 attacks Dagenham motorcyclist outside pub "because he is Polish"". Barking and Dagenham Post. Archived from the original on 9 November 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  162. ^ "Pobili Polaka w Londynie. "Kopali i krzyczeli, że ma wracać do Polski"" [Pobili Polaka w Londynie. "Kopali i krzyczeli, że ma wracać do Polski"] (in Polish). Wyborcza.pl. 18 January 2014. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  163. ^ Steven Alexander (17 January 2014). "Seven attacks in 10 days as racist gang targets Polish community in east Belfast". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  164. ^ "Reports of "No more Polish vermin" signs left outside primary schools in Huntingdon". Cambridge News. Archived from the original on 28 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  165. ^ Micklethwaite, Jamie. "Police probe racist graffiti smeared on Polish centre after Brexit vote". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  166. ^ "Xenophobic bullying souring lives of East European pupils in UK". www.msn.com.
  167. ^ Rzepnikowska, Alina (2019). "Racism and xenophobia experienced by Polish migrants in the UK before and after Brexit vote". Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 45 (1): 61–77. doi:10.1080/1369183X.2018.1451308.
  168. ^ "Lapid: Poland was complicit in the Holocaust, new bill 'can't change history'". www.timesofisrael.com.
  169. ^ "The truth about Poland and the Holocaust". blogs.timesofisrael.com.
  170. ^ "Yair Lapid's rhetoric on Poland feels like Holocaust denial, Auschwitz museum says". 10 May 2019.
  171. ^ "Work needed to reduce anti-Polish sentiment: Israeli ambassador". Radio Poland. 24 May 2018. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  172. ^ "Poles 'sucked anti-Semitism with their mothers' milk,' Israeli official says". NBC News. 18 February 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  173. ^ "Suckling hatred with mother's milk". Haaretz.
  174. ^ "Arik Lederman Architects". Archived from the original on 22 August 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
  175. ^ "Israeli 'spits at' Polish ambassador in street amid ongoing diplomatic dispute". The Independent. 16 May 2019. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  176. ^ "Polish ambassador spat at in Israel amid rising tensions". Reuters. 15 May 2019 – via www.reuters.com.
  177. ^ "Ambasada RP w Tel Awiwie: Mamy zapis z kamer monitoringu". www.rp.pl.
  178. ^ Huff, Richard (21 November 2007). "Shamed Fox apologizes for Polish slur on 'Back to You'". NY Daily News. New York. Archived from the original on 23 November 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2007.
  179. ^ Selection of articles (12 August 2005). "Top Headlines: 12 August 2005". Warsaw FM. WN Network. pp. Index. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  180. ^ a b BBC News (12 August 2005), Putin 'must end attacks on Poles' (Polish president calls on Putin to stop attacks on Poles in Moscow) BBC News UK. Quote: "In my capacity as president of the Polish Republic – Kwaśniewski said in an official statement – I address, to the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, an appeal calling on the Russian authorities to undertake energetic action to identify and punish the organizers and perpetrators of the assaults." Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  181. ^ Grzegorz Podolski (18 April 2024). "Rosjanie przywołują słowa skandalisty. "Polacy to prawdziwi naziści"" [Russians are recalling the words of a scandalist. "Poles are true Nazis".]. onet.pl. Przegląd Sportowy.
  182. ^ "Walesa declines Lithuanian honour Archived 14 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine". Radio Poland. 7 September 2011.
  183. ^ [David R. Marples], Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine, 2007, Chapter 6. The Ukrainian-Polish Conflict, pp. 203-237
  184. ^ "The Polish-Ukrainian Battle for the Past"., Carnegie Europe
  185. ^ "Ukrainians call on Poland to rebuild controversial monument", Radio Poland
  186. ^ "Poland's Duda urges Ukraine leadership not to appoint to high positions officials with anti-Polish views"., UNIAN
  187. ^ "Poland to ban Ukrainians with 'anti-Polish views'". Reuters. 2 November 2017.
  188. ^ "Poland downplays tensions with Germany over 'anti-Polish' comments". news.yahoo.com.
  189. ^ "Poland summons German charge d'affaires over election media coverage". Reuters. 8 July 2020 – via www.reuters.com.
  190. ^ Ebels, Philip (2 February 2012). "Dutch far right opens anti-Polish hotline". EUobserver. Archived from the original on 24 September 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  191. ^ "Dutch allow Wilders' anti-Pole website, EU critical". Reuters. 10 February 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  192. ^ "Poles, Bulgarians say they face more discrimination in the Netherlands". DutchNews. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 16 December 2023.

Bibliography

  • Ersch, Johann Samuel, ed. (1810). "Erdbeschreibung". Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung. 2 (177). Halle-Leipzig: 465–472.
  • Mikołaj Teres: Ethnic Cleansing of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia, Alliance of the Polish Eastern Provinces, Toronto, 1993, ISBN 0-9698020-0-5.
  • Ryszard Torzecki: Polacy i Ukraińcy; Sprawa ukraińska w czasie II wojny światowej na terenie II Rzeczypospolitej; Warsaw, 1993.
  • Tadeusz Piotrowski: Genocide and Rescue in Wolyn: Recollections of the Ukrainian Nationalist, Ethnic Cleansing Campaign Against the Poles During World War II, McFarland & Company, 2000, ISBN 0-7864-0773-5.
  • Dr. Dariusz Łukasiewicz: Czarna legenda Polski: Obraz Polski i Polaków w Prusach 1772-1815 (The black legend of Poland: the image of Poland and Poles in Prussia between 1772–1815) Wydawnictwo Poznanskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciól Nauk, 1995. Vol. 51 of the history and social sciences series. ISBN 83-7063-148-7. Paper. In Polish with English and German summaries.
  • Eduard v. Hartmanns Schlagwort vom "Ausrotten der Polen" : Antipolonismus und Antikatholizismus im Kaiserreich / Helmut Neubach.
  • 'Erbfeindschaften': Antipolonismus, Preußen- und Deutschlandhaß, deutsche Ostforschung und polnische Westforschung, [w:] Deutschland und Polen im 20. Jahrhundert, red. U. A. J. Bechner, W. Borodziej, t. Maier, Hannover 2001

Further reading

  • Danusha Goska, "Bieganski: The Brute Polak Stereotype in Polish-Jewish Relations and American Popular Culture", 2010, ISBN 1-936235-15-3
  • M.B.B. Biskupski, "Hollywood's War with Poland, 1939–1945" 2009, ISBN 0-8131-2559-6
  • "Polish Encounters, Russian Identity", 2005, ISBN 0-253-21771-7; — based on the materials of a conference on "Polonophilia and Polonophobia of the Russians", Indiana State University, 2000