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Hardcover Fear: Anti-Semitism in Poland After Auschwitz Book

ISBN: 0375509240

ISBN13: 9780375509247

Fear: Anti-Semitism in Poland After Auschwitz

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Format: Hardcover

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Poland suffered an exceedingly brutal Nazi occupation during the Second World War. Close to five million Poles were killed. Of these, more than half were Jews killed in the Holocaust. Ninety percent... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Courage to face the truth of almost universal antisemitism

Many of the reviews, and the responses to it are full of logical errors. Here is just one constantly repeated: "Poles could not have been so antisemitic, since so many Poles have risked their lives to save Jews." Indeed Poland leads the Righteous Among Nations with 6066 hero's! These heroic Poles bring tears to my eyes, many of them took much greater risk than their counterparts in Holland, France, of Belgium. There are two reasons for that: First of all, Germans killed the Poles, (and Ukrainians) and in some cases their whole family if they found them hiding Jews. Second reason is much more scary: The poles who hid the Jews, were in danger from their fellow Poles. The great majority of Poles were so intensely antisemitic, that these Polish hero's were ostracized, and often physically attacked by other Poles, if it was discovered that they helped the Jews. Pani Wykszykowska, who saved lives of several Jews from Jedwabne, had been beaten up by the Polish bandits after the war. As the harassment intensified, she moved to another town, where unfortunately people learned about her saving Jews and she had to move again, this time to a bigger town. This heroic and patriotic, woman, had eventually had to flee Poland into safety in Canada. This is example illustrates the superhuman integrity of the Just Poles. They stood up not only against the German occupier, but against the prevailing sentiment in their own country. Such integrity and courage is indeed rare. Tragically, for each of these 6066+ hero's, there have 6066 been between hundreds and thousands, Jew-hating antisemites, actively supporting, or passively approving the genocide, (while in the process benefiting from the stolen Jewish property). Based on my own experience of growing up in Poland shortly after the war (as a child of Polish-Jewish parents who returned from Russia), I testify that I have met with almost universal antisemitism, with only few noble exceptions. Antisemitism was intense in Poland all the time and my parents were finally forced to leave their motherland, Poland, in 1968-69.

Disturbing book, a noble effort which failed

I have read "Fear" with much pain. As a Pole, each time Gross wrote about how my compatriots killed and robbed their Jewish neighbours, my heart ached. The facts presented in this book have not been unknown to historians, but they were not publicly discussed in Poland for decades. Learning the extent of brutal, murderous Polish anti-semitism during and after WW II was a huge shock for me. For this reason, this an important book. Many people have accused Gross of a "one-sided view". Well, it seems to be done on purpose. We Poles like to talk about Polish priests and nuns who hid Jews during the war, about who has the most trees in Yad Vashem, and so on. It is the public discourse on Holocaust in Poland which is one-sided -- a veil of silence is held over Polish anti-semitism and Polish murdering of Jews during and shortly after WW II. Gross aimed to break this silence, and I think he partially succeeded. The book is worth reading but is not an easy, nor a comfortable reading.

An extremely disturbing but important book to read

This is a very depressing book to read, but is nevertheless worth the effort.If you are interested in Polish-Jewish relations during and after W.W. II, this book is for you. Gross documents various cases of Polish violence against Jews in the period immediately following W.W. II, including murderous pogroms in Krakow and other cities, as well as instances of anti-Jewish bias in local government administration, employment discrimination, and anti-Semitism in Polish schools. He discusses massacres of Jews by Poles during the war in eastern Poland, including the massacre in Jedwabne that became the basis for his earlier book Neighbors, as well as the widespread plunder of Jewish property that accompanied these massacres. He pays particular attention in the book to a 1946 pogrom in Kielce, Poland, in which 42 Jews were brutally murdered by Polish civilians, policemen, and soldiers. Some 30 additional murders were carried out at the Kielce train station and on the train route into and out of Kielce. The savagery of these murders is unbelievable. As Gross shows in his book, what makes this worse is the apparent involvement of nearly every sector of the Polish population in the killings, including women and children, and the indifferent attitude of most of the Polish Catholic clergy to the murders. What led to this awful pogrom? Some Poles claim that this was the result of a Communist secret police "provocation." However, Gross shows that claims of alleged Jewish ritual murder of Polish children incited the crowds to anti-Jewish violence, falsehoods that originated long before in the Middle Ages. It seems that Poles were prepared to employ any pretext to murder Jewish fellow citizens, no matter how seemingly absurd. Gross makes a convincing case that Polish society at that time allowed for the murder of Jews as an acceptable action. He argues that such murders would never have occurred after the war if Poles hadn't been murdering Jews during the war, as he documented they had in Jedwabne and other towns. He suggests that large sectors of Polish society were complicit in the Nazi extermination of Polish Jewry, that many Poles expressed approval for Nazi genocide even as they opposed other Nazi policies, and that many Poles benefited from the genocide by plundering Jewish property. In his view, returning Jewish survivors posed a threat to Poles by reminding them of what they had done to Jews during the war. Not surprisingly, many Poles find this hard to deal with, judging from some of the other reviews posted here. Some resort to anti-Jewish slander and stereotypes to discredit this book, its subject matter, and its well-founded conclusions. Take these reviews with a grain of salt and read the book yourself to reach your own conclusions.
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