Przesylam Panstwu ponizsza recenzje z NYT Book Reviev...uwazany za 
najbardziej miarodajne zrodlo opiniotworcze na swiecie....
Nic dodac nic ujac...czy trzeba wiekszego dowodu na spolecznosc szkodliwosc 
falszrstwa Grossa????
RomanK
Hitler's Willing Executioners

An account of the wartime massacre of Polish Jews by their neighbors.

Related Link First Chapter: 'Neighbors' 
</books/first/g/gross-neighbors.html>

By STEVEN ERLANGER
   NEIGHBORS  The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland. 
By Jan T. Gross. Illustrated. 261 pp. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University 
Press. $19.95.

his small book is an important contribution to the literature of human 
bestiality unleashed by war. ''Neighbors'' tells a story that has long been 
known in Poland but one that has shocked the rest of the world and even, it 
seems, the Poles themselves. In great but austere detail, Jan T. Gross, a 
Polish-born historian who teaches at New York University, describes how 
''one day, in July 1941, half of the population of a small East European 
town murdered the other half.''
On that day residents of Jedwabne, a little village about 85 miles northeast 
of Warsaw, beat, bludgeoned and knifed 1,600 of their neighbors, Jews with 
whom until then they had peacefully managed to share their poor existence. 
The ones who weren't already dead they locked in a barn and burned. Only a 
handful of the town's Jews escaped the slaughter. This was not a crazed and 
spontaneous outbreak of rage. As Gross notes, the local people ''knew what 
was coming ahead of time,'' and some of them tried to warn Jewish friends. 
While the Germans who had occupied Jedwabne encouraged and agreed to the 
slaughter, it was planned by Polish officials, among them the mayor and the 
town council, and carried out by Poles who knew what they intended to do. 
Still, even the town's butcher couldn't watch.
The man who volunteered his barn for the burning, Bronislaw Sleszynski, was 
rewarded later by the Germans for his good deed. They built him a new barn. 
Once the Communists took over again after the war, the new barn was 
dismantled by the local cooperative, and the lumber was used to renovate a 
mill -- once owned by one of the village's murdered Jews.
A plaque in Jedwabne blamed the Gestapo and the Nazi occupation police for 
the massacre, and the people of the town walked by it for decades, knowing 
that it was a lie. Only recently, after this book was published in Poland, 
where it caused an uproar of self-examination, soul-searching and 
resentment, has the plaque been removed -- another family secret no longer 
tenable.
In fact, the story of the slaughter at Jedwabne was available in the 
testimony given four years later by one of the survivors, Szmul Wasersztajn, 
and in the records of a 1949 trial of 22 of Jedwabne's citizens for the 
murder of the Jews. The story was told again in 1980, in a memorial book 
compiled by the few other survivors, seven of whom were hidden by a local 
family. Gross, almost reticent, cites long excerpts from these accounts, 
which are deeply wrenching.
For many Poles, the story of Jedwabne has come as a revelation. They knew 
they were victims of the Soviets and the Nazis, but they managed to believe, 
like many Austrians, that they were only victims and never perpetrators. It 
should be no great revelation to the rest of the world. There is manifold 
evidence that the Germans, Russians, Poles, Ukrainians and many others were 
complicitous in the destruction of their Jewish neighbors. It is no secret 
that many people participated in the destruction of their fellow human 
beings, and it is surely no surprise that many of those who did not 
participate did nothing to stop the slaughter, either because they could not 
or dared not.
But how widespread was this ultimate collaboration? In one of the book's 
odder and more chilling notes, Gross cites testimony about other massacres 
of Jews by Poles that took place in the five days before the Jedwabne 
killings, in the nearby villages of Radzilow and Wasosz. In those two 
places, he suggests, as many Jews were killed as in Jedwabne.
Gross has written more an essay than a history, a thoughtful, sometimes 
oblique meditation on the Jedwabne affair. From time to time, he stretches 
for meaning, but in general he is cautious and fair to the facts. He is 
particularly concerned with Jedwabne's meaning for Poland and the already 
rich history of the Holocaust. He dismisses the notion that somehow the 
history of the Jews and their fate in Poland can be separated from the 
larger history of the nation. Citing the important role Jews played in 
prewar Poland, he asks, ''How can the wiping out of one-third of its urban 
population be anything other than a central issue of Poland's modern 
history?'' He calls for ''a new historiography'' in Poland that will 
acknowledge how ''anti-Semitism polluted whole patches of 20th-century 
Polish history and turned them into forbidden subjects.''
Gross also ponders the nature of village life, the generally correct if 
distant prewar relationship between Jedwabne's Catholics and Jews, and the 
mitigating circumstances of this strange war, when Poles were first 
subjected to the Soviets and then the Nazis and then the Soviets again. A 
fascinating aspect of the book, once its main and obvious theme has been 
absorbed, is the instances of collaboration as armies advanced and retreated 
and peasants tried to stay alive.
One of the main charges against Jedwabne's Jews was that they had 
collaborated with the Soviets during their 20 months of rule before the 
Nazis seized the region. While Gross shows that few in fact did so, the 
accusation of collaboration became mixed with traditional anti-Semitism and 
German encouragement to create the fever that led to the massacre. Where 
Gross may stretch too far, given his evidence, is when he suggests that the 
Poles who collaborated with the Germans were prime material for 
collaborating later with the Communists, and consequently that anti-Semites, 
not Jews, were the ones ''instrumental in establishing the Communist regime 
in Poland after the war.'' That is a Polish debate about responsibility that 
goes beyond this little book.
Gross also proposes that those very ''communities where Jews had been 
murdered by local inhabitants during the war were especially vulnerable to 
Sovietization.'' Perhaps. But it would be more useful first, given the theme 
of ''Neighbors,'' to know how many communities there were in Poland where 
Jews were murdered by local inhabitants during the war. If Polish 
responsibility during the Holocaust is the issue, then surely that is the 
question, and this fine, careful book about the awful massacre in Jedwabne 
is only the beginning of an answer.

Steven Erlanger is Prague bureau chief for The Times.
Return to the Books Home Page </books/>




_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com

Odpowiedź listem elektroniczym