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New Jersey Holocaust Curriculum Quits Blaming Poland For Hitler’s Death Camps

23 września, 2014

“It was an embarrassing and upsetting moment for anyone dedicated to the assurance that the history of the Holocaust must be accurately recorded and preserved.”

This was the way the Holocaust Documentation Committee of the Polish American Congress stated its position after it discovered the New Jersey Department of Education displayed a Holocaust curriculum on its website wrongfully accusing Poles, instead of Germans, as those guilty of exterminating Jews.

But after the committee brought the false accusation to the attention of New Jersey’s Commission on Holocaust Education, the commission acknowledged the error and promptly deleted the segment from the document containing it.

The Polish American Congress brought this problem to New Jersey’s attention in a detailed letter refuting the misrepresentations. The N.J. Commission agreed to delete the misinformation in a telephone discussion which took place afterwards.

This is the section the Congress requested be removed and no longer appears in the revised curriculum:

So to solve this problem, Hitler began arresting the Jews and sending them to Poland, which had a long history of Anti-Semitism. Does anybody know what anti-Semitism is? The hatred of Jews or prejudice against Jews. Since Jews were always excluded in Polish society, it was easier to put Jews in prisons in Poland rather than prisons in Germany. This is because Hitler would have to justify his actions to the Germans, while the Polish government (which already persecuted the Jews) made it easier for him to accomplish his goals. It is important to note that there were many concentration camps in Germany, but all six of the extermination camps were located in Poland. The Nazi took the path of least resistance by sending as many Jews as possible to Poland.


Shown below is the original letter from the Polish American Congress identifying the anti-Polish misstatements appearing on the New Jersey website:


David C. Hespe, Acting Commissioner
New Jersey Dept. of Education
P.O. Box 500
Trenton, New Jersey 08625-0500

Dear Mr. Hespe:

New Jersey’s Dept. of Education’s website displays a curriculum titled, “Teaching About the Holocaust.” It states this curriculum was “Reviewed, Edited and Disseminated” by the Commission on Holocaust Education.

We would like to inquire about the extent to which New Jersey uses it to teach the Holocaust. We understand you were appointed Acting Commissioner of Education only recently and you may not be aware of this curriculum’s shortcomings and defects.

The matter was brought to our attention by constituents of ours residing in your state. They recognized numerous errors and omissions which could easily confuse and mislead students into adopting attitudes of prejudice against Poland and the Polish American community.

Our Holocaust Documentation Committee was founded by a Polish Catholic survivor of Auschwitz just prior to the opening of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1993. Although most survivors have already passed on, we are fortunate to still have one of the very first prisoners of Auschwitz, a Polish Catholic sent there shortly after it opened in June, 1940.

Polish Christians constituted the largest group of prisoners for the first 2 ½ years of the war. Your curriculum confirms this little-known fact when it identifies the Wannsee Conference of 1942 as the event at which the Germans formulated the Final Solution and began the intensive persecution of Europe’s Jews.

In its introduction, your curriculum states it wants students to “understand the enormity and depth of the Holocaust.” It describes victims of the Holocaust as Jews and others from “targeted groups.”

Strangely, these “targeted groups” are never identified. Poland, of course, represented the major component of the groups. But Poles were not only victims. Right from the day the Germans invaded Poland in 1939 until the day the war ended in May 1945, Poland’s underground resistance was the largest and most effective anti-Nazi resistance in all of German-occupied Europe.

Yet, your curriculum misrepresents Poland’s wartime role by implying Hitler placed his extermination camps in Poland instead of Germany “because Hitler would have to justify his actions to the Germans, while the Polish government...made it easier for him to accomplish his goals.” This is more than merely an absurd accusation. It is a shameful Holocaust fraud perpetrated against Poland and against the schoolchildren of New Jersey.

Poland’s wartime losses were catastrophic. Six million Polish citizens had been killed by the time it all ended: three million Polish Jews and three million Polish Christians, together representing 22% of the nation’s population, proportionately larger than any other country’s.

Those who were members of New Jersey’s Commission on Holocaust Education and “Reviewed, Edited and Disseminated” this curriculum appear to have lacked qualifications to authorize its use as a valid educational tool. Their perspective conflicts dramatically, for example, with Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial which honors Poland as the country with the largest number of “Righteous Gentiles” who risked their lives to save Jews. More Poles were killed trying to rescue Jews than anyone else.

Two years ago, President Obama awarded his Presidential Medal of Freedom to the great Polish Catholic hero, Jan Karski who today is known as “the man who tried to stop the Holocaust.” Poland’s wartime government and the Polish underground resistance sent him to England and the United States to warn the Allies, specifically President Roosevelt, that Hitler had begun the Holocaust. Your curriculum, however, instructs New Jersey students that the Polish government “already persecuted the Jews” and “made it easier for him (Hitler) to accomplish his goals.”

Your curriculum also charges Poland “has a long history of anti-Semitism.” This long history, however, dates back to the Middle Ages and before. When the nations of Western Europe were expelling their Jews, Poland opened its borders to offer them a safe haven. Poland’s welcome was so warm that 80% of Europe’s Jews chose to eventually live there. They were accepted and allowed to have their language, religion and culture flourish as nowhere else.

The attempt to discredit Poland’s image and reputation is most obvious in the second part of the Kristallnacht section, a totally incongruous place to include it since this was a pre-war event in Germany. It has every appearance of being a malevolent afterthought aimed at tarnishing Poland’s good name. Its out-of-context misplacement warrants its total removal.

The Polish people support the teaching of Holocaust history -- but taught truthfully and without anti-Polish malice. Polish suffering and Polish resistance to the Nazis and the Communists are an essential part of this history.

That Hitler made the Polish people one of the Holocaust’s major targets attests to the magnitude of this horrific crime. “Never Again” are words a Pole could speak just as loudly and just as articulately as any Jew would.

Sincerely yours,
Frank Milewski, Chair