Michał Bilewicz, a researcher at the University of Warsaw, a social psychologist at the Faculty of Psychology at the University of Warsaw and head of the Center for Research on Prejudice, argued until recently that Poland has “a long history of occupation of Ukraine” and ” owes Germany an apology.” Now he stated that Poles under the German occupation “lived in peace as they saw the destruction of the ghetto”.
Poles calmly watched the destruction of the ghetto?
Bilewicz boasted on the Internet that he had seen the exhibition “Sea of Fire Around Us” at the Polin Museum, about the fate of civilians during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. According to an employee of the University of Warsaw, “After seeing this exhibition, it’s hard not to ask where those Polish neighbors were supposedly ready to rescue?”.
When the inhabitants of their city suffocated in cellars and children starved to death. This exhibition is an indictment of all those who lived in peace and witnessed the devastation of the ghetto
Bilewicz said.
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“Has he been pilloried yet, as Balcerowicz advised?” Bilewicz points to journalists. There is an answer: “Not every author of the list is Kisiel”
– Scandal! YOUR teacher wants Poland to apologize to Germany! “For all insults and slander, flag insult, discrimination”
— History according to a lecturer at the University of Warsaw? Bilewicz: “Maybe as a country with a long history of occupation of Ukraine…”. There is a response from the netizens
Internet users respond
Users on Twitter reacted to Bilewicz’s statement, stating that the Warsaw University employee does not know history and that his provocations are pathetic.
My great-grandfather was murdered in cold blood by the Gestapo. Great-grandmother has an empty grave because she died somewhere in Wola during the uprising. Grandpa was a prisoner of a labor camp near Hamburg. For Michał Bilewicz, Poles were happy and pleasant, like in the movie “Forbidden Songs” …
Did they live in peace?! Do you spot or ask for directions? Your pseudo-intellectual provocations are getting more and more pathetic.
“They lived in peace.” There are no words to describe it. By the way, Bilewicz will of course not mention that in Poland, as the only country in German-occupied Europe, helping Jews was punishable by death. Helping the whole family It is interesting that in the narration of such Bilewiczes and Engelkings…
You deliberately provoke, but unnecessarily. As a psychologist, because you are not a historian, you know that even in peacetime people are rarely capable of heroic behavior, much less in time of war. And it was the Germans who killed the Jews. Premeditated.
The conclusion is that you do not know the sources of Poland, the record of their fate, the studies of historians. Total closure from the suffering of others, 100 percent. egocentrism and lack of solidarity. Your tt shows that you regard Poles as inferior beings, of little importance, which explains a lot.
And what would Prof. suggest? Please specific? Hit the Germans in 1943 and spark a nationwide uprising? These digressions make as much sense as the question of what the Jews did to save their Polish neighbors from massive Soviet deportations to Siberia. What were they to do?
A professor at the University of Warsaw, in his ideological zeal, claims that Varsovians living under German occupation “lived in peace”. Mr. Bilewicz, don’t you feel how inappropriate this message is? I am sorry that you are an academic teacher.
“Where were the Polish neighbours? They were under German occupation, terrorized and murdered (among others for helping Jews). They were in German concentration camps, they were in Pawiak, in Szucha. They were in the home army, farmer battalions, NZS. They were on the Council for Aid to Jews (“Żegota”).
WK/TT
Source: wPolityce