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< Talk:History of Poland (1939-1945)
Anyone reading this archive should be made aware that the comments signed as GH were made by the user now known as AM.
| Table of contents |
If I deleted any links you think are important I apologise. Feel free to restore them. Adam 09:30, 26 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I don't like edit wars. If what I contributed wasn't approved, why should I bother to engage in wiki-warfare? I asked, and still ask, since I am seriously curious about what's wrong with the links to:
I admit to have done minor revisions to the text at the same time, and I understand that some of these changes, given the current tensed atmosphere around issues Polish, might have caused all of my changes to have been reverted, but I would be eager to learn which:
| German Army | Wehrmacht |
| Nazi-Soviet Pact | Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact |
| Cracow | Krakow |
| the mass murder by gassing of millions of Jews from Poland and other countries | the genocide by gassing of undesired "races," chiefly millions of Jews from Poland and other countries |
| It was German policy that the (non-Jewish) Poles were to be reduced to the status of serfs, and eventually replaced by German colonists. | It was German policy that the (non-Jewish) Poles, like other Slavic peoples, were to be reduced to the status of serfs, and eventually replaced by German colonists of "master race." |
| The Home Army [...] was formed from a number of smaller groups in 1942. | The Home Army [...] was formed from a number of smaller anti-Socialist groups in 1942. |
| By 1944 the AK had some 200,000 men, although few arms: the AL was much smaller. The AK killed about 150,000 German troops during the occupation. | By 1944 the AK had some 200,000 men, although few arms. During the occupation, the AK killed about 150,000 German troops. The AL was smaller and less significant. |
--Ruhrjung 10:32, 26 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I didn't intentionally reverse any of your changes. They must have been overridden when I redirected General Government to this page. I don't have any problem with any of your changes so feel free to edit the page. Adam 11:20, 26 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I knew we would have trouble with this. If Mr Anonymous Polish Patriot would like to become a user then we can debate these issues. Adam 12:56, 29 Oct 2003 (UTC)
What is wrong with the detail description: "At the areas of former Soviet occupation, Germans tried to inicite hate against alleged Jewish collaboration with Soviets, so they could perform genocide local hands. It is alleged that this strategy initially succeeded in the town of Jedwabne. However, the truth about this incident is hotly disputed. " I think it is NPOV, while the previous version is POV.
Why you think that it is relevant to mention that some Poles were Anti-Semites, without taking into account, that Jewish culture flourished in Poland for 7 centuries?
If you say that Jews pointed out at Polish collboration, you should mention that Poles pointed out at Jewish collaboration? GH
GH:
I don't think this has anything to do with "evil Poles" -- anti-Semitism was fairly mainstream and widespread in late 19th century and early 20th century Europe, and I don't think Poland was an exception to that general trend. The fact that pogroms happened every two years (which does seem pretty often to me) indicates that there was in fact a fairly strong anti-Jewish sentiment in the interwar years.
All these issues do need to be written up more generally though in the context of European anti-Semitism; the phenomenon of French willingly helping Nazi catch Jews during the Vichy era is very similar. I think there has been an attempt by modern Europeans to pain themselves in retrospect as non-anti-Semites, and blame the Nazis exclusively for any harm that may have come to Jews, but I think the notion that everyone in France, Poland, etc. hid Jews in their attics and was a member of the Resistance is a bit more romantic than factual. --Delirium 01:01, Oct 30, 2003 (UTC)
When I say most Poles were anti-Semites I don't mean that they were itching to murder their Jewish neighbours. I mean that they lived in am anti-Semitic culture, promoted by the Catholic church and (after Pilsudski's death) by the Polish regime, that promoted negative views of Jews and used Jews as scapegoats for all of Poland's ills. I can quote both Smigly-Rydz and Cardinal Hlond to that effect if you want. Poland wasn't unique in that, the same was true in Hungary, Austria, Lithuania etc.
Nor did I say that all or even most Poles helped the Germans carry out the Holocaust. A few did, while a few actively helped the Jews. The great majority were passive bystanders, and in the terrible circumstances that most Poles were in by 1942 that is understandable. I would agree that there was less Polish collaboration with the Nazis in Poland than there was in (say) Ukraine or the Baltic states.
In an encyclopaedia we do not call people evil, we try to explain what happened in the context of the times. I wish our anonymous Polish friend would stop distorting the text by making these kinds of allegations. I fear also that his English isn't quite up to editing this article.
Also I am again going to redirect the General Government article to this article. The text is much the same and it serves no purpose as a separate article.
Adam 03:03, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Yes I would, if it served no useful purpose to have two separate articles. I am not Polish but I know enough Polish history to argue with you on these points. The issue here is not knowledge of Polish history but allowing ourselves to be influenced by defensive / patriotic sentiment. Adam 03:15, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Your most recent additional material is very interesting and I have no problem with it. The only thing we are disagreeing about is your paragraph about Jews collaborating with the Nazis. I have looked in six books and seen no reference to this. Where is your evidence? Adam 09:11, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
By the way, where to put info concerning administrative divisions, which Reichsgau particular districts belonged to? GH
Also should mention the shocking handover of these people to the Soviet Union at the end of World War 2. Not one of our(Britain's) finest hours! : ChrisG 11:42, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
This probably isn't any use...at all...anyhow...
My Grandad ended up teaching soldiers from the Polish Free Corps english.
Probably utterly useless, but I thought I'd mention it anyway.
Alun Ephraim 12:32, 31 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Added links to existing (for LONG TIME) article about massacre in Jedwabne. Added mentioning about Zegota. Corrected info about Gheto uprising (IIRC there were also other uprising in Polish ghettoes before Warsaw). Added info about civil war in Poland. szopen
Actually, i think that History of Poland (1939-1945) should cover history of Poland, including the fate of different prtions of Poland, while GG should concenrate on conditions in GG, and mentioning Poznan in article about GG is, well, strange. szopen
It is historically imprecise to call the country Germany from 1932 to 1990. The country was called Germany until 1932 and again since 1990. In between it has to be called Nazi Germany (1932-1945), later West or East Germany (1945-1990). Everything else is colloquial and should not stand in an Enzyklopedia. It would not be accepted by historicians. I tried to correct it, but a user twice undoed my changes. (Andreas)
There has never been a country called Nazi Germany. The country was called Deutsches Reich from 1871 to 1945. The "historically precise" name (in English) for the country is Germany and the for the people Germans. Everybody who reads this article knows that Germany was ruled by the Nazi Party in 1939, and it doesn't need to be constantly restated. Adam 13:38, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Exactly that is, what historicians want to stress. (Andreas)
I presume from your spelling of Enzyklopedia that you are German. I understand that Germans don't like reading that Germans did things like invading Poland, and so seek to blame Nazis for all this history. But we are all stuck with our history, and the fact is that Germany did invade Poland and all the other stuff. Germans are just going to learn to live with this, and not try to tamper with the historical record. Adam 13:56, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Hi! I join this discussion. Maybe it's some off-topic, but just like Germans AND RUSSIANS have to live with their history and the invasion of Poland, Americans also have to live with the history of a country which is responsible for crimes even larger the Nazis, and which as late as this year invaded a country and killed thousands of civilians.
Btw.: Germany for a large part liberated German territories occupied by Poland since end of WW1, territories which legally belonged to Germany according to the Vienna congress; the ALLIED country Soviet had no reason for invading Poland, just like USA had no reason for invading Iraq. And why did not France and UK declare Soviet war for this invasion? Who massacred the Polish officers, for instance? And who started the WW2? Nico 14:10, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
In Wikipedia there are wiki links to Nazi Germany, East Germany, West Germany. Nobody, who clicks "Germany" in _this_ text, thinks that a text about the modern Germany would appear. Since you even can find texts about the period using these names, they should linked. Why using the imprecise word, when Wikipedia offers the possibility for more precision? I stick to it, Nazi Germany should be used. In comparision, nobody says "Russians" when speaking about people from the former "Soviet Union", because it was another system with other borders. I am german and I know that there exist different views, but why should the American (or British?) view the only right one, only because this is an English Wikipedia version? (Andreas)
@Nico: I think it is clear, that Nazi Germany started the war, when invading Poland. But it was not Germany (Schröder, Kohl, ...) (Andreas)
None of all that is to the point. The point is, what was the name of the country which invaded Poland in 1939? The answer is Germany. And that is what an encyclopaedia has to say. End of argument. Adam 14:22, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
@Adam: Even you are right, Nazi Germany instead of Germany is not incorrect. Click on Nazi Germany and find out! It is a common name, even in English, for "The Germany in the Hitler Era". Would you accept this argumentation and would you accept that "the usage of Nazi Germany is not incorrect"? I say: "Germany is always wrong", if you accept my last view, then you say "Germany is always correct, but Nazi Germany, too." (Andreas)
I don't really understand what Andreas is saying. This is an English-language encyclopaedia and Andreas's English isn't really up to this argument. There is a German-language Wikipedia, too, you know. I will just repeat my point that the name of the country in 1939 was Germany, and that is what an encyclopaedia should call it. Adam 14:40, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
What I wanted to tell you, is, that there is even in your argumentation the possibility to call "Germany" Nazi Germany. I don't accept "Germany", you do. I only accept "Nazi Germany", perhaps, you, too? That's what I want to know. For me it is the only possibility to distinguish between "Drittes Reich" and "Bundesrepublik Deutschland" in english. Therefore it should be used. (Andreas)
As I said before, Germany was legally called Deutsches Reich from 1871 to 1945. Look it up if you don't believe me. It was never called "Nazi Germany" or Drittes Reich. It's not a question of what "you accept." It's a question of historical fact. Adam 14:57, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I guess, you don't WANT to understand me. Of course It was called "Drittes Reich", that is what I said. A common english term is "Nazi Germany". It is correct to call Hitler's Germany "Nazi Germany", especially in an Encyclopedia, were just Germany is imprecise and there is no better possibility for distinction in english. (Andreas)
Andreas you're just repeating yourself. We've said all there is to say about this. If you don't know the history of youur own country I can't help you. Adam 15:06, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Yes, there was indigenous anti-Semitism in Poland, but the Holocaust was perpetrated by the Nazis, not the Poles, and even Poles who participated would not have done so were it not for the Nazi occupation. Many Poles were hostile to the Jews, and there was official anti-Semitism in Poland before the war, however, there were also considerable efforts to help Jews in Poland. ZEGOTA is mentioned. Jan Karski is another important example. Was Polish passivity any greater than, say, Ukrainian or Lithuanian passivity (or even Hungarian or French passivity)? I would like to see some documentation to back that up. As for the Polish POV, yes, there were many Jews who were communists (but certainly not a majority), but there were also many Jews who were proud Polish patriots, including among the communists. Jews escaped East because they did not want to be killed. Period. Yes, the Nazis forced German Jews into Poland. Many of them did not speak Polish. What is the argument? That people uprooted from their homes and forced to live in dismal conditions in a foreign country that did not really want them should feel loyalty to that country? As for collaboration in the Ghettos, that is yet another bit of nonsense. The person most frequently called a collaborator is Czerniakow--he committed suicide when he realized that the Nazis were bent on extermination. A recent PhD disertation in NYU discusses the personal ads of the Jewish press in the Warsaw Ghetto. It points to the large number of job training opportunities offered in the ghetto right up to the end. People thought--and for good reason--that if they were deemed useful, they would survive. What is the argument? That the half million Jews in the Ghetto should have chosen martyrdom, and because they didn't they are anti-Polish? What, exactly, is the "very large number" of Jews killed by the Jewish police? How many? Oh, and the Jewish police worked for the Jewish authorities, not for the Nazis. The Jewish authorities were allowed by the Nazis to create a police force to maintain order in the Ghetto. As for Jedwabne, are you saying that the Poles committed the massacre because the Soviets (whom, you earlier claimed, had plenty of Jewish backing) killed their leaders? Does that mean: a) the Poles were responsible for Jedwabne, b) the Soviets were responsible for Jedwabne, or c) the Jews were responsible for Jedwabne? Until this section can be rewritten from a decent historical perspective, I, for one, vote it stays out. Danny
Danny wrote: " The Holocaust was perpetrated by the Nazis, not the Poles"
The Nazis included also Poles, and even Poles who not were Nazis killed Jews.
Danny wrote: " however, there were also considerable efforts to help Jews in Poland."
Yes, sure! Especially when Poland deported the whole Jewish population still living in the country in the 60s! This was also Hitler's original plan!
I have made another attempt to restore some coherence and objectivity to this article. Constructive comments and edits are of course welcome, but if this article is vandalised again I will ask to have it protected. Adam 03:51, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Danny wrote, "The person most frequently called a collaborator is Czerniakow--he committed suicide when he realized that the Nazis were bent on extermination."
--I would have thought that that "honor" belonged to Mordecai Rumkowski of the Lodz ghetto. He cooperated in handling over all the children of the ghetto in full knowledge of what their fate would be. But of course there is always more to the story. There ought to be a separate article on the Judenrate and the controversy about them (from Hanna Arendt to the present). --Zero 05:46, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I picked Czerniakow because he is better known than Rumkowski--the Warsaw Ghetto is better known than the Lodz Ghetto if only by virtue of the books and movies made about it, and Czerniakow's diaries are easily available in English. If you'll pardon my French (well, actually Yiddish) Rumkowski was a much bigger shmuck, but to his credit it can be said that Lodz was only liquidated in the summer of 1944. For a real problem figure, I would probably pick Moshe Merin of Sosnowiec, yet even then, there are extenuating circumstances that make it impossible for me to judge these people and the decisions they made. Danny 06:33, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I think an article Jewish life in Poland 1939-45 would be valuable. I have the raw materials for it but it would be a big and sensitive project. Adam 05:54, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I also have plenty of material on it, but I wonder whether it should not be part of a larger piece on 1,000 years of Jewish life in Poland (maybe it's because I have Dubnow on my desk). Of course, given the scope of the subject matter, it will probably have to be broken up anyways ... Danny 06:33, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Do either of you have any material on Zofia Kossak-Szczucka? Adam 07:13, 2 Nov 2003 (UTC)
To the rest: As a Poles I thikn that current revision is NPOV. It mentions that some Poles were helping and some were bastards. You could also mention that although AK warned that people making living out of blackmailing Jews willl be sentenced to death and pursued after the war, few death punishmentns were actually in effect during war. Mostly because AK was _underground_ organisation.
Except for Jedwabne there is also Radzilow (IIRC), Wasosz and one othervillage, ALL in region of Jedwabne. Can't hear about similar events from elsewhere in Poland. Excellent article about Polish-Jewish relations is : http://www-personal.engin.umich.edu/~zbigniew/Periphery/No4/Radzilowski.html
szopen
Following Angela's advice, I created a new page History of Poland (1939-1945), and redirected the old page General Government to it. An anonymous user called 145.254.117.188 keeps un-redirecting the article, plus making edits to both articles which reflect a Polish nationalist POV and are in bad English. 145 has now taken to accusing me of being anti-Polish at my Talk page as well. I therefore request that General Government be deleted, and a new, empty, General Government be created and redirected to History of Poland (1939-1945), so that 145 can't restore the old text. Adam 03:48, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I am not the slightestly inclined to get involved in more warfares around matters of Poland's history. But many contributors, in particular them being cock-sure of their own NPOV-ishness, tend to neglect the involved emotions, it seems. Not the least the degree of disappointment, sadness and anger over how Poland, when formally on the victorious side of World War II, could be so harshly hit in the post-war decades.
Now, you say, the emotions have no place in the encyclopaedic articles, and nobody would argue against that, of course. But the emotions is a driving force which complicates the issue, as you don't have to be much of a nationalist patriot to see belittling of Poland's sufferings in edits which in the rest of the world rather would be seen as pedagogically motivated simplifications. If we don't recognize the emotions behind the edit-war, then we can be pretty sure of the defeated party going increasingly bitter against wikipedia. And that is exactly what wikipedia doesn't need.
On the issue at stake, the question of a separate article on the General Government, or not, I think that would be as much appropriate as separate articles on Vichy France and the Free French.
But that's only my personal view, of course.
--Ruhrjung 18:14, 30 Oct 2003 (UTC)
The current version is IMHO OK. The changes proposed by 145.xxx etc are IMHO caricatures of Polish view, not actual views from Poland. I propose to ignore him altogether. In the same time, GG cannot be merged with historry of Poland 1939-1945. GG covers only part of occupied Poland, and history of Poland in 1939-1945 is not only history of occupied Poland. szopen
So now we have settled that, why don't one of you quarrelsome Poles find some biographical facts about Zofia Kossak-Szczucka? Where was she born? What did she write? How did she survive Auschwitz? What did she do after the war? There's lots about her on the Net but it's all in Polish. Adam 09:43, 4 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I guess this is not for me, since I doubt i could be called "quarellsome" B-D szopen
All Poles are quarrelsome :) Adam It is called "to incite Rokosz" ( from Rakos fields in Hungary). But you shouldn't be allowed by politicall correctness to use the word ALL.GH
At your request, Adam. Zofia Kossak-Szczucka, Wladyslaw Bartoszewski, Czartak, Zegota. -- szopen
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