Friday, 28 August 2009

Poland marks 65th anniversary of Lodz ghetto liquidation

Sermon on mount Poland: Your daily dose of holocaustianity

Aged Holocaust survivors commemorated the 65th anniversary of the last deportations from the Lodz ghetto to Nazi death camps on Thursday, and Poland's president recalled their suffering and praised Poles who risked their lives to save Jews.

President Lech Kaczynski dedicated a memorial incorporating a Polish eagle into a Star of David to remember Polish Christians who rescued Jewish neighbors during the World War II occupation of Poland by Nazi Germany.


Lodz was the second-largest city in prewar Poland, after Warsaw, and home to the second-largest Jewish population, with 231,000 Jews representing more than one-third of the city's population.

"The liquidation of the Lodz ghetto, the murder of some 70,000 people, was the last act in the annihilation of Poland's Jews, who have lived here at least since the 12th century," Kaczynski told a crowd of hundreds, many who had come from as far as Los Angeles and Israel."Today we honor those who were killed and those who survived and those who - showing the greatest courage - saved their fellow citizens."

Thursday's commemorations began at the brown wooden Radegast train station, where about 145,000 Jews began their final journey to Nazi death camps. Wooden cattle cars with flaking rust-colored paint, still stamped with the Nazi-era Deutsche Reichsbahn, sit in the station as grim reminders of the death trains.

Kasimira Rosmarinowsky, 86, a survivor who lives in Germany, said she attended to honor her parents and 142 other relatives killed in the Holocaust because she has no graves to visit. "It's my duty; it's the only thing I can do for my parents," she said.

The survivors, many accompanied by grown children, then marched 1.5 kilometers to Survivors' Park, where the president unveiled the memorial: a concrete eagle, Poland's national symbol, on a pedestal that forms one corner in a giant Star of David. The star's edges are inscribed with the names of the Poles who saved Jews from extermination.

Lodz Mayor Jerzy Kropiwnicki stressed the role played by non-Jewish Poles who hid Jews or smuggled them to safety. He noted that it was not only those caught directly aiding Jews who faced death, but their families as well.

In recent years, Polish officials have sought to honor such people as part of an effort led by Kaczynski to dispel the stereotype that Poland was a deeply anti-Semitic country.
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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I pity the fool who Volunteers.