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Warsaw: Berlin's Ethnic Cleansing Exhibition Controversial In Poland

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  • Warsaw: Berlin's Ethnic Cleansing Exhibition Controversial In Poland

    BERLIN'S ETHNIC CLEANSING EXHIBITION CONTROVERSIAL IN POLAND
    Report by Krysia Kolosowska

    Radio Polonia, Poland
    Aug. 9, 2006

    Some Poles are wary of an exhibition on expulsions in the 20th century
    which opens in Berlin tomorrow, headed by the vocal champion of German
    expellee claims, Erica Steinbach.

    The exhibition aims to show how expulsions - what we would call today
    'ehtnic cleansing - affected various European nations, starting from
    the Armenians in 1915, through the Germans at the end of World War II,
    to the Balkan nations more recently.

    Erica Steinbach went out of her way to assure that the exhibition is
    not biased and that its intentions are honest.

    "Naturally, we will show forced expulsions and deportations after
    1939 of Poles, the Baltic people and Ukrainians and the expulsions
    of Germans at the end of World War II. Their fate will be presented
    in a historical context."

    But Poland is wary when such exhibitions are organized by the German
    Union of Expellees, which represents the interests of Germans displaced
    from their homes in present-day Poland, the Czech republic and other
    east European countries.

    The resettlement was orchestrated by the victorious Western Allies and
    the Soviet Union and affected also millions of Poles, Ukrainians and
    Jews. German expellees have long been advancing compensation claims
    towards Poland for property left behind on its territory.

    Piotr Nowina-Konopka from the Warsaw-based Schumann Foundation says
    that under Erica Steinbach the Union of German Expellees did a lot
    to sour bilateral relations.

    "Mrs Steinbach is neither a historian nor an expellee, she hasn't
    a moral right to defend the case. Second point - we had already bad
    experience with the association under her leadership and that's why
    in Poland there is a generally bad feeling about its activities and
    this latest initiative. Of course, must see the exhibition to judge
    whether it's objective and whether it shows the reason that led to
    all the cruelties that, without any doubt, happened."

    Voices can be heard in Germany today that the suffering of Poles at
    the hands of Nazi Germans between 1939 and 1945 is comparable with
    the suffering of German expellees at the end of the war.

    Eva Kraftchyk of the German DPA agency understands Poland's suspicions
    that Germany is trying to rewrite its history, but she thinks such
    fears are exaggerated.

    "The tone of discussions in Poland over the past months is not very
    objective. I don't think that anyone who is serious in Germany would
    try to pretend that Germany did not attack Poland, is not responsible
    for the Holocaust and did not start the war."

    Furthermore, Eva Kraftchyk believes that the expellees have a moral
    right to show their suffering.

    "The refugees lost their homes in what is now western Poland,
    Kaliningrad, the Czech Republic and other countries. That was a very
    dramatic experience for these people. Now they are very old and they
    want to tell their stories. I don't think this should arouse fears
    that Germany is trying to rewrite its history. It's about showing
    all the facts."

    Piotra Nowina-Konopka agrees that the suffering of the expellees needs
    to be remembered but he expects more good will first to be shown by
    the German Expellees Union.

    "The most important problem in Polish-German relations is to find
    reconciliation in truth and good will. But this was missing when we
    were observing the activities of Mrs Steinbach."

    The Polish government is sending an independent expert to Berlin to
    visit the exhibition and appraise its message. Only then will Warsaw
    take a stand on the exhibition.

    http://www.polskieradio.pl/polonia/ar ticle.asp?tId=40301&j=2
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