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{{WikiProject Jewish history|class=B|importance=High}} |
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{{WikiProject Poland |
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] (9 May 2021):{{pb}} |
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The Arbitration Committee advises that administrators may impose "reliable-source consensus required" as a discretionary sanction on all articles on the topic of Polish history during World War II (1933-45), including the Holocaust in Poland. On articles where "reliable-source consensus required" is in effect, when a source that is not a high quality source (an article in a peer-reviewed scholarly journals, an academically focused book by a reputable publisher, and/or an article published by a reputable institution) is added and subsequently challenged by reversion, no editor may reinstate the source without first obtaining consensus on the talk page of the article in question or consensus about the reliability of the source in a discussion at the ].{{pb}} |
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{{Press |
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|subject = article |
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|author = Jan Grabowski & Shira Klein |
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|title = Misplaced Pages’s Intentional Distortion of the History of the Holocaust |
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|date = 2023 |
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|org = The Journal of Holocaust Research |
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|url = https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/25785648.2023.2168939 |
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|archiveurl = https://archive.is/Jgsyz |
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|archivedate = February 12, 2023 |
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|url=https://slate.com/technology/2023/04/how-wikipedia-covers-the-history-of-the-holocaust-in-poland.html |
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{{Graph:PageViews|90|The Holocaust in Poland|en.wikipedia.org}} |
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|author=Stephen Harrison |
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== Volksdeutsche from Reich? == |
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|title=How Misplaced Pages covers the history of the Holocaust in Poland.}} |
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Weren't they rather Reichsdeutsche?] (]) 13:47, 31 January 2018 (UTC) |
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* Thanks for noticing. Sentence refactored to read: {{tq|Following the invasion of 1939, additional 1,180,000 German speakers came to occupied Poland either from the Reich or from the east with little to lose (Volksdeutsche).<sup></sup>}} {{Done}} ''']''' ] 15:29, 31 January 2018 (UTC) |
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=== A number of problems === |
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* What was ''Poland''? Was Vilnius or Grodno Poland? |
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:: What do you mean by this? 'Grodno' is not mentioned by name in the main copy, only in references? Vilnius is mentioned in section "German-inspired massacres" (quote): {{tq|In the lead-up to the establishment of the Wilno Ghetto in the fifth largest city of prewar Poland and a ], now Vilnius, Lithuania)<sup></sup> ...}} Sounds fine, so — what would you like me to do here? ''']''' ] 15:29, 31 January 2018 (UTC) |
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::::My question is fundamental, what is "The Holocaust '''in Poland'''"? Was Grodno Poland or not? Jews and Poles were murdered in Ponary/Paneriai by Lithuanian volunteers, was it a part of the Holocaust in Poland?] (]) 07:21, 1 February 2018 (UTC) |
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* Quite many Jews were transported from Western Europe to ghettos and camps in occupied Poland. Some of them were later transported to another ghettos or camps. ] (]) 14:05, 31 January 2018 (UTC) |
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:: What part of the article are you referring to? Please provide citation, or at least the location which is of interest to you. Thanks, ''']''' ] 15:29, 31 January 2018 (UTC) |
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::::The Holocaust in Poland was a part of the Holocaust in general, both Jewish victims and the executors were moved from place to place. Many Western Jews died in Łódź ghetto (which was named Litzmannstadt ghetto, not Łódź). Was it a part of the Holocaust in Poland? Hundreds of thousands Jews were transported to Auschwitz from Greece, Slovakia, Hungary, Western Europe. Was it a part of the Holocaust in Poland? Some Polish Jews died in camps in Germany. ] (]) 07:21, 1 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::The name ''The Holocaust in Poland'' suggests there existed ''Poland'' like there existed ''Hungary'' or ''Norway''. ] (]) 08:07, 1 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::* This is a ] question that can only be answered by writing a whole manual on the topic of sovereignty. I will look into the foreign deportations' question, which is the only thing I can do. ''']''' ] 18:45, 1 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:::I'm sorry I don't understand which problem you address. The definition of "Poland" is basic to discuss the "Holocaust in Poland". Apparently many Western readers, journalists ignore basic facts - the destruction of Polish state, annexations, German administration (districts, gaus). German administration in GG was both civilian (Hans Frank controlled by German government) and SS/police (controlled by Himmler). ] (]) 08:01, 2 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:::: Poland as a country or region is distinct from Poland the state - and in territorial extent is different from the modern state (which has moved to the West - taking German lands on the one hand, and losing land to the USSR). In terms of Jewish history - much of greater Poland - contained in the ] - is often referred to as Poland. The brief spurt of Polish independence to the Jewish destruction in the Holocaust was fairly irrelevant. (this often causes issues when reconciling a source that says Poland with modern day geography). In any event - The region itself is distinct from the state. If Britain were to have been occupied - we still would have referred to events in Britain or the British Isles.] (]) 09:47, 2 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::Part of Britain was ooccupied. Am I the only expert here?] (]) 12:27, 10 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:May someone explain me the above text? ] (]) 12:49, 2 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::Allow me to try. Your repeated attempts, over many years, to cloud the issue by asking for a definition of Poland are a waste of everybody's time—including yours. When Poland was partitioned, the Polish state ceased to exist, but the history of Poland didn't suddenly cease, only to begin again with the reestablishment of a Polish state after World War I. Likewise, when the Polish state ceased to exist after the start of World War II, Poland did not cease to exist. — ] <sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub> 04:08, 3 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:I meant - which area do we assume to be "Poland" during WWII. Vilnius area is described both here and in ]. ] is allegedly about Reichskommissariat Ukraine, but it mentiones also Lviv and Lvov, which is the same place.] (]) 13:23, 5 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::I do not see any problem. Both cities belonged to prewar Poland. Therefore, they are correctly included on this page. But they also should be included to pages about The Holocaust in Lithuania and in Ukraine because they were a part of Holocaust on these territories. Same thing can be noted on any number of pages if it is logically and historically connected to subjects of these pages. ] (]) 04:20, 9 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:::Some Polish Jews were deported to places outside Poland, eg. to camps in Germany. Some of them died there, some survived. Is it the part of the subject?] (]) 12:23, 10 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:* Next time, please start a new thread, because responding to old threads is counterproductive. All nations have their own national mythologies, with or without sovereignty. Jews were citizens of prewar sovereign states including the Second Republic and the USSR, but they were targeted in the Holocaust as one 'race'. The Poles were also targeted as one 'race' based on language, ancestry and culture, regardless of where they lived (in the Holocaust, but also during the ] and later). At the conclusion of World War II millions of people were either moved or expelled. As a result, we have two separate histories to contend with: the history of the land, on the one hand, and the history of the peoples, on the other. ''']''' ] 18:32, 10 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:I don't mean any mythology, I'm asking if this page should inform about Polish Jews deported by Nazis outside Poland, eg. when Auschwitz prisoners were evacuated in 1945.] (]) 06:13, 11 April 2018 (UTC) |
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== Victims forced by Nazis to give up their protectors == |
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As , these cannot count as Holocaust collaborators under any reasonable definition. By all this means this should be mentioned in ] as an additional peril to Righteous Among the Nations, but the blame for such murders is clearly on the Nazis. I also don't think that the source used is an appropriate one, better to use one that gives a more general summary of the perils faced by protectors.--] (]) 22:25, 4 February 2018 (UTC) |
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== Soviet or Polish Jews in the areas invaded in 1941 == |
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:* Please read the entire section; our coverage goes both ways. At the very bottom of the same section the article also states: {{tq|... the communist secret police routinely tortured the NSZ insurgents in order to force them to confess to killing Jews among other alleged crimes. This was most notably the case with the 1946 trial of 23 officers of the NSZ in Lublin. The torture of political prisoners by the Ministry of Public Security did not stop when the interrogations were concluded. Physical torture was also ordered if they retracted in court their forced confessions of "killing Jews".}} — The ''Christian Martyrs of Charity'' by the Kolbe Foundation gives documented examples of Jewish people betraying all (!) Polish rescuers known to them, and the source is reliable. It is not up to us to blame anyone, and I don't think we need a replacement for a monograph that might have taken decades to develop. Many recently published books on the subject (no need for titles) use prisoner confessions extracted through extreme physical torture as a viable source of information about the mistreatment of others. Summaries don't always help. ''']''' ] 23:14, 4 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::*I'm not sure what you mean by "coverage goes both ways" - I do agree it is appropriate for this section to cover the issue of false confessions of collaboration extracted by torture. ''Christian Martyrs of Charity'' is a memorial book of Christian heroism, not Jewish treachery, and you are missing the point of this publication. The format seems to be ] one-sentence commemorations of individual instances of Christian heroism; in some of these one-sentence summaries the word "betray" is used, but almost certainly these "betrayals" were extracted by torture or the threat of torture from people about to be murdered. That the rescuers willingly faced this additional peril of being revealed is a credit to them, but it is not something that any reasonable person would attribute to those taken by the Nazis. We would need general historical sources that Jewish victims who were forced by Nazis to give up their protectors, should be considered to themselves be Holocaust collaborators.--] (]) 17:33, 5 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:::* I resent your insinuation that I am misusing the source (or missing the point of this publication), and I strongly disagree with your assessment of the book as WP:PRIMARY. It is not! Primary sources generally comprise the survivor testimonies, but the survivors (witnesses, bystanders, etc.) do not speak in this volume! (ISBN 0945281005) is a notable historian with two books written on the same subject, and belittling his research is unnecessary. Your claim of betrayals "extracted by torture" is ]. — Zajączkowski did not say that. His research is as much a part of Holocaust narrative as any other information on the subject. It is a part of the rescue attempts' history, but no '''''rescuer''''' would have ever consider that as an "additional peril" (as you say). You removed the 'betrayal' from the section heading. — How would you categorize the extortions in the ghettos themselves ... was it not betrayal? ''']''' ] 18:37, 5 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::::*I do not mean to diminish Zajączkowski's work at all, but I disagree with your interpretation of it. Many historians work directly with primary texts and individual cases; there are a number of historians who have written comparable books on large numbers of Jewish Holocaust victims as well, with short one--sentence summaries for each. But it would not be appropriate for a Misplaced Pages editor to take a few isolated individual histories from such a book on Jewish Holocaust victims either, and interpret a trend. The interpretation of a trend like that is not a function for us. I think that the word "betray" in the text is certainly inclusive of forced betrayal, and that is the only reasonable interpretation; these were people could not hold out, but they were not collaborators getting a reward. I certainly do agree that people in the ghettos like ] were collaborators.--] (]) 19:04, 5 February 2018 (UTC) |
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For what it's worth, it seems most books about the Holocaust list these victims as Soviet Jews, for example: |
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== Perhaps this should be retitled ... == |
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*"Almost 900,000 Soviet Jews were murdered during such operations under German control in 1941" (Gerlach, p.70) |
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*Longerich 2010: section "MASS EXECUTIONS OF JEWS IN THE OCCUPIED SOVIET ZONES, 1941". There is no mention of "Polish Jews" in this section; the next mention of "Polish Jews" is on page 264 in the next part, "Genesis of the Final Solution on a European Scale", section "Reflections on the Fate of the Polish Jews in the Summer of 1941" (referring to the areas occupied by Germany in 1939) |
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Perhaps this should be retitled "Poland's Holocaust." If the Polish government wants to forget the people who died for them so they could regain independence in WWI; and if the Polish government does not hold itself accountable in the past or in the future, then I see no other alternative. I am of German, Polish, and Russian ancestry. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) from ] at 15:35, 7 February 2018 (UTC)</small> |
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*Beorn 2018, chapter "War of Annihilation: The Invasion of the Soviet Union"—no mention of "Polish Jews" in this chapter. There are a few mentions of "Poland", most of them comparing the Nazi policies in Poland in 1939 to the Soviet Union in 1941, although it does mention the ] as happening in Poland. |
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*Dan Stone 2023 ''The Holocaust: An Unfinished History'', same comparison of "Soviet Union" and "Poland" (“Yet if what had happened since September 1939 in Poland was shocking, what would take place in the Soviet Union after June 1941 was of another order still”), no mention of "Polish Jews" in the chapter "War of Annihilation" dealing with the invasion of the Soviet Union |
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*Cesarani 2016, ''Final Solution'': does mention Polish Jews three times in the "Barbarossa" chapter, but all of them refer to Jews living west of the areas invaded in 1941 |
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I think these sources substantiate my concern that Reichskommissariat Ostland and other areas east of Bialystok and the General Governorate are most often not considered part of the Holocaust in Poland. (] · ]) ''']''' 23:35, 10 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:Then we can mention this in the text. It is consistent with ] claim that "Contemporary Russian sources include Poland's losses in the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union with Soviet war dead" - and I guess Soviet propaganda seeped through to many Western sources over the years. Just like many estimates conflate Soviet with Russia, ommitting Ukraine (see ] for context). <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 03:47, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:No, it's the Holocaust, as committed by Nazi Germany, and part of it took place in Poland under German occupation. The Polish government is not responsible for what the Nazis did under occupation. Whether or not you agree with the current Polish government's push to formally state that Germany is solely responsible for the Holocaust is irrelevant here. The Polish government did not exist during the occupation. The people of Poland were under Nazi rule. Many individuals resisted, many were passive, some individuals collaborated. However, the latter does not implicate the whole of Poland any more than it does in any other occupied territory during the war. The current article title is the most accurate based on well-established historical sources. The Holocaust -- some of it -- took place in Poland. ]] 15:40, 7 February 2018 (UTC) |
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::Great, so all five of these historians are all infected by Soviet propaganda? Any evidence to back up this claim? |
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I request clarification, am I allowed to say, "Polish Ghetto"? <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small> |
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::I realize the question of nationality is not straightforward when it comes to areas that were part of Russia prior to World War I, part of Poland for about 20 years (although most of these areas had a majority non-Polish-speaking population), then part of the Soviet Union for about 2 years. That's why I think we should follow how most reliable sources on the topic divide it up. (] · ]) ''']''' 07:16, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:I'm not certain what you're asking. Polish Ghetto meaning what exactly? The ]? Or do you mean Poland as an occupied territory was a kind of ghetto? Either way, you're free to say what you want but you can't make up terms for Misplaced Pages. Most reliable sources refer to the occupation of Poland and the Holocaust as it happened in Poland, so "The Holocaust in Poland" is the simplest most neutral title we can use. ]] 16:05, 7 February 2018 (UTC) |
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:PS. I'll ping ] who knows much more than me about what Polish historiography may say about this. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 03:50, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:{{tq|I think these sources substantiate my concern that Reichskommissariat Ostland and other areas east of Bialystok and the General Governorate are most often not considered part of the Holocaust in Poland}}, and you are judging on what, because none of your sources actually confirm that. Obviously works that describe the entire history of the Holocaust may, for the sake of argument, use this and that choice of terms, which, for example, will speak of Jews killed in Polish lands occupied by the Soviets as "Soviet Jews". But this is irrelevant to us. Especially for this article. Following your logic, we can't talk about ] because your sources will say it is part of ]. Do you understand what your mistake is? You just cannot expect a clear distinction. The ] will cover the whole of pre-war Poland, and, for example, the ] will cover the area of Ukraine within modern borders; and the fact that they will overlap geographically is no problem. |
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:Also you are ignoring sources that are more precise. For example: Snyder, ''Bloodlands'', 2015, p. 275: ''Of the million or so Soviet Jews killed in the Holocaust, fewer than one percent died at Auschwitz. Of the three million or so Polish Jews killed in the Holocaust, only about seven percent perished at Auschwitz. Nearly 1.3 million Polish Jews were killed, usually shot, east of the Molotov-Ribbentrop line. Another 1.3 million or so Polish Jews were gassed in Operation Reinhard in the General Government''. Or : ''In June 1941, after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the Germans began to imprison the rest of Polish Jewry in ghettos and to deport them to concentration and slave labor camps.'' |
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:Or look at the numbers given by : ''Poland. Jewish population of Poland in 1937: 3,350,000. Deaths: 2,770,000–3,000,000'' and ''Soviet Union. Jewish population of the Soviet Union in 1939: 3,028,538. Deaths: approximately 1,340,000''. There is a clear distinction here and the inclusion of Jews murdered in Soviet-occupied territories after 1939 among the victims of the Holocaust in Poland. As I said, without them, the number of Holocaust victims in Poland would have been smaller by one third. ] (]) 08:29, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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::Good point about Lithuania (also, ], Belarus, Estonia, Latvia...). Some sources simplify things, others go into detail. This article is one where we go into detail in the context of Polish citizens and Polish territories, even if one or the other or both was not universally recognized back then or later. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 12:49, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::Exactly, besides, we should check the sources which have the same scope as the article, so "Holocaust in Poland", not Holocaust in general. ] (]) 14:10, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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::::"Polish citizens" and "Polish territories" according to what standard? They became (mostly) Soviet citizens and Soviet territories in 1939 and for the most part haven't been Polish since then. Besides, by your own proposed standard, it is not as if Bloodlands is about the Holocaust in Poland either. Maybe they are covered in sources whose stated topic is the Holocaust in Poland, but I'd like to see it. (] · ]) ''']''' 17:16, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::{{tq|"Polish citizens" and "Polish territories" according to what standard?}}. What kind of argument is it? By the same standards by which the territories occupied and their inhabitants by Germany were "Polish." Or do you deny that too? Perhaps you have sources in which Poland did not exist at all? |
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:::::{{tq|Maybe they are covered in sources whose stated topic is the Holocaust in Poland, but I'd like to see it}}, for what? So you can remove them also? ] (]) 18:18, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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::::::Maybe try wp:agf? (] · ]) ''']''' 19:32, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::::As I said, I was assuming your good faith until I explained you the history of the Holocaust in Poland, in other words your only excuse was an ignorance. ] (]) 19:47, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::What standard, hmmm. Would you like to rename ] to ] or ]? Also, does it mean that in Jedawbne, Soviet/German Jews were killed by Soviets or just Germans? Do elaborate on your logic, I find it... fascinating. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</sub> 06:31, 14 June 2023 (UTC) |
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: {{ping|Buidhe|Piotrus|Marcelus}} In ]'s ''Bloodlands'' (Polish edition, 2011, p. 442) I found such interesting assesment (my rough translation from Polish): |
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{{Blockquote |
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|text=In historical works on the Holocaust, individuals residing east of the Ribbentrop-Molotov line are often labeled as Soviet Jews. However, this description is imprecise as in 1939, at the outbreak of war, the majority of Jews who were later murdered in that region, held Polish citizenship rather than Soviet citizenship. Referring to them as Soviet Jews also reinforces a narrative that marginalizes or overlooks the Soviet invasion and occupation of its western neighbors. If these individuals were considered Soviet Jews, it would imply that their homeland was the Soviet Union and that the war began with the German invasion of the USSR . In reality, however, the war commenced with the German-Soviet alliance resulted in the destruction of Poland, placing the Jews in question within the borders of the enlarged USSR.}} |
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Hope it helps to some extent.] (]) 19:10, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:I think that settles it. ] (]) 19:47, 12 June 2023 (UTC) |
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So the Polish Government is allowed to take away the free speech of the World? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 16:08, 7 February 2018 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:I have no idea what that has to do with this article. Whether or not the Polish government is "taking away free speech" is irrelevant here as they have no authority over Misplaced Pages. ]] 17:14, 7 February 2018 (UTC) |
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{{hab}} |
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Raul Hilberg, ''The Destruction of European Jews'', 2003, p. 301: ''In Kraków the Befehlshaber der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD (BdS) of the Generalgouvernement, SS-Oberführer Schöngarth, organized three small Kommandos. In the middle of July these Kommandos moved into the eastern Polish areas and, with headquarters in Lvov, Brest-Litovsk, and Białystok, respectively, killed tens of thousands of Jews.'' ] (]) 08:35, 14 June 2023 (UTC) |
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== Please explain == |
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== Archives missing from box == |
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What is the connection of the phrase "At that time, Wilno had only a small Lithuanian-speaking minority of about 6 percent of the city's population" with the Ponary massacre?] (]) 08:08, 11 April 2018 (UTC) |
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: This would explain why this present day Lithuania locale was actually Polish (part of the second Polish republic and demographically Polish).] (]) 10:15, 11 April 2018 (UTC) |
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::The subject of this page is the Holocaust, not ''ethnicity of this present day Lithuania locale''. The murderers were mostly Lithuanian and at least one thousand of victims were ethnic Poles - local leaders, underground activists. Eyewitnesses who documented the crimes were Polish - ] and ]. ] (]) 12:31, 11 April 2018 (UTC) |
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* The new reference, you brought (above link): Prof. Piotr Niwiński from University of Gdańsk (2011) '''', ] with ]; results in yet another problem. In our article, the reference used is: Müller, Jan-Werner (2002), '''' Cambridge University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-521-00070-3. Chapter: ''Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine, 1939–1999'' by ], section ''"The Transfer of Vilnius"''. — But page 47 is not in the Google Books' preview, therefore the information cannot be confirmed now as claimed by Misplaced Pages (quote): {{tq|"Wilno ''(Vilnius)'' had only a small Lithuanian-speaking minority of about 6 percent of the city's population."}} Meanwhile, the statistics offered by Niwiński's are very different (quote from page 4 in PDF): {{tq|"The Lithuanians represented less than 0.7 percent of the inhabitants of Vilnius."}} Not 6 percent... but 0.7 percent. I don't know what to believe. Let's go back to ], population by city: ] Here's what it was in 1931: Grand total – 195,071 inhabitants, including 128,628 Polish speakers, and 1,579 Lithuanian, and 47,523 Yiddish, and 7,073 Hebrew among several other groups. Here's the math: 1579x100/195071='''0.8 percent''' of Lithuanians from 100% data. Would you consider this ''0.8 percent'' original research on my part, or is it OK to be used? Thanks, ''']''' ] 05:40, 12 April 2018 (UTC) |
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*: I don't think this would be OR, it would however only be correct for 1931 (would have to be attributed as such).] (]) 06:12, 12 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:::This must be a nightmare. The paragraph informs about a Ponary massacre and you discuss ratio of ethnic Lithuanians in the city/region. ] (]) 06:24, 12 April 2018 (UTC) |
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The box listing Archives for this page is missing the links to ], ], ], and ]. I can't see how to fix it, so will ask around to see if anyone else does. ] (]) 20:46, 13 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:* The connection between population statistics and the ] is direct, because statistics help us define who the victims were. The mass killings began in July 1941; the victims were ], in most part. I found another book reference which is equally relevant for our purposes as Niwiński. '''' edited by Omer Bartov & Eric D. Weitz; chapter ''"Nationalizing the Borderlands"'' by Tomas Balkelis, pp. 246–248. This information is critical; by outlining the presence of war refugees according to Lithuanian sources, above and beyond the 10-year-old Polish national census. According to: ''Note 21.'' Regina Zepkaite, ''Vilniaus istorijos atkarpa, 1939–1940'' (Vilnius: Mokslas, 1990), 49 – in 1937, the total population of Polish Wilno was 210,000. Take into consideration possible Lithuanian bias also. Upon the ] in September 1939, (now) Vilna was transferred to Lithuania per ]. But refugees from German-occupied western Poland kept arriving, which resulted in humanitarian crisis (quote): {{tq|According to the Lithuanian Red Cross, in February 1940 these 'newcomers' numbered around 150,000 in the entire Vilnius region, including 83,000 in Vilnius itself.<sup><sup></sup></sup> On the eve of the Soviet annexation of Lithuania '''', Vilnius alone was home to around 100,000 newcomers, including 85,000 Poles, 10,000 Jews, and 5,000 Belorussians and Russians.<sup><sup></sup></sup>}} When the killings started, the number of Lithuanian speakers in the city was negligible. I am going to include the new findings and the Niwiński's stats in mainspace. Thanks, ''']''' ] 15:45, 12 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:It has now been fixed. ] (]) 21:15, 13 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:What is the connection between Auschwitz camp and demographic structure of Oświęcim? |
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::@], tip for the future: please avoid ]. After starting a discussion here, it would have been better to ''link'' to here (<code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code>) at ] or the other way around. —] (]) 23:07, 13 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:"When the killings started, the number of Lithuanian speakers in the city was negligible." - so what? BTW - Lithuania obtained Wilno region in 1939 and a number of Lithuanians moved there (some of them returned after about 20 years).] (]) 06:50, 16 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:The text should inform not only about Ponary executions but also about ].] (]) 06:53, 16 April 2018 (UTC) |
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] |
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::* I find your attitude toward my inquiry condescending, and the rhetorical question regarding the (quote-unquote) {{tq|connection between Auschwitz}} complex and the {{tq|demographic structure}} of ] – in reply to my analysis of the ] victims by nationality – vacuous and obtuse. Sorry. This article is about the Holocaust in Poland. The persecution of Lithuanian-speaking Jews (including by ]) as described by Lithuanian historians was taking place elsewhere in ], not in formerly Polish Wilno, where all ~ 22,000 victims were Polish, hence the connection with the article subject. Victims of the Holocaust by bullets at Ponary were not Lithuanian. ''']''' ] 18:35, 16 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:The Lithuanian Security Police acted also in Wilno. Alaksadras Lileikis was the leader. They persecuted Jews and ethnic Poles. |
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:At least one thousand of ethnic Poles was murdered in Ponary. |
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:It's quite probable that Jews murdered in Ponary were citizens of Poland, but a source is neede rather than OR. ] (]) 06:44, 17 April 2018 (UTC) |
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: ] (]) 11:48, 18 April 2018 (UTC) |
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== Not only Jedwabne == |
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== Failed verification == |
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While it's possible that we are looking at different versions of the book, the text is not on the cited pages of the 2003 edition. Oddly, the one I'm looking at does discuss Poland on these pages, but still does not support the text, which makes me wonder what is going on. Could you provide quotes from the source? I am not entirely sure Weimar Republic policies are relevant to discuss, but that is secondary to the verifiability issue. (] · ]) ''']''' 17:54, 17 June 2023 (UTC) |
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There was a series of pogroms in the region in about 20 places. Two pogroms took place probably without any German participation - Szczuczyn, Kolno. Jedwabne is so ''popular'' thanks to the JT Gross' book. There are hundreds of sources, eg. IPN two volume report, Anna Bikont's book, "Miasta śmierci". ] (]) 06:44, 16 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:Various laws of interwar Germany aimed at Polish Jews are discussed by Hilberg on pages 188-189. It's weird that you can't find them. ] (]) 20:20, 17 June 2023 (UTC) |
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== Szlachta helped hiding Jews == |
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::Again, can you provide a quote from the source that supports the content? (] · ]) ''']''' 01:03, 18 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::''A second factor was the German perception of Polish Jewry. These Jews were at the bottom for some time. They had been singled out and targeted repeatedly before the war. In recent memory were the thousands who had been transported from Germany to the Polish frontier in 1938. Fifteen years earlier individual Jews holding Polish citizenship had been deported as undesirable by the Bavarian Government. Still earlier, on April 23, 1918, Polish Jews who were unskilled laborers and who had sought entry into Germany’s eastern provinces were banned by the Prussian Interior Ministry on the ground that they were not interested in work but immigration, and that they were morally unreliable as well as physically unclean, carrying typhus to Germany. Armed with such conceptualizations, the Nazi regime in Poland was less considerate and more drastic than in Germany itself. Typically, no concessions were made to Polish Jews who had been veterans of the German or Austro-Hungarian armies in the First World War. There was little hesitation to produce housing densities for Polish Jews that were far higher than those for German Jews, or to lower food rations for Jews in Poland below those allowed for Jews in Germany. Moreover, in Poland, unlike Germany, there was no need for precautions whenever anti-Jewish measures could have painful repercussions for the non-Jewish population. There was no imperative to be mindful of the welfare of Poles.'' Here you go. ] (]) 10:49, 19 June 2023 (UTC) |
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::::Thanks for posting this. Nevertheless, it does not fix all of my concern about verification. Neither Hilberg nor the other source cited say that Polish Jews generally had a lower status than other eastern Jews; according to the quote, it was only true "for some time" (when?), a qualification missing in your text. By 1941 it was clearly who were considered "worst". (] · ]) ''']''' 01:40, 20 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::''A second factor was the German perception of Polish Jewry. These Jews were at the bottom for some time. '' ] (]) 07:53, 20 June 2023 (UTC) |
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== Risk of denunciation == |
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https://wpolityce.pl/historia/391371-to-zascianki-endeckie-i-onr-owskie-uratowaly-najwiecej-zydow-paradoksy-grabowskiego-i-engelking In some areas of GG there were nationalistic zaścianeks (poor szlachta villages) and peasant villages. The zaścianeks saved more Jews than villages. Unfortunately many Jews ignored the difference. ] (]) 07:54, 23 April 2018 (UTC) |
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The article says: "Many Jews tried to escape, but surviving in hiding was very difficult due to factors such as the lack of money to pay helpers and the risk of denunciation." Is that really how it's called - denunciation? I'm having trouble thinking of an alternate but it just doesn't seem right to be using this without qualification. ] (]) 20:33, 2 November 2023 (UTC) |
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== Use of Ewa Kurek as a source == |
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The removal of a source (while retaining the text sourced to a different source) was . To begin with iUniverse is a self-publishing company, which would preclude using this source in most situations - however, surprisingly, this is not the most troubling aspect here. The author Ewa Kurek - while she does have a PhD from the Catholic University of Lublin, she is not particularly well published nor cited (note - there is a better published microbiologist with the same name - - so if you go scholar - you need to filter out all the life sciences hits) - nor does it seem does she hold a significant academic post (as of 2006 - - she held a lecturing position in "Higher School of Skills in Kielce" (which seems to mainly do weekend studies - per ). Moving a bit onwards, it seems she has - and it seems she has been called out on it by - not only the Jewish community, but it would seem also Polish government officials (yup - the current government). AP leads off with {{tq|One, Polish author Ewa Kurek, has claimed that Jews had fun in the ghettos during the German occupation of Poland during World War II}} when describing her, and notes a response by the Polish government {{tq|"Andrzej Pawluszek, an adviser to Poland's prime minister, said Wednesday that the award was never a government initiative, but authorities acted to stop an event that would have been divisive."}}. per - {{tq|"“Deeper research” reveals that Kurek says Jewish perfidy is intrinsic to Jewish law and communal organization."}} (not so deep research - you might see this in the video of her speaking above (which I found prior to this article - containing - {{tq|“Jews behave like a of lions in a threatening situation,” Kurek says in a YouTube video. “Lions are said to throw the weakest ones to death, to save the rest. And this is the norm among Jews. We Christians, since the beginning of … time, we have one principle: In the situation of a threat, the strong protect the vulnerable. If someone tells you about a Judeo-Christian civilization, then there is no such thing because this law excludes our civilization.”}}. Some have noted some subtle aspects to her discourse {{tq|“Kurek is more subtle than David Irving,” Holocaust scholar Berel Lang told the Forward. “She doesn’t deny the genocide but argues rather that the Jews were complicit with the Nazis in organizing the wartime ghetto system.” }}. |
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In short - we should definitely not be using her as a source in Misplaced Pages for WWII history.] (]) 12:19, 25 April 2018 (UTC) |
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==Attribution== |
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===Note=== |
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Text copied from ] to ]. See former article's history for a list of contributors. <span style="text-shadow:#396 0.2em 0.2em 0.5em; class=texhtml">] (])</span> 16:04, 1 December 2023 (UTC) |
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'''The above ] is a multiple copy-paste by User:Icewhiz first added to ] on 25 April 2018, with no relevancy to this article content.''' ''']''' ] 15:33, 25 April 2018 (UTC) |
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{{Holocaust Poland}} |
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: I have engaged in cleanup of Kurek (thankfully - the red flags around this as a source are quite obvious - and this was used in very few articles). The relevance for this article, as I pointed out in a also above - was use of Kurek as source in this article. The paragraph source to her has another supporting reference, so removing this questionable source does not affect this article's text.] (]) 15:41, 25 April 2018 (UTC) |
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::Icewhiz you copy/pasting same mass wall of text all over. Here !!! ] (]) 06:48, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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There is a repetition in the text of "Resettlement plans". "At this point, efforts to concentrate Jews in a compact territory were abandoned". <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:33, 11 January 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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== Use of Mark Paul as a source == |
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I've removed some information sourced to Mark Paul, which was self-published on-line and via PEFINA. This (note that this affected approx. 2 sentences of text). Per ] self-published sources are not an acceptable sources generally. Mark Paul (bio details unavailable - it is possible this is pseudo-name or composite) has been publishing "response tracts" to notable works (e.g. Neighbors by Gross, Hunt for the Jews by Grabowski, There once was a world: A 900-Year Chronicle of the Shtetl of Eishyshok by Eliach, etc.) under the of the Canadian Polish Congress. These works are hardly cited by reliable sources (in google scholar - one of them has 1 cite, if you search via books - you get a bit more hits - but some of the citing books themselves are not reliable (e.g. self-published)). Also at issue is that the online PDFs/Words are updated (they are not static) - and page numbers are liable to change. It is actually quite hard to find RSes covering Mark Paul, however per ] in , {{tq| Ironically, even a cursory examination of The Story of Two Shtetls reveals that Mark Paul and the other authors in this generally anti-Jewish tract rely almost overwhelmingly on Polish secondary sources-rather than archival research-to discount the "Jewish version" of the events described. In other words and without explanation, Polish histories of the Holocaust are taken as the gospel truth, while Jewish sources and testimonies are mostly treated as complete falsehoods}}.] (]) 14:14, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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== Shouldn't Majdanek Be Included As Well? == |
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===Note 2=== |
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At least 78,000 Jews were killed there. |
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'''The above ] is a multiple <s>copy-paste</s> entry by User:Icewhiz first added to ] on 25 April 2018, with no relevancy to this article content.''' |
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:Source? ] (]) 09:38, 15 September 2024 (UTC) |
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* The argument is not about who said what. – It is yet another attempt at trying to hide whatever inconvenient facts there might be from the history of Polish-Jewish relations by User:Icewhiz who's been pushing his POV in a number of articles for months. ''']''' ] 14:59, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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*: Actually - not a single word was copied from ]. The source, rather simply, fails as ]ed.] (]) 15:04, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:Yes, the same 'meme' was just rewritten by User:Icewhiz to mean exactly the same thing with the use of slightly different words. I repeat, his intentions are quite obvious throughout. Please look at his edit wars, and the AN/I reports. There's no end to it. ''']''' ] 15:36, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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: ] |
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: Claims made in the ''Hunt for the Jews'' by Grabowski (which User:Icewhiz is POV-pushing hard in mostly pathetic edit wars) have never been confirmed for accuracy by any reputable historian of the Holocaust whatsoever. Some authors mention his (never reviewed) work in their 'Notes', that's all. Grabowski however, is a new darling of Haaretz. Icewhiz is single-handedly trying to make him into something he isn't by ]. ''']''' ] 15:36, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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:: Grabowski (who has been covered in RS, and reviewed in peer reviewed journals, as well as being cited), but who to the best of my knowledge has not cited or mentioned Mark Paul - has no relevance on whether Mark Paul, writing in ]ed books, is ].] (]) 16:21, 26 April 2018 (UTC) |
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For what it's worth, it seems most books about the Holocaust list these victims as Soviet Jews, for example:
I think these sources substantiate my concern that Reichskommissariat Ostland and other areas east of Bialystok and the General Governorate are most often not considered part of the Holocaust in Poland. (t · c) buidhe 23:35, 10 June 2023 (UTC)
The article says: "Many Jews tried to escape, but surviving in hiding was very difficult due to factors such as the lack of money to pay helpers and the risk of denunciation." Is that really how it's called - denunciation? I'm having trouble thinking of an alternate but it just doesn't seem right to be using this without qualification. Ben Azura (talk) 20:33, 2 November 2023 (UTC)
There is a repetition in the text of "Resettlement plans". "At this point, efforts to concentrate Jews in a compact territory were abandoned". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.242.10.158 (talk) 01:33, 11 January 2024 (UTC)
At least 78,000 Jews were killed there.