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{{Short description|Polish historian}} | |||
'''Ewa Kurek''' (born 1951) is a Polish historian, screenwriter, filmmaker, and author of historical books. She is a researcher of Polish-Jewish relations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/bookdetail.aspx?bookid=SKU-000573942|title=Polish-Jewish Relations 1939-1945|website=www.iuniverse.com|access-date=2018-05-18}}</ref><ref name="haaretz201607"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://multibook.pl/pl/c/Ewa-Kurek/323|title=Największa księgarnia po Prawej stronie, Księgarnia Wolnorynkowa, Książki prawicowe|website=multibook.pl|language=pl|access-date=2018-05-18}}</ref> | |||
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==Biography== | |||
'''Ewa Kurek''' (also '''Ewa Kurek-Lesik'''; born 1951) is a Polish historian specializing in ] during ]. She has been associated with the far-right, and her revisionist views regarding ] have been widely categorized as indicative of antisemitism and Holocaust denial.<ref>{{Citation |last=Michlic |first=Joanna Beata |title=The return of the image of the Jew as Poland's threatening other: Polish national identity and antisemitism in the third decade after the end of communism in 1989 |date=2020 |url=https://www.elgaronline.com/view/edcoll/9781789903430/9781789903430.00046.xml |work=Research Handbook on Nationalism |pages=406–426 |publisher=Edward Elgar Publishing |language=en |doi=10.4337/9781789903447.00046 |isbn=978-1-78990-344-7 |s2cid=225035829 |access-date=2023-02-15}}</ref><ref name="Rosen20180503" /><ref name="Finkelstein20180416" /><ref>Archéologie des violences de masse et politique historique en Pologne depuis la fin du XXe siècle : le cas de Jedwabne », dans Cahiers d’Histoire Culturelle, n° 31 Usages de l’archéologie en Europe médiane (XIXe-XXIe siècle, textes réunis sous la direction de Daniel Baric), juin 2020.</ref> | |||
⚫ | |||
==Education and career== | |||
⚫ | ==Views== | ||
⚫ | From 1971 to 1977, Ewa Kurek studied history at the ], gaining a master's degree in 1979 and later a Ph.D. from the ] on the rescue of Jews by Polish nuns under the supervision of ].<ref name=":0"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180601070838/http://wyborcza.pl/1,76842,3558299.html|date=2018-06-01}}, ], Paweł P. Reszka & Jan Cywiński, 20 August 2006</ref><ref name="Rosen20180503" /> She edited the underground ''NSZZ Solidarność FSC Information Bulletin in ]'' and collaborated with the underground ''Spotkania'' and with Polish and American scholars and press. She has been a lecturer at the {{interlanguage link|Humanities-Economy Academy in Łódź|pl|Akademia Humanistyczno-Ekonomiczna w Łodzi}} and at the {{interlanguage link|Higher School of Learning in Kielce|pl|Wyższa Szkoła Umiejętności im. Stanisława Staszica w Kielcach}}.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://ewakurek.pl/o-mnie/|title=O mnie|date=2013-12-16|work=Ewa Kurek|access-date=16 May 2018|language=pl-PL|archive-date=2018-05-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180516175438/https://ewakurek.pl/o-mnie/|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
] writing in ], an American-Jewish magazine, argues that according to Kurek, Jews lie about Polish conduct in WWII in order to smear Poland and hide their own duplicity. According to Rosen, Kurek writings imply that Poland's urbanized Jews were Nazi collaborators during the Holocaust.<ref name="Tablet201805">, Tablet, Armin Rosen, 3 May 2018</ref> According to Rosen, Kurek works contain damning claims like that "Jews had fun in the ghettos" during the Nazi occupation of Poland.<ref>, Boston Globe (AP), 11 April 2018</ref> | |||
== Works == | |||
In 2006, Kurek advanced an interpretation, described as "outlandish" by ], of ghetto development in German-occupied Poland in a book she published on the ]. According to Kurek ghettos "were essentially autonomous Jewish provinces built in the years 1939-42 by Polish Jews with the approval of the German occupation authorities", and the Jews "for the first time in over 2,000 years built their own framework of Jewish sovereignty". Kurek has also said that the situation of ethnic Poles, outside the ghetto, was far worse than the situation of the Jews who were held in confinement in the ghettos.<ref>, edited by Roni Stauber, essay by Laurence Weinbaum, Routledge, 2010</ref> | |||
=== Cursed Soldiers === | |||
In 2016 she circulated a petition calling for the exhumation of the victims of the ].<ref name="haaretz201607">, Haaretz (JTA), 19 July 2016</ref> | |||
In 1995, Kurek published ''Zaporczycy, 1943-1949'' about the "]". The family of one of the subjects objected to the accuracy of his alleged links with the ], and filed a suit — consequently, the second edition dropped pertinent fragments.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== |
=== Pole Nuns and Jew Children === | ||
In 1997, Kurek published an English translation of her dissertation thesis —''Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945'' — from ]; it carried an introduction by ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lupack |first=Barbara Tepa |date=1998 |title=Review of Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/25779035 |url-status=live |journal=The Polish Review |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=107–110 |issn=0032-2970 |jstor=25779035 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210603021415/https://www.jstor.org/stable/25779035 |archive-date=2021-06-03 |access-date=2019-06-05}}</ref> ], found her account "compelling and historically significant" but took issue with her analysis; Kurek "oversimplified both the nuns' attitudes towards their Jewish charges and the Polish Jews' attitudes towards their own impending doom."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lupack |first=Barbara Tepa |date=1998 |title=Review of Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945 |journal=The Polish Review |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=107–110 |issn=0032-2970 |jstor=25779035}}</ref> | |||
She has been accused of downplaying the suffering of Jews in World War II,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.newsweek.pl/polska/ewa-kurek-o-zydach-i-holokauscie-w-tvp-info,artykuly,423582,1.html|title=TVP promuje jako ekspertkę osobę, która twierdzi, że w gettach żyło się normalnie|date=2018-02-20|work=Newsweek.pl|access-date=2018-05-16|language=pl-PL}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://wyborcza.pl/1,76842,3558299.html|title=Kurek: Getta zbudowali Żydzi|last=|first=|date=2006-08-20|website=wyborcza.pl|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=2018-05-16}}</ref> anti-semitic views, and described as 'divisive'.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.timesofisrael.com/polish-officials-prevent-award-to-author-accused-of-anti-semitism/|title=Polish officials prevent award to author accused of anti-Semitism|last=|first=|date=2018-04-11|work=Times of Israel|access-date=2018-05-16|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
In 2001, she expanded on her dissertation and published ''Dzieci żydowskie w klasztorach. Udział żeńskich zgromadzeń zakonnych w akcji ratowania dzieci żydowskich w Polsce w latach 1939–1945'' (Jewish Children in Convents. The Participation of Nuns' Congregations in the Rescue Operation of Jewish Children in Poland Between 1939 and 1945).<ref name=":1" /> ], a historian specializing in Polish-Jewish history and the Holocaust, noted Kurek's chapter on the postwar recovery of the children to offer a "rather biased perspective colored by anti-Jewish prejudices" — she implied that the Jewish children would have been "better off" had they been left in the hands of Polish convents and families, and blamed Jewish organizations and individuals for traumatic changes in the children's lives, rather than the war and the genocidal destruction of Jewish families.<ref name=":1" /> Her assumptions were questionable from historical as well as moral points of view.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Michlic |first=Joanna B. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CJMxAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA81 |title=Holocaust Survivors: Resettlement, Memories, Identities |publisher=Berghahn Books |year=2011 |isbn=9780857452481 |editor1-last=Ofer |editor1-first=Dalia |pages=81–82 n. 24 |chapter=Rebuilding Shattered Lives: Some Vignettes of Jewish Children's Lives in Early Postwar Poland |editor2-last=Ouzan |editor2-first=Françoise S. |editor3-last=Baumel-Schwartz |editor3-first=Judy Tydor |author-link=Joanna Michlic}}</ref> | |||
According to philosopher ] "Kurek is more subtle than ], She doesn’t deny the genocide but argues rather that the Jews were complicit with the Nazis in organizing the wartime ghetto system."<ref name="Forward201804">, Forward, 16 April 2018</ref> | |||
=== Polish-Jewish Relationship === | |||
According to ], editor-in-chief of ], Kurek "is maybe the only legitimate Holocaust scholar to have become an alleged Holocaust revisionist or distorter during a later phase of her career", with ] being a possible precedent, however Irving lacked Kurek's credentials.<ref name="Tablet201805"/> | |||
In 2006, Kurek submitted her ] dissertation titled ''Poza granicą solidarności: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie, 1939–1945'' ("Beyond the Border of Solidarity: Polish-Jewish relations, 1939-1945") to ] but was summarily rejected.<ref name=":0" /> It was published by Kielcke in 2006.<ref name=":2">{{cite journal |year=2007 |title=Michlic, Joanna B. ''The Soviet Occupation of Poland, 1939–41, and the Stereotype of the Anti-Polish and Pro-Soviet Jew'' |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4467778 |journal=Jewish Social Studies |volume=13 |issue=3 |pages=135–176|jstor=4467778 }}</ref> | |||
Michlic finds the work to present Jewish-Polish relations as a conflict between incompatible civilizations.<ref name=":2" /> Kurek's interpretation of ghetto development in German-occupied Poland — where she suggested that ghettos "were essentially autonomous Jewish provinces built ... by Polish Jews with the approval of the German occupation authorities", and that the Jews "for the first time in over 2,000 years built their own framework of sovereignty" — was described as "outlandish" by ]; he found her work as "another troubling development" in the context of a "conservative clerical culture" and rising anti-semitism that followed the 2005 election of ] as president.<ref>{{cite book |last=Weinbaum |first=Laurence |title=Collaboration with the Nazis: Public Discourse After the Holocaust |date=13 September 2010 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-97136-5 |editor1-last=Stauber |editor1-first=Roni |pages=25–43 |chapter=Where the past is never past. Holocaust memory in post-Communist Poland |access-date=5 June 2019 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X_ktCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA38 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220508182316/https://books.google.com/books?id=X_ktCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA38 |archive-date=8 May 2022 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==Selected works== | |||
⚫ | *{{cite book| |
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⚫ | == Views == | ||
⚫ | *{{cite book| |
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In 2016, Kurek circulated a petition calling for exhumation of the victims of the ] — academics agree that the pogrom was committed by local Poles with active support of the Nazi state apparatus but far-right Polish nationalists challenge the involvement of Poles and deny culpability.<ref name="haaretz201607"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180517005514/https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/jedwabne-mayor-calls-for-exhumation-of-jewish-mass-grave-1.5412836 |date=2018-05-17 }}, ''Haaretz'' (JTA), 19 July 2016</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bucholc, Marta |date=2020 |others=Joachim Von Puttkamer, Michal Kopeček, Włodzimierz Borodziej |title=The Polish 'Holocaust Law' revisited: The Devastating Effects of Prejudice-Mongering |url=https://digital.herder-institut.de/publications/frontdoor/index/index/docId/175 |language=en |pages=598 KB |doi=10.25626/0094}}</ref> A couple of years later, in the aftermath of the ], that penalized any public speech which attributes responsibility for the Holocaust to Poland, Kurek expressed elation about the Poles becoming increasingly aware of the abuse perpetrated upon them by the Jews.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kaczmarek |first=Olga |title=The Polish Vernacular Culture: A Comparative Perspective |publisher=Scholar Publishing House Ltd. |year=2021 |isbn=978-83-66849-22-8 |editor-last=Dobrosielski |editor-first=Paweł |location=Warsaw |pages=61 |language=en |chapter=It's Acceptable Now |editor-last2=Napiórkowski |editor-first2=Marcin}}</ref> | |||
*Ewa Kurek (1992) NYU Press. ] ]. | |||
Later, in 2018, across multiple speeches delivered across the ], she accused Poland's urban Jews of collaborating with Nazis during the Holocaust against Hasidic Jews; days later, she absolved native Poles of any responsibility for the ].<ref name="Rosen20180503" /> In March 2020, she claimed that the ] was a weapon used to replace "Western Christian culture" with Jewish culture, and that Western Europe was controlled by "Jewish conglomerates".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hacohen |first1=Hagay |date=31 May 2020 |title=Polish historian Ewa Kurek: Coronavirus is 'Jewfication' of Europe |work=The Jerusalem Post |url=https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/polish-historian-ewa-kurek-coronavirus-is-jewfication-of-europe-629877 |url-status=live |access-date=1 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200601080203/https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/polish-historian-ewa-kurek-coronavirus-is-jewfication-of-europe-629877 |archive-date=1 June 2020}}</ref> | |||
== Reception == | |||
], a historian and head of the Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland at ], finds Kurek to have distorted Jewish-Polish history in a bid to spread hate.<ref name="Rosen20180503" /> According to ], editor-in-chief of '']'', she might be the ''only'' legitimate Holocaust scholar to have become a Holocaust revisionist or distorter later; while ] could be considered as a precedent, he lacked the academic credentials.<ref name="Rosen20180503">{{cite news |last=Rosen |first=Armin |date=3 May 2018 |title=How Ewa Krek, the Favorite Historian of the Polish Far Right, Promotes her Distorted Account of the Holocaust |work=Tablet |url=http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/261051/ewa-kurek-favorite-historian-of-the-polish-far-right |url-status=live |access-date=4 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190829211044/https://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/261051/ewa-kurek-favorite-historian-of-the-polish-far-right |archive-date=29 August 2019}}</ref> However, both Irving and ] emphasize that Kurek is not a denialist in the traditional sense; she doesn't deny the genocide but argues rather that the Jews were complicit with the Nazis.<ref name="Rosen20180503" /> | |||
Aleksandra Hadzelek{{who|date=March 2023}} finds Kurek's scholarship to be a representative example of the nationalist developments in Polish politics that had birthed a vigorous one-dimensional emphasis on Polish help to Jews during the War than a nuanced study of the variety of Polish attitudes; this new wave of scholarship primarily depended on singular personal accounts than archival sources.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Jakubowicz |first1=Andrew |last2=Hądzelek |first2=Aleksandra |date=2013-09-01 |title=The Polish Jews of Shanghai and the Political Sociology of Historical Memory |url=https://doi.org/10.1080/17504902.2013.11087378 |journal=Holocaust Studies |volume=19 |issue=2 |pages=31 |doi=10.1080/17504902.2013.11087378 |s2cid=142908166 |issn=1750-4902}}</ref> ]{{who|date=March 2023}} concurs that Kurek's scholarship exhibit a disingenous cherry-picking of contemporary sources to advocate fringe viewpoints.<ref name="Rosen20180503" /> In 2018, she was scheduled to be awarded by a Polish-American NGO for her work on Jewish history at the Polish consulate in New York; however, following media criticism, including from the ], the award was withdrawn.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://wyborcza.pl/7,75398,23267999,dr-ewa-kurek-bez-nagrody-im-jana-karskiego-organizacja-polonijna.html|title=Dr Ewa Kurek bez Nagrody im. Jana Karskiego. Organizacja polonijna wybierze nowych laureatów|date=13 April 2018|website=wyborcza.pl|language=pl|access-date=7 June 2019|archive-date=5 June 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190605072940/http://wyborcza.pl/7,75398,23267999,dr-ewa-kurek-bez-nagrody-im-jana-karskiego-organizacja-polonijna.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Finkelstein20180416">{{Cite web|last=Finkelstein|first=Barbara|url=https://forward.com/yiddish/398754/why-was-historian-who-blames-jews-for-complicity-with-nazis-considered-for/|title=Why Was Historian Who Blames Jews For Complicity with Nazis Considered For Humanitarian Prize?|work=The Forward|date=16 April 2018|access-date=7 June 2019|archive-date=5 June 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190605063336/https://forward.com/yiddish/398754/why-was-historian-who-blames-jews-for-complicity-with-nazis-considered-for/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
*{{cite book |first=Ewa |last=Kurek |year=1992 |title=The Role of Polish Nuns in the Rescue of Jews, 1939-1945 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=9780814762295}} | |||
⚫ | *{{cite book|first=Ewa |last=Kurek |title=Your Life is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-occupied Poland, 1939-1945|year=1997|publisher=Hippocrene Books|isbn=978-0-7818-0409-7}}, introduction by ]. | ||
*{{cite book |first=Ewa |last=Kurek |title=Poza granicą solidarności: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie, 1939–1945 |publisher=Kielcke |year=2006}} | |||
⚫ | **self-published in English as {{cite book|first=Ewa |last=Kurek |title=Polish-Jewish Relations, 1939-1945: Beyond the Limits of Solidarity |date=2012 |publisher=iUniverse |isbn=978-1-4759-3832-6}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*{{Official website|www.ewakurek.pl}} | |||
* in nauka-polska.pl database | * in nauka-polska.pl database | ||
{{authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kurek, Ewa}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Kurek, Ewa}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:12, 10 April 2023
Polish historian
Ewa Kurek (also Ewa Kurek-Lesik; born 1951) is a Polish historian specializing in Polish-Jewish history during World War II. She has been associated with the far-right, and her revisionist views regarding the Holocaust in Poland have been widely categorized as indicative of antisemitism and Holocaust denial.
Education and career
From 1971 to 1977, Ewa Kurek studied history at the Catholic University of Lublin, gaining a master's degree in 1979 and later a Ph.D. from the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin on the rescue of Jews by Polish nuns under the supervision of Władysław Bartoszewski. She edited the underground NSZZ Solidarność FSC Information Bulletin in Lublin and collaborated with the underground Spotkania and with Polish and American scholars and press. She has been a lecturer at the Humanities-Economy Academy in Łódź [pl] and at the Higher School of Learning in Kielce [pl].
Works
Cursed Soldiers
In 1995, Kurek published Zaporczycy, 1943-1949 about the "cursed soldiers". The family of one of the subjects objected to the accuracy of his alleged links with the communist security apparatus, and filed a suit — consequently, the second edition dropped pertinent fragments.
Pole Nuns and Jew Children
In 1997, Kurek published an English translation of her dissertation thesis —Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945 — from Hippocrene Books; it carried an introduction by Jan Karski. Barbara Tepa Lupack, found her account "compelling and historically significant" but took issue with her analysis; Kurek "oversimplified both the nuns' attitudes towards their Jewish charges and the Polish Jews' attitudes towards their own impending doom."
In 2001, she expanded on her dissertation and published Dzieci żydowskie w klasztorach. Udział żeńskich zgromadzeń zakonnych w akcji ratowania dzieci żydowskich w Polsce w latach 1939–1945 (Jewish Children in Convents. The Participation of Nuns' Congregations in the Rescue Operation of Jewish Children in Poland Between 1939 and 1945). Joanna Michlic, a historian specializing in Polish-Jewish history and the Holocaust, noted Kurek's chapter on the postwar recovery of the children to offer a "rather biased perspective colored by anti-Jewish prejudices" — she implied that the Jewish children would have been "better off" had they been left in the hands of Polish convents and families, and blamed Jewish organizations and individuals for traumatic changes in the children's lives, rather than the war and the genocidal destruction of Jewish families. Her assumptions were questionable from historical as well as moral points of view.
Polish-Jewish Relationship
In 2006, Kurek submitted her habilitation dissertation titled Poza granicą solidarności: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie, 1939–1945 ("Beyond the Border of Solidarity: Polish-Jewish relations, 1939-1945") to John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin but was summarily rejected. It was published by Kielcke in 2006.
Michlic finds the work to present Jewish-Polish relations as a conflict between incompatible civilizations. Kurek's interpretation of ghetto development in German-occupied Poland — where she suggested that ghettos "were essentially autonomous Jewish provinces built ... by Polish Jews with the approval of the German occupation authorities", and that the Jews "for the first time in over 2,000 years built their own framework of sovereignty" — was described as "outlandish" by Laurence Weinbaum; he found her work as "another troubling development" in the context of a "conservative clerical culture" and rising anti-semitism that followed the 2005 election of Lech Kaczyński as president.
Views
In 2016, Kurek circulated a petition calling for exhumation of the victims of the Jedwabne pogrom — academics agree that the pogrom was committed by local Poles with active support of the Nazi state apparatus but far-right Polish nationalists challenge the involvement of Poles and deny culpability. A couple of years later, in the aftermath of the Amendment to the Act on the Institute of National Remembrance, that penalized any public speech which attributes responsibility for the Holocaust to Poland, Kurek expressed elation about the Poles becoming increasingly aware of the abuse perpetrated upon them by the Jews.
Later, in 2018, across multiple speeches delivered across the United States, she accused Poland's urban Jews of collaborating with Nazis during the Holocaust against Hasidic Jews; days later, she absolved native Poles of any responsibility for the purge of Jews in 1968. In March 2020, she claimed that the 2020 coronavirus pandemic in Europe was a weapon used to replace "Western Christian culture" with Jewish culture, and that Western Europe was controlled by "Jewish conglomerates".
Reception
Havi Dreifuss, a historian and head of the Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland at Yad Vashem, finds Kurek to have distorted Jewish-Polish history in a bid to spread hate. According to David Silberklang, editor-in-chief of Yad Vashem Studies, she might be the only legitimate Holocaust scholar to have become a Holocaust revisionist or distorter later; while David Irving could be considered as a precedent, he lacked the academic credentials. However, both Irving and Berel Lang emphasize that Kurek is not a denialist in the traditional sense; she doesn't deny the genocide but argues rather that the Jews were complicit with the Nazis.
Aleksandra Hadzelek finds Kurek's scholarship to be a representative example of the nationalist developments in Polish politics that had birthed a vigorous one-dimensional emphasis on Polish help to Jews during the War than a nuanced study of the variety of Polish attitudes; this new wave of scholarship primarily depended on singular personal accounts than archival sources. Katka Reszke concurs that Kurek's scholarship exhibit a disingenous cherry-picking of contemporary sources to advocate fringe viewpoints. In 2018, she was scheduled to be awarded by a Polish-American NGO for her work on Jewish history at the Polish consulate in New York; however, following media criticism, including from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the award was withdrawn.
Bibliography
- Kurek, Ewa (1992). The Role of Polish Nuns in the Rescue of Jews, 1939-1945. New York University Press. ISBN 9780814762295.
- Kurek, Ewa (1997). Your Life is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-occupied Poland, 1939-1945. Hippocrene Books. ISBN 978-0-7818-0409-7., introduction by Jan Karski.
- Kurek, Ewa (2006). Poza granicą solidarności: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie, 1939–1945. Kielcke.
- self-published in English as Kurek, Ewa (2012). Polish-Jewish Relations, 1939-1945: Beyond the Limits of Solidarity. iUniverse. ISBN 978-1-4759-3832-6.
References
- Michlic, Joanna Beata (2020), "The return of the image of the Jew as Poland's threatening other: Polish national identity and antisemitism in the third decade after the end of communism in 1989", Research Handbook on Nationalism, Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 406–426, doi:10.4337/9781789903447.00046, ISBN 978-1-78990-344-7, S2CID 225035829, retrieved 2023-02-15
- ^ Rosen, Armin (3 May 2018). "How Ewa Krek, the Favorite Historian of the Polish Far Right, Promotes her Distorted Account of the Holocaust". Tablet. Archived from the original on 29 August 2019. Retrieved 4 October 2019.
- ^ Finkelstein, Barbara (16 April 2018). "Why Was Historian Who Blames Jews For Complicity with Nazis Considered For Humanitarian Prize?". The Forward. Archived from the original on 5 June 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
- Archéologie des violences de masse et politique historique en Pologne depuis la fin du XXe siècle : le cas de Jedwabne », dans Cahiers d’Histoire Culturelle, n° 31 Usages de l’archéologie en Europe médiane (XIXe-XXIe siècle, textes réunis sous la direction de Daniel Baric), juin 2020.
- ^ Kurek: Getta zbudowali Żydzi Archived 2018-06-01 at the Wayback Machine, Gazeta Wyborcza, Paweł P. Reszka & Jan Cywiński, 20 August 2006
- "O mnie". Ewa Kurek (in Polish). 2013-12-16. Archived from the original on 2018-05-16. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
- Lupack, Barbara Tepa (1998). "Review of Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945". The Polish Review. 43 (1): 107–110. ISSN 0032-2970. JSTOR 25779035. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2019-06-05.
- Lupack, Barbara Tepa (1998). "Review of Your Life Is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-Occupied Poland, 1939-1945". The Polish Review. 43 (1): 107–110. ISSN 0032-2970. JSTOR 25779035.
- ^ Michlic, Joanna B. (2011). "Rebuilding Shattered Lives: Some Vignettes of Jewish Children's Lives in Early Postwar Poland". In Ofer, Dalia; Ouzan, Françoise S.; Baumel-Schwartz, Judy Tydor (eds.). Holocaust Survivors: Resettlement, Memories, Identities. Berghahn Books. pp. 81–82 n. 24. ISBN 9780857452481.
- ^ "Michlic, Joanna B. The Soviet Occupation of Poland, 1939–41, and the Stereotype of the Anti-Polish and Pro-Soviet Jew". Jewish Social Studies. 13 (3): 135–176. 2007. JSTOR 4467778.
- Weinbaum, Laurence (13 September 2010). "Where the past is never past. Holocaust memory in post-Communist Poland". In Stauber, Roni (ed.). Collaboration with the Nazis: Public Discourse After the Holocaust. Routledge. pp. 25–43. ISBN 978-1-136-97136-5. Archived from the original on 8 May 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
- Polish Mayor Calls for Exhumation of Jewish Mass Grave in Jedwabne Archived 2018-05-17 at the Wayback Machine, Haaretz (JTA), 19 July 2016
- Bucholc, Marta (2020). "The Polish 'Holocaust Law' revisited: The Devastating Effects of Prejudice-Mongering". Joachim Von Puttkamer, Michal Kopeček, Włodzimierz Borodziej: 598 KB. doi:10.25626/0094.
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(help) - Kaczmarek, Olga (2021). "It's Acceptable Now". In Dobrosielski, Paweł; Napiórkowski, Marcin (eds.). The Polish Vernacular Culture: A Comparative Perspective. Warsaw: Scholar Publishing House Ltd. p. 61. ISBN 978-83-66849-22-8.
- Hacohen, Hagay (31 May 2020). "Polish historian Ewa Kurek: Coronavirus is 'Jewfication' of Europe". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 1 June 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- Jakubowicz, Andrew; Hądzelek, Aleksandra (2013-09-01). "The Polish Jews of Shanghai and the Political Sociology of Historical Memory". Holocaust Studies. 19 (2): 31. doi:10.1080/17504902.2013.11087378. ISSN 1750-4902. S2CID 142908166.
- "Dr Ewa Kurek bez Nagrody im. Jana Karskiego. Organizacja polonijna wybierze nowych laureatów". wyborcza.pl (in Polish). 13 April 2018. Archived from the original on 5 June 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
External links
- Official website
- Ewa Kurek-Lesik in nauka-polska.pl database