Poland Ceremony Honors Jews Who Fled Anti-Semitic Push of 1968
A ceremony at a Warsaw train station commemorated the 20,000 Jews who were forced to leave Poland following the anti-Semitic campaign of March 1968.
Golda Tencer, director of the Jewish Theatre in Warsaw, who organized Tuesday’s event at the Gdansk Station, said at the ceremony that the crisis in 1968 was her personal tragedy.
“A tragedy of those who stayed and those who left. It should be mentioned in the schools. When we ask today about the generation of March ’68, the young people do not know what we are talking about.”
March 1968 saw a student and intellectual uprising against the Polish government led by the Polish People’s Republic party. The subsequent crackdown by security forces suppressed student strikes, and led to an anti-Semitic campaign throughout the country led by General Mieczysław Moczar, the then-minister of internal affairs. Jews were fired from their jobs and Jewish professors were dismissed from universities. Some 20,000 Jews left Poland, mainly to Israel and Scandinavia in 1968 and 1969.The protests coincided with the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia.
During the ceremony, participants placed flowers next to a plaque commemorating the Jews that left Poland during those years.
Elzbieta Karpinska, who now lives in Grenoble, France, left Poland on Jan. 3, 1969 when she was 22 and thought she would never return.
“I cried on the train after leaving the station to the border,” Karpinska recalled. “It has changed our lives. In Israel, everything was strange to me, surprising.”
Michal Sobelman, who now is a spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Warsaw, left Sosnowiec in June 1969.
“I left with a heavy heart because those two years, from June 1967, were the hardest in my life,” he said. “I’ve always been Polish, but here my Polishness was seriously questioned by the authorities.”
“After 1968 until the end of the 80s, many people were convinced that this is the end of the history of Polish Jews. But this is different. In our exhibition the last items are not from 1968 or 1969 but from the last year or two,” Dariusz Stola, director of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, told JTA.
This is a moment of great uncertainty. Here’s what you can do about it.
We hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, we’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s independent Jewish news this Passover. All donations are being matched by the Forward Board - up to $100,000.
This is a moment of great uncertainty for the news media, for the Jewish people, and for our sacred democracy. It is a time of confusion and declining trust in public institutions. An era in which we need humans to report facts, conduct investigations that hold power to account, tell stories that matter and share honest discourse on all that divides us.
With no paywall or subscriptions, the Forward is entirely supported by readers like you. Every dollar you give this Passover is invested in the future of the Forward — and telling the American Jewish story fully and fairly.
The Forward doesn’t rely on funding from institutions like governments or your local Jewish federation. There are thousands of readers like you who give us $18 or $36 or $100 each month or year.
