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Copyright 2001 British Broadcasting Corporation
March 29, 2001, Thursday
LENGTH: 552 words
HEADLINE: Polish historians question credibility of witnesses cited in 1941 pogrom book
SOURCE: PAP news agency, Warsaw, in Polish 1118 gmt 29 Mar 01
BODY:
Two
Warsaw, 29 March:
Gross wrote in his book that "the first and most precise account on this
subject is the testimony of Wasersztajn, dating from 1945." Meanwhile,
historian Prof Tomasz Strzembosz has told PAP that Szmul Wasersztajn
could not have seen the murder of Jews in Jedwabne on 10 July 1941, because on
that day he was in hiding at a distance of 500 metres from the place of
the atrocity. As Strzembosz stresses, in its justification of the verdict in
the Jedwabne case after the war a court stated that "Wasersztajn was not a
direct witness" of this event.
Strzembosz cites the same court files upon the basis of which Gross
wrote his book. (as the author of "Neighbours" writes, "we find successive
descriptions of the events in the files of the Lomza northeastern Poland
trials of May 1949 and November 1953..." PAP ellipses ).
According to Prof Gross, other not credible witnesses cited by Gross are
Abram Boruszczak and Eljasz Gradowski. Gross writes: "Eljasz Gradowski,
describing the participation of particular people in the pogrom, states
that they looted Jewish property..." and "Abram Boruszczak states in this
context..." PAP ellipses .
Meanwhile, Strzembosz told PAP, Adam Boruszczak did not live in Jedwabne at
all and was questioned in this case after the war upon the instruction of
the Lomza court. Eljasz Gradowski, on the other hand, was sentenced for
theft in 1940 (during the Soviet occupation) and deported into the interior
of the USSR. He returned in 1945 and, as Prof Strzembosz adds, "had nothing
to do with the Jedwabne case".
Tomasz Strzembosz reported that in the hearing of the case before the
Lomza court in 1949 neither Boruszczak nor Gradowski were taken into account
as witnesses by the court since "they could, at most, have heard about the
crime ".
The Thursday 29 March edition of the Zycie daily, citing the opinion of
the historian Piotr Gontarczyk, also writes that "in writing his
Neighbours', Gross based himself on testimonies and accounts that were not credible."
"He chose those which matched what he wanted," Gontarczyk told Zycie.
An investigation into the case of the mass-murder of the Jews of
Jedwabne, who were burnt to death in a barn on 10 July 1941, is being conducted by
the National Remembrance Institute IPN . The motive for the crime is said to
have been revenge for "the participation of Jews in Stalinist repressions".
Jedwabne was a part of those territories of the Polish Second Republic
that were occupied by the USSR between 17 September 1939 and the German
aggression on the USSR on 22 June 1941. During this period, NKVD terror
touched many Polish citizens of various nationalities.
BBC, BBC, 0000-00-00
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