Polish death camps
Polish foreign minister formalizes request for German WW2 reparations
Some six million Poles, including three million Polish Jews were killed during World War Two
Is writing poetry barbaric after the Holocaust? - book review
Why I have no regrets about visiting Poland
MEET THE AMBASSADOR: Marek Magierowski, of Poland
On the linguistics of Polish death camps and other things antisemitic
I’m on the side of free speech and informed discussion.
Work with our Polish friends – while confronting our Polish enemies
Center field
Israel to work with Poland to ‘defend and reveal’ truth about Holocaust
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said, 'Above all, future generations must internalize the lessons of the Holocaust.'
Polish government cancels scheduled Bennett visit over Holocaust remarks
“The blood of Polish Jews cries from the ground, and no law will silence it. The Government of Poland cancelled my visit, because I mentioned the crimes of its people. I am honored.”
Bennett to visit Poland to relay Israel’s opposition to Polish bill
“I came to tell the truth in the place where the truth happened and it is not dependent on any law.”
What do Holocaust survivors think of ‘Polish death camps’?
Whitewashing history “can be done more easily when our generation is not here, so it’s very important that we have to fight it.”
Pressure mounts on Poland to back away from Holocaust bill
Antisemitism has resurfaced amid the debate over a bill that would criminalize suggesting complicity on the part of the Polish nation or state in Nazi Germany's crimes.
Yad Vashem: Polish law 'jeopardizes free and open discussion' about Holocaust
Israel's Holocaust remembrance center said the law is "liable to blur historial truths."
Israeli politicians slam Poland for passing controversial Holocaust law
The Polish parliament on Thursday passed a law that makes suggesting Polish complicity or participation in the Holocaust punishable by prison time or a fine.
Polish Senate passes law criminalizing suggesting complicity in Holocaust
"We have to send a clear signal to the world that we won't allow for Poland to continue being insulted," Patryk Jaki, a deputy justice minister, said.