US 'regret' not enough for 'Polish death camp' gaffe, says Poland
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                  US 'regret' not enough for 'Polish death camp' gaffe, says Poland

                  US 'regret' not enough for 'Polish death camp' gaffe, says Poland

                  31.05.2012, Holocaust

                  Poland insisted Wednesday the US express more than just regret over President Barack Obama's erroneous description of a Nazi Holocaust site as a "Polish death camp", words Warsaw termed hurtful.
                  Obama on Tuesday labeled a World War II Nazi German facility used to process Jews for extermination as a "Polish death camp." The White House later said the president misspoke and expressed "regret".
                  The linguistic faux pas overshadowed Obama's posthumous award of the highest US civilian honour, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, to Jan Karski, a Polish underground officer who provided the Allies with early eyewitness accounts of Nazi Germany's genocide against European Jews.
                  Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Wednesday Obama's words had hurt all Poles and he expected more from Washington than just regret.
                  "I am convinced that our American friends can today allow themselves a stronger reaction than a simple expression of regret from the White House spokesman -- a reaction more inclined to eliminate once and for all these kinds of errors," Tusk told reporters in Warsaw.
                  "Today, this is a problem for the reputation of the United States," the Prime Minister said.
                  Members of Poland's Jewish community -- including the country's Chief Rabbi Michael Schudrich -- said in a statement that: "We expect President Barack Obama to personally correct his words."
                  Poland's President Bronislaw Komorowski said meanwhile he had sent a letter to Obama "counting on (...) cooperation in correcting this unfortunate error" which "I am certain in no way reflects the thoughts or views of our American friend."
                  Poland's anti-communist icon Lech Walesa meanwhile termed Obama's error a "golden occasion" to set the historical record straight.
                  Between 1939 and 1945, nearly six million Polish citizens perished under Nazi Germany's brutal World War II occupation of their country.
                  More than half of Poland's victims were of Jewish origin and they, in turn, accounted for half of the six million European Jews who perished during the Holocaust. Many were killed in death camps set up by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland -- including the most notorious, Auschwitz-Birkenau.
                  Poland's government keenly watches the global media for descriptions of former Nazi German death camps as "Polish" because it says the term -- even if used simply as a geographical indicator -- can give the impression that Poland bore responsibility for Nazi Germany's World War II genocide.
                  Although located in Poland, Auschwitz for example was set up and run entirely by German dictator Adolf Hitler's occupying forces from 1940 to 1945.
                  While most of the camp's 1.1 million victims were Jews deported from other German-occupied nations in Europe, 300,000 were Polish Jews.
                  Until 1942, the camp was primarily a prison and killing centre for non-Jewish Poles, such as resistance members.
                  An estimated 75,000 died there, out of around 2.6 million non-Jewish Poles who perished under Nazi occupation. Many were resistance fighters like Karski.
                  Karski, who was a clandestine officer of the Polish government-in-exile in London, witnessed scenes of starvation and death after infiltrating Warsaw's Jewish Ghetto. Dressed as a Ukrainian guard, he also went to a Nazi transit camp near Warsaw where he saw Jews beaten and stabbed and loaded into trains treated with quicklime to be taken to the gas chambers.
                  Karski took his eye witness testimony to wartime US president Franklin Roosevelt. He later became a professor of history at Georgetown University and died in Washington aged 86 in 2000.

                  EJP