1968 forty years after
Title1968 forty years after
Call number943.8004924/0045
Object number04950
Place of publicationOxford, England
PublisherThe Littman Library of Jewish civilization, American Association for Polish-Jewish Studies.
Year of publication
2009
Physical descriptionxiv,531p.,index
MaterialBook
Series titlePolin : studies in Polish Jewry, Vol. 21
ISBN9781904113362
Description
In the mid-1960s, public opinion in Poland turned against the Gomulka regime for a variety of reasons. In an attempt to regain public support and divert attention from the real problems, Gomulka adopted an antisemitic stance. On 19 March 1968 he delivered a speech to party activists in which he divided Jews into three categories: 'patriotic Jews', 'Zionists', and those who were neither Jews nor Poles but 'cosmopolitans', who should 'avoid those fields of work where the affirmation of nationality is indispensable'. In consequence, nearly 15,000 Jews--a very large part of Poland's Jewish community--left for Israel, western Europe, and North America, effectively ending Jewish life in the country for over a decade.