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Calling Auschwitz a ‘Polish death camp’ could result in jail time, as Poland tries to emphasise that Nazis were in charge

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The entrance to the former Nazi German death camp of Birkenau is lit by the morning sun, in Oswiecim, Poland. Photo: AO
Associated Press

The Polish government has approved a new bill that foresees prison terms of up to three years for anyone who uses phrases like “Polish death camps” to refer to Auschwitz and other camps that Nazi Germany operated in occupied Poland during World War II.

The bill aims to deal with a problem the Polish government has faced for years: foreign media outlets — and even US President Barack Obama — referring to the Nazi camps as “Polish.”

The Justice Ministry said the Cabinet of Prime Minister Beata Szydlo approved the legislation during a weekly session on Tuesday. It is expected to pass easily in the parliament, where the nationalistic right-wing ruling Law and Justice party enjoys a majority.

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Poles fear that as the war grows more distant younger generations across the world will incorrectly assume that Poles had a role in running Auschwitz, Treblinka and other German death camps, a bitter association for a nation that was occupied and subjected to brutality that left some 5.5 million Polish citizens dead during the war, about 3 million Jews and 2.5 million non-Jews.
Polish scouts wait for the arrival of Pope Francis in Brzezinka part of the former Nazi concentration camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau in Brzezinka, Poland, on July 29. Photo: AFP
Polish scouts wait for the arrival of Pope Francis in Brzezinka part of the former Nazi concentration camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau in Brzezinka, Poland, on July 29. Photo: AFP

“It wasn’t our mothers, nor our fathers, who are responsible for the crimes of the Holocaust, which were committed by German and Nazi criminals on occupied Polish territory,” Zbignew Ziobro, the justice minister, said Tuesday. “Our responsibility is to defend the truth and dignity of the Polish state and the Polish nation, as well as our fathers, our mothers and our grandparents.”

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Many Poles support such legislation and feel that it differs little from laws that some countries, including Poland and Germany, have that make Holocaust denial a crime.

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