Attack on Polish museum holds lesson for U.S. museums [View all]
By Michelle Goldberg / The New York Times
Before Polands illiberal Law and Justice party came to power in 2015, the country had been deep in a reckoning over its role in the Holocaust. In 2000, historian Jan Gross published an explosive book, Neighbors, about a 1941 massacre in the Nazi-occupied Polish town of Jedwabne, where Poles enthusiastically tortured and murdered up to 1,600 Jews. The book punctured a national myth in which Poles were only either heroes or victims in World War II.
After Neighbors came out, Polands president, Aleksander Kwasniewski, went to Jedwabne for a ceremony broadcast on Polish television. For this crime, we should beg the souls of the dead and their families for forgiveness, he said.
The notion of Polish historical guilt made many conservative Poles furious. Law and Justice capitalized on their anger, running against what its leader called the pedagogy of shame. After the partys 2015 victory, one of its first targets was the Museum of the Second World War, then being built in Gdansk.
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Today in America, this history has an eerie familiarity. Five years ago, many institutions in the United States tried, with varying degrees of seriousness and skill, to come to terms with our countrys legacy of racism. A backlash to this reckoning helped propel Donald Trump back into the White House, where he has taken a whole-of-government approach to wiping out the idea that America has anything to apologize for. As part of this campaign, the administration seeks to force our national museums to conform to its triumphalist version of history.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/goldberg-attack-on-polish-museum-holds-lesson-for-u-s-museums/