Submitted by Geek-Haven888 t3_10kkrsa in history
ATNinja t1_j5somyw wrote
Reply to comment by FlipaFlapa in A firefighter's 1943 photos of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising have been found by Geek-Haven888
Poland was extremely anti semitic in the 40s and refused to allow their deported jews back to their homes from Siberia and the camps after ww2.
According to wikipedia, there were 3000 jews in Poland in 2010, hardly a sizeable population.
QikPlays t1_j5sos5b wrote
Yes, because a lot of them died during the holocaust…
ATNinja t1_j5spgtx wrote
And the ones that survived were not welcome back, because Poland didn't like their jews either.
There are more jews today in Germany, Austria, Italy, Denmark, Belarus, Ukraine, Romania, hungary...
Vuko__ t1_j5sptwl wrote
"And the ones that survived were not welcome back, because Poland" was under soviet occupation for the next ~50 years
QikPlays t1_j5sqb8t wrote
Poland had a population of around 3.5 million Jews before WW2, of those around 90% were wiped out by the Nazis. If it was as antisemitic as you seem to think it was, that population would have never grown so large.
Now unfortunately, right after one antisemitic regime was toppled, a second replaced it. The cult of Stalin, the Soviets. Communist Poland was a puppet state that was forced into carrying out Stalin’s policies, a lot of which were incredibly anti semitic. However that regime also eventually fell, leaving modern Poland to govern itself.
There isn’t a huge population of Jews anymore because of the tragedies during the 20th century, a lot of people don’t immigrate to Poland Jewish or not, so it’s not surprising the population hasn’t risen. People are far more likely to leave Poland instead
[deleted] t1_j5swg26 wrote
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HiddenLordGhost t1_j5ssvx5 wrote
Okay, so lol - no. It was not.
We had this little thing that can amount to pretty much occupation by USSR called PRL, that next to no one will defend on the ground we "decided for ourselves".
Before war it had one of the biggest amount of Jewish citizenry in the world, and a lot of our bigger cities had pretty sizeable influence left behind by some. Łódź is one for example, lol.
[deleted] t1_j5sot7z wrote
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bobrobor t1_j5tsw6f wrote
After WW2 those decisions were made by the Soviet Union not the Polish “government.”
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