Tzipi Livni, one of the leaders of the opposition Zionist Union faction in the Israeli parliament, told Sputnik that Morawiecki's remarks were intolerable.
"The idea of comparing the victims and those that [murdered] them during the Holocaust, and during the period of the Second World War, is unacceptable," the opposition leader said.
The Israeli lawmaker's indignation was shared by Pinchas Goldschmidt, spiritual leader of the Moscow Choral Synagogue and head of the rabbinical court in the Commonwealth of Independent States, who told RT that the Polish prime minister's remarks were "words which undermine."
Goldschmidt stressed that calling Jews perpetrators of the Holocaust is "unacceptable to any person who knows history, who knows Europe, and wants a better future. We did not expect a Polish prime minister to say such things."
The senior rabbi noted that unfortunately, "when politicians issue statements, there is usually a political need to issue those statements, and there's definitely a certain segment of the Polish population which feel the same way."
"This is a problem not only for us, but I think it is a problem for Poland," Goldschmidt said.
Prime Minister Morawiecki attracted the ire of Jews around the world Saturday with his remarks at the Munich Security Conference, where in a defense of Poland's new law against referring to Nazi concentration camps in Poland as 'Polish death camps', he asserted that in addition to German perpetrators of the Holocaust, there were also Polish, Jewish, Russian and Ukrainian perpetrators.
"Prime Minister @MorawieckiM laid and lit a candle at the gravesite of soldiers of the Holy Cross Mountains Brigade of the National Armed Forces."