The new Polish Education and Science Minister Professor Przemysław Czarnek of the ruling Law and Justice party, who was appointed as a result of a recent Cabinet reshuffle, last year called for the removal of a memorial for Jews killed by Poles during the Holocaust, writesThe Times of Israel.
Created by artist Dorota Nieznalska, the memorial represented a pile of charred logs arranged in the shape of a burning stake, with signs of places where Poles had killed Jews during and after the Holocaust.
Polish art historian and curator Tomasz Kitlinski had commissioned the work for the Open City Festival in Lublin.
“This is an anti-Polish scandal, for I do not know whose money paid for it. Why does the president allow this type of slander and anti-Polish action to happen here in the castle, where Polish heroes died for the independence of our homeland?” Czarnek, then the governor of Lublin, said in an interview for the news site Strajk.eu.
Memorialising the victims of the Holocaust has been a touchy subject in the country.
The artist who created the monument said she was “not surprised” that a government official had called for the removal of her work.
“In Poland, there has been an official ban on criticising historical memory for a long time… In this case, of course, it was a denial of the fact that the Poles pogromed the Jewish community during or just after World War II,” said Nieznalska in an email cited byArtnet News.
The artwork reportedly came down after the festival ended on 11 October 2019.