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David Herman interviews Jan Gross, chronicler of Polish atrocities

Historian remains shocked at events that took place in his native land

June 22, 2012 14:12
Jan T Gross

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

‘I was absolutely stunned. How could antisemitism persist in Poland after the war?” Three times in our conversation, Jan Gross states how he was astonished by a revelation in the course of his work as a historian. First, by the story of how Poles had massacred the Jewish half of the population of Jedwabne, a small town in eastern Poland, in July 1941. This became the subject of his breakthrough book, Neighbours (2000).

It happened again a few years later when he discovered evidence that showed the scale of Polish antisemitism after the Holocaust. This became the subject of his next major book, Fear (2006). Then, in 2008, he saw a photograph in the largest Polish daily newspaper. It showed a group of peasants standing in two rows in the fields around Treblinka.

In front of them is a pile of human skulls and bones. They had found the skulls in the ground while searching for gold fillings and jewellery that had belonged to dead Jews. This is the starting point of his latest book, Golden Harvest, co-written with his wife, about the scale of plunder from Jews during the Holocaust; by the Nazis of course, at every level, but also by Polish civilians, often accompanied by murderous violence.

Gross speaks with the same passion and energy that characterise his writing. His books on Poles, Jews and the Holocaust are enormously powerful, full of statistics and research but also containing desperately moving stories. Together, they have added enormously to our understanding of the Holocaust in Poland.