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Book on Polish Holocaust 'exploitation' causes uproar

March 3, 2011 12:33
Jan Gross’s book details how some Polish peasants dug up mass graves in search of gold

By

Nissan Tzur

1 min read

A controversial new book which argues that some Poles gained financially from the plight of Jews during the Holocaust has sparked outrage in Poland and abroad.

Golden Harvest, the latest work by Jan Gross, a Polish-American historian and sociologist, makes the case that some rural Poles benefited from the Holocaust in various ways, including plundering mass graves and ferreting out Jews in exchange for rewards.

The book's cover photograph, taken near Treblinka, appears to show Polish peasants digging up human remains in a search for gold or other treasuries that the Nazis may have missed.

Last October, speaking to an audience at Yad Vashem, Mr Gross said: "The crops scattered in front of the group are skulls and bones. In this photograph we see peasants standing on top of a mound of ashes. These are the human ashes of 800,000 Jews who perished in gas chambers in Treblinka between July 1942 and October 1943."