The Counter-Memorial at Jedwabne
Eighty-five years after Polish neighbors burned their Jewish neighbors alive, right-wing demonstrators gathered at the site to challenge the historical record.
The memorial at Jedwabne stands on the site where, in July 1941, Polish locals herded hundreds of their Jewish neighbors into a barn and set it ablaze. On the eighty-fifth anniversary of that massacre, right-wing extremists organized a counter-protest in the shadow of that same monument. Their presence was not a disruption of the ceremony. It was a denial of the ground itself. [1]
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