Looting Robbery Not Only Jews Were Victims Szwajger
![](https://bpeprojekt.home.pl/jews-website/wp-content/uploads/images/Looting_Robbery_Not_Only_Jews_Were_Victims_Szwajger.jpg)
I Remember Nothing More: The Warsaw Children’s Hospital and the Jewish Resistance, by Adina Blady Szwajger. 1992
Not Only Fugitive Jews: Poles, Too, Were Subject to Robbery. Auschwitz Carmelite Convent Irony
The author’s work as a nurse gave way to that of a courier girl during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943. She mentions Schremf, who was Director of the German-run Department of Health of Warsaw. He was sadistic and brutal, and hated both Poles and Jews. (p. 33). To him, at least, there was no dialectic of the prime victimhood of Jews and the lesser victimhood of Poles.
FUGITIVE JEWS WERE NOT THE ONLY ONES BLACKMAILED OR ROBBED. POLES WERE TOO
Poles nowadays get a lot of flak, in Holocaust materials, for sometimes betraying Jews, for stealing from Jews, and for sometimes participating in Nazi-sponsored auctions of recently-murdered Jews.
This is hardly a black and white issue. Szwajger puts the szmalcowniki (blackmailers) and thieves of Jews in the broader context of the overall criminality that had arisen in the Polish population (as a consequence of the brutality of the German occupation). She writes: “I told them honestly that I was afraid. Going home just before the curfew through the dark streets of Powisle wasn’t safe. What I normally carried with me was too valuable to risk its being stolen. You have to remember that that on the streets there roamed, apart from the gendarmes and the extortionists, bands of young men completely corrupted by the war, PREYING ON ANYBODY, NOT JUST US. The words ‘Get out of your coat, Miss’ were not uncommon, and you were rarely able to resist.” (p. 123; Emphasis added).
AN IRONY TO THE MEDIA MESSAGES DURING THE AUSCHWITZ CARMELITE CONVENT CONTROVERSY
We heard all those pronouncements about the Cross being absolutely foreign to Judaism, voiced during the Auschwitz Carmelite Convent controversy. In contrast, Szwajger joined the ranks of Jews who appropriated Christian-suffering themes, in this case in the context of her work as a nurse: “And that this hospital was a Golgotha where the little Jesus of the ghetto was falling under the weight of his cross–the Jewish child, thrice innocent, suffering a thousand tortures.” (p. 43).
To see a series of truncated reviews in a Category click on that Category:
- All reviews
- Anti-Christian Tendencies
- Anti-Polish Trends
- Censorship on Poles and Jews
- Communization of Poland
- Cultural Marxism
- German Guilt Dilution
- Holocaust Industry
- Interwar Polish-Jewish Relations
- Jewish Collaboration
- Jewish Economic Dominance
- Jews Antagonize Poland
- Jews Not Faultless
- Jews' Holocaust Dominates
- Jews' Holocaust Non-Special
- Nazi Crimes and Communist Crimes Were Equal
- Opinion-Forming Anti-Polonism
- Pogrom Mongering
- Poland in World War II
- Polish Jew-Rescue Ingratitude
- Polish Nationalism
- Polish Non-Complicity
- Polish-Ukrainian Relations
- Polokaust
- Premodern Poland
- Recent Polish-Jewish Relations
- The Decadent West
- The Jew as Other
- Understanding Nazi Germany
- Why Jews a "Problem"
- Zydokomuna