Poland's deputy culture minister backed away on Monday from an academic's proposal to build a so-called "Polocaust" museum for Polish victims of the Nazis, at a time when Warsaw is facing international pressure over its new law imposing jail terms for suggesting Polish complicity in the Holocaust.
Writer and academic Marek Kochan coined the term "Polocaust" this month to suggest that Poles were targets of Nazi crimes similar to Jews, and said a museum should quickly be built to commemorate them.
Last week, Deputy Culture Minister Jaroslaw Sellin backed the proposal.
However, the idea drew criticism, including from the dean of the university where Kochan teaches, and on Monday Sellin rolled it back, saying the idea would antagonize Jews.
"It is a complete misunderstanding," Sellin told the daily Rzeczpospolita when asked if he wanted the museum to be built.
"Using the concept of 'Polocaust' in a way I understand it would hurt Jewish sensitivity and unnecessarily provoke more tension between our nations. The Polocaust museum will not be built," he said.
Poland's nationalist ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS) says the new law, which imposes jail sentences of up to three years for those who suggest Poland was complicit in Nazi crimes, is necessary to protect the honor of the nation. Israel and the United States have spoken out forcefully against the Holocaust law, which they say could criminalize truthful scholarship about the role some Poles played in German crimes. Opponents accuse the PiS of politicising World War II to build a nationalist sense of grievance among the population.
More than 90% of the 3.3 million Jews living in pre-war Poland were murdered by the Nazis during their occupation of the country, accounting for about half of all Jews killed in the Holocaust. Jews from other parts of Europe were sent to be murdered at death camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau and Treblinka, built and operated by Germans in Poland.
The Nazis also killed 1.9 million non-Jewish Polish citizens, although there was never a plan to exterminate all of them, as there was with Jews.
Sellin said the new law will not be used until the Constitutional Tribunal determines whether it is compatible with the constitution.
The head of the Constitutional Tribunal, Julia Przylebska, was appointed by the PiS. The European Union accuses Poland's ruling party of breaching the rule of law to impose control over the judiciary.
Many Poles believe their nation behaved honorably for the most part during the Holocaust. But research published since 1989 has sparked a painful debate about responsibility and reconciliation.
A 2000-2004 inquiry by Poland's State Institute of National Remembrance found that on July 10, 1941, Nazi occupiers and local inhabitants colluded in a massacre of at least 340 Jews at Jedwabne. Some victims were burned alive after being locked inside a barn.
The revelation disturbed many Poles' belief that their country was fundamentally a victim during a war in which a fifth of the nation perished. Some Poles still refuse to acknowledge the findings.