Polish prosecutors yesterday opened a libel probe against a U.S. historian after he claimed Poles killed more Jews than Germans during World War II, the AFP (Agence France-Presse) website reports today (October 16, 2015).
Last month, German newspaper Die Welt ran an article by the Polish-born Princeton University professor Jan T. Gross in which he sought to explain Poland's wariness of accepting Syrian migrants streaming into Europe by referring to anti-Semitism during World War II.
"The Poles, for example, were indeed rightfully proud of their society's resistance against the Nazis, but in fact did kill more Jews than Germans during the war," wrote the 68-year-old Jewish historian.
The Warsaw prosecutor's office has since received more than 100 complaints from individuals and organizations saying they found Gross's claim offensive, according to office spokesman Przemyslaw Nowak. Nowak told public television that the prosecutor's office was acting under a paragraph of the criminal code that "provides that any person who publicly insults the Polish nation is punishable by up to three years in prison."
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