The New
European Fascists
By Chris
Hedges
July 25,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Truthdig"
-
WARSAW,
Poland—Jaroslaw Kurski and Piotr Stasinski embody
the hope that once was Poland. They struggled
against the Communist regime for years in the
underground press and as
Solidarity members. They built Gazeta Wyborcza,
now one of the most influential newspapers in the
country, after the 1989 fall of communism. They
helped usher in a period of democracy and open
debate, one that included cultural space for
historians such as Jan Gross, a Polish-born American
who courageously confronted the taboo topic of
Polish complicity in the Nazi extermination of
nearly all of Poland’s 3 million Jews.
And then
neoliberalism, imposed by global capitalism and
international banks, began to spread its poison.
Legions of unemployed or underemployed were cast
adrift. Two million Poles, many of them young people
desperate for jobs, have left to work abroad.
Governmental austerity programs devastated cultural
institutions, including public schools, the arts and
public broadcasting. And finally, following a
familiar death spiral, the October 2015 elections
brought to power the nationalists and demagogues of
the right-wing Law and Justice Party (PiS). There is
no left-wing party represented in the parliament.
Not much of
Poland’s promise remains. PiS is rapidly rolling
back constitutional rights. It blocks state media
coverage of the fading political opposition,
especially the Committee for the Defense of
Democracy (KOD), which has held a series of protest
demonstrations. PiS shamelessly uses the airwaves
and the schools for rabid nationalist propaganda.
The public broadcasting system—in which the party
purged more than 100 staff members—twisted President
Barack Obama’s
recent criticism of the Polish government’s
assault on the judiciary into praise for Polish
democracy. And the ruling party has forced state
institutions to cancel subscriptions to Gazeta
Wyborcza and pressured distributors throughout the
country not to display or sell copies of the
newspaper.
“There is
no longer genuine parliamentary debate,” Stasinski
said when I met with him and Kurski at the Gazeta
Wyborcza offices in Warsaw. “There are no longer
checks and balances of power. The parliamentary
system is dysfunctional. The Constitutional Court
and judiciary are paralyzed. New laws passed by the
parliament cannot be challenged or changed. The
government is supposed to publish sentences of the
Constitutional Court in The Journal of Laws
[Dziennik Ustaw] for them to become legally
effective. This is required by the Constitution. But
the government, by not printing them, paralyzes the
Constitutional Court, which has been reduced to
announcing its sentences on the internet without any
legal effect. It is a very dangerous time.”
“We operate
under two systems of law,” said Kurski. “One is
constitutional and legal. The other is
unconstitutional and illegal. The problem is that
the illegal and unconstitutional system runs the
country.”
Jaroslaw
Kaczynski, the founder and head of the ruling party,
governs Poland like a private fiefdom. Prime
Minister Beata Szydlo and President Andrzej Duda are
political puppets. Kaczynski, reclusive and morbid,
is referred to with fear or reverence as “the
Chairman.” His words, and his obsessions, are law.
And it is
not only Poland that is in trouble. Europe,
especially EU countries on the fringes of the union,
is devolving into proto-fascism. The Hungarian
strongman Prime Minister Viktor Orban has destroyed
his country’s democracy. Neofascist groups are
gaining strength in France, the United Kingdom,
Austria, Denmark, Sweden and Greece.
These
movements are rabidly xenophobic, racist,
Islamophobic and homophobic, and they demonize
immigrants and brand internal dissent as treason.
When they take control they rely on ruthless
internal security and surveillance systems—Poland
has established 11 intelligence agencies—to crush
dissent. They seek their identity in a terrifying
new nationalism, often, as in Poland, coupled with a
right-wing Catholicism. They preach hatred of the
outsider and glorification of obedient and “true”
patriots. This lurch to the right will be augmented
in Poland later this year with the establishment of
an
armed militia of more than 30,000 whose loyalty,
it seems certain, will be to the ruling party.
“If you are
a Pole, you should be Catholic,” said Stasinski.
“I’m not. So for some, I’m not a Pole.”
Poland,
like Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, has
rejected the European Union’s call for its nations
to accept refugees fleeing the chaos in the Middle
East. The ruling party in Poland employs rhetoric to
describe Muslim immigrants that echoes prewar Polish
anti-Semitism. Immigrants are condemned as diseased,
painted as rapists and excoriated for supposedly
having barbaric religious practices. When Gross, who
teaches at Princeton University, decried the hate
campaign against immigrants and made the links with
anti-Semitism, reminding Poles that they killed more
Jews than they killed Germans during the war,
PiS began legal proceedings to challenge Gross’
assertions and called for his Polish Order of Merit
to be revoked.
“It’s the
same right-wing populist melody as in the United
States,” said Stasinski. “Isolationism becomes
appealing. Maybe there is something rotten in human
nature. Maybe we are selfish people who don’t care
about the other. Maybe this story about how we are
Christian and altruistic is rubbish.
“There is a
fear that grows from ignorance,” he said. “These
parties manufacture and strengthen this resentment
against those they allege are privileged and the
powerful, as well as the European Union. They say
these forces can’t tell us what to do. They say the
nation-state should organize societal living, not
global institutions. They say things are out of
control. They say there is no real democracy. This
leads to the mental and physical militarization of
the society. The demagogues promise security. You
are safe with us. We care about you. We care about
your family. Chauvinism defines public discourse. We
are a proud people. We are a proud nation. We don’t
accept that other nations can humiliate us. The
government devoted a hundred million
zlotys to create a special foundation to defend
Poland’s good name.”
Populist
ideologies sweeping across Europe call for the
redistribution of “power, prosperity and dignity,”
all of which have been taken from the working class
by neoliberalism, Kurski said. “And we saw what such
ideologies did to Europe in the 1930s. They led to
war.”
The Warsaw
Rising Museum, dedicated to the failed 1944 armed
uprising by the Home Army (AK) against the Nazis
that left 200,000 Poles dead and saw the center of
Warsaw razed, is the cornerstone of the rewriting of
history and the state hagiography of the nation’s
martyrdom. It was opened in 2005 as part of what is
called the “repolonization” of the country.
Schoolchildren and youth groups are bused from
across the country for tours. The museum does not
acknowledge Polish anti-Semitic crimes.
The museum
was in part a reaction to
Gross’ book “Neighbors,” published in 2000 in
Poland. It told the story of Catholic Poles in the
town of Jedwabne who on July 10, 1941, murdered
their Jewish neighbors. The number of dead,
including women and children, slaughtered with
clubs, knives and axes or burned alive, was in the
hundreds. And there were dozens of similar massacres
of Jews by their Polish neighbors. The houses of the
murdered Jews were plundered immediately. For
decades, the killings were officially blamed on the
German occupiers. Now, the public airing of these
crimes has shattered the myth in Poland that Poles
were solely heroic victims of the war. The
nationalists have attacked the veracity of the
accounts and called their publication an
unforgiveable humiliation.
In the
museum I walked past display cases of weapons and
uniforms spread out over three dimly lit floors. I
listened to the recorded sound of gunfire and
watched the video interviews with former soldiers
and other participants. The symbols of Catholicism
and the Polish state were fused in display after
display. There was a room dedicated to child martyrs
wearing oversized helmets and clutching weapons.
There were replicas of graves of the fallen. And
there was a video of Pope John Paul II, who was
Polish, likening the failed Warsaw uprising to the
crucifixion of Jesus.
Only on the
third floor, tucked away from the main exhibits, was
there an oblique reference to Poland’s sinister
past. It was a video interview with Marek Edelman,
the deputy commander of the 1943 Warsaw ghetto
uprising, who also fought in the 1944 uprising of
Warsaw. He said he and other Jewish survivors from
the ghetto were forced to fight alongside fringe
elements of the Communist armed resistance during
the 1944 uprising because the AK, now sanctified in
the museum, did not accept Jews and refused to give
them weapons. He mentioned a Jewish fighter who
approached the AK and was shot dead. He said he went
into hiding after the AK’s surrender to the Germans
because the Polish commanders refused to guarantee
that he and the other Jews would not be turned over
to the Nazis. This, he said with stunning
understatement, was “unfortunate.”
“Jewish
citizens were treated by Catholic Poles as foreign
elements, if not outright enemies,” said Elzbieta
Janicka, a cultural anthropologist and author at the
Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of
Sciences. “Polish majority stances and behaviors
proved to be an important factor within the German
machinery of extermination. Sealing it, they made
the extermination complete and irrevocable.”
But this
truth about Polish history has been reburied with
the rise of Polish right-wing populism. And the
binary view of the world, split between the noble
Poles and the evil Nazis, is being revived today.
“There is
no such thing as human nature,” Janicka said to me.
“Human nature is culture. It is a product of
education. When you construct an educational system
and a public discourse where there is an almost
total lack of critical, analytical thinking, where
you refuse to strengthen individual human beings
capable of autonomous judgment, human beings aware
of their experiences and feelings, responsible for
their deeds and relationship to the other, you
destroy what is fundamental to an open society. It
becomes exclusively about collective image, meaning
collective narcissism. Liberal pluralism from this
perspective is viewed as moral relativism or
nihilism. There is a clash in Poland between the
formal and legal frame of liberal democracy and the
majority dominant culture.
“This began
before the current government. Catholicism—with its
structural fixation on the Jews—is ingrained into
the dominant model of the Polish national identity
which did not undergo a laicization and citizen
redefinition. Lech Walesa in the 1991 presidential
campaign suggested his opponent [Tadeucz] Mazowiecki
could be a Jew. Mazowiecki’s electoral staff made
public baptismal certificates of his family lineage
going back to the 16th century. People began to ask:
‘What about before the 16th century?’ In the final
debate of the 2015 presidential campaign the first
question the future winner asked his opponent
concerned the official state acknowledgment of the
Polish perpetration of the Jedwabne massacre.”
The
nationalist myth is appealing to most Poles, not
only those humiliated and marginalized by
neoliberalism. It is used and manipulated by Polish
proto-fascists in an attempt to compensate for the
loss of social cohesion.
“There are
almost no young people in KOD [the opposition
Committee for the Defense of Democracy],” Janicka
said. “The young people are mostly on the other
side. They are nationalists. It is a direct
consequence of the ethnic-religious perspective
characteristic of the education they received in the
independent Poland.”
Right-wing
populism, with its heavy doses of self-adulation,
requires an assault on historical memory. All that
does not fit with the heroic narrative is purged.
The minister of justice in 2000 halted exhumation at
the site where Poles massacred Jews in Jedwabne.
Anna Zalewska, the minister of education, who is
overhauling school curricula, recently questioned
whether Poles were involved in the Jedwabne
massacre. She and the Polish defense minister,
Antoni Macierewicz, have also questioned whether
Poles were involved in the July 1946
Kielce pogrom, in which more than 40 Jews were
accused of ritual murder and killed by Catholic
residents of the city.
Overt
anti-Semitism is publicly unacceptable in Poland,
much as overt racism is unacceptable in the United
States. But, as in the U.S., there are ways to speak
in code.
“There is
always a test of submission,” Janicka said.
“Everyone who feels that he or she is a subtenant in
this culture, that he or she does not have all of
the rights to belonging, has to pass this test of
submission. The test of submission means you have to
say, ‘I’m normal. I’m a Polish patriot. I respect
John Paul II and the Catholic Church. I’m against
communism. I apologize for my parents who were
Communists,’ and so forth. It doesn’t pay respect to
a pluralist culture and society. It delegitimizes
cultural critique as well as alternative social,
economic projects.”
Over two
days, I walked with Janicka through the streets of
Warsaw to look at the handful of remnants of the
Warsaw ghetto. Monuments to non-Jews, including one
to the Polish soldiers who fought with the British
army at Monte Cassino in Italy in World War II, are
at many of the most important Jewish sites within
the ghetto. The Monte Cassino monument, put up in
1999, is a headless Nike adorned with images that
include Christian crosses and the Virgin Mary.
A crucifix
is directly in front of the old tenement house at 20
Chlodna St., once the home of
Adam Czerniakow. Czerniakow, head of the Warsaw
ghetto Judenrat, killed himself on July 23, 1942,
after the Germans demanded that he be involved in
the mass extermination of the Jews of the ghetto.
“This
[crucifix] is not an exception,” Janicka said as we
stood under it. “The fields of Jewish ashes in
Birkenau are dominated by the cross of the
church set in one of the former camp buildings.
There is a crucifix in the Plenary Hall of the
Polish parliament. It is an illegitimate
appropriation and a reminder about who is the host,
‘who is the guest and who is the enemy,’ as the
serving Polish president has said in one of his
recent speeches. As if the country does not have
real problems it should face.”
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more
than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years. |