4.5 • 670 Ratings
🗓️ 11 June 2018
⏱️ 4 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey, history lovers. I'm Mike Rosenwald with Retropod, a show about the past, rediscovered. |
0:06.9 | Wars never really end. There are the scars, both physical and psychological, |
0:11.8 | and there is the matter of blame. Who caused what? Who is to blame? |
0:18.4 | Earlier this year, Polish lawmakers advanced a bill that would make it a crime to blame Poland |
0:23.6 | for the Nazi death camps and other German atrocities committed within the country during World War II. |
0:29.6 | The bill sparked an outcry from historians in the Israeli government |
0:33.6 | that Poland was whitewashing history. |
0:36.6 | And many critics used just one word as evidence. |
0:42.3 | Yedvobni. Here's what they mean. |
0:47.5 | In the summer of 1941, the small eastern village of Yedvobni was occupied, as was all of Poland, by a contingent of German |
0:56.0 | police. On a blistering July day, a group of Polish men from and around the town began rounding |
1:02.8 | up Jewish male residents. They forced the Jews, including the local rabbi, to pull down the statue |
1:08.9 | of Lenin that was left over from the Soviet occupation |
1:12.1 | of the region. Then, with the Germans looking on, the Jews were taken to a barn and clubbed and |
1:18.3 | stabbed to death by their fellow townsmen. The carnage, historians say, didn't end there. |
1:25.4 | The raids widened as the day wore on. More and more Jews of all ages were |
1:29.8 | packed in the barn. With a crowd of townspeople and German police looking on, the structure |
1:35.2 | was set on fire. Of those basic facts, there is little dispute. About everything else, there has been a raging debate. |
1:47.6 | The most serious controversy has centered on raw questions of complicity versus compulsion. |
1:53.8 | Were the locals of Vyadne compelled to kill or were they instigators of a mass murder? |
2:00.0 | Poland was under brutal Nazi control at the time. |
2:02.9 | Auschwitz, 300 miles to the south, |
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