A/HRC/43/50/Add.1
reported being called “traitors” or “enemies of the nation” simply for questioning the role
of some Poles in past events.
40.
Beyond the direct impact on the work of historians and curators, the amendments
may also have a considerable impact on the teaching of history and on the work of persons
and organizations promoting reconciliation with Jews. Moreover, at the time of the Special
Rapporteur’s visit, debates over the amendments had already contributed, as indicated by
survey data, to an increase in hate speech, in particular hate speech of an antisemitic nature,
of an increasingly open and public nature. The Special Rapporteur deplores this
development and stresses the need for effective official responses.
41.
More must be done to increase the international recognition for and understanding of
the severe suffering of Poles of all religious backgrounds during the Second World War, a
reality importantly demonstrated in the Warsaw Rising Museum. There is an array of
institutions and monuments in Poland seeking to display a complex vision of history and
past human rights abuses and atrocities, such as the European Solidarity Centre in Gdańsk,
the POLIN Museum in Warsaw and the Auschwitz-Birkenau former German Nazi
concentration and extermination camp, which must be able to continue their work
unimpeded. Constructively addressing these difficult chapters of history and integrating
them in school history curricula, in open debates and in museums, is essential for
developing critical thinking and understanding, shaping a tolerant and inclusive society and
guaranteeing cultural rights and many other human rights, such as academic freedom, the
right to education and the right to freedom of conscience.
C.
Identity and nationalism
42.
Like many countries today, Poland is currently experiencing political and cultural
polarization. Efforts must be made to transcend such divides, and cultural and artistic
initiatives can play a positive role in this regard. Polish identity does not belong to any one
group or any one opinion bloc alone.
43.
The Special Rapporteur was disturbed to hear that the term “anti-Polish” was being
applied to Poles expressing views that differed from those of the Government or ruling
party, including through art and culture, and by the suggestion that there is only one way of
being Polish, one monolithic Polish identity based on one interpretation of one religion and
one way of thinking. This does not reflect lived cultural realities. The diversity of
perspectives, approaches and views – from avant-garde theatre directors to traditional
clergy – and the vibrant debates the Special Rapporteur found in Poland are sources of
cultural richness.
44.
One exemplary aspect of the Polish Constitution is its explicit recognition that “both
those who believe in God as the source of truth, justice, good and beauty, as well as those
not sharing such faith but respecting those universal values as arising from other sources”
are “equal in rights and obligations towards the common good” (preamble). It stresses that
Polish culture is “rooted in the Christian heritage of the Nation and in universal human
values”. Turning away from such a pluralist commitment now means rejecting the values
that have motivated and underpinned the great Polish human rights movements of the past,
which have inspired the world.
45.
The Special Rapporteur recognizes that many different governments may try to
promote cultural expressions that reflect their particular worldviews, and that the current
government claims to be aiming to include “conservative” voices that it alleges were not
heard in the past. However, present efforts in Poland to defund, sideline and silence cultural
dissidence and views at odds with the historical and cultural vision of the current
government, represent a kind of cultural engineering that seeks to alter the public face of
Poland and reshape and simplify the complex contours of its difficult history. The Special
Rapporteur fears this may give rise to further violations of cultural rights. Additionally,
official discourse is often at odds with the lived experience, beliefs and values of wide
sectors of the population.
46.
The impact of language in debates about identity must also be carefully considered.
Inclusive language should be used to refer to all inhabitants of Poland so as not to reinforce
dynamics of othering and ideas that within the population of Poland some are “us” and
some are “them”, or that minorities are not Polish.
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