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Polish-Jewish relations : ウィキペディア英語版
Jewish-Polish history (1989–present)

With the end of Communism in Poland following the Revolutions of 1989, Jewish cultural, social, and religious life has been undergoing a revival. Many historical issues related to the Holocaust and the long period of Soviet domination in the countrysuppressed by the Communist censorshiphave been reevaluated and publicly discussed leading to better understanding and visible improvement in Polish-Jewish relations.
== Jewish-Polish current events ==
(詳細はMassacre in Jedwabne, the Koniuchy Massacre, the Polish-Jewish wartime as well as postwar relations in general,〔("Zapluty karzeł reakcji, czyli lekcja nienawiści." - Telewizja Polska SA )〕 Stalinist reign of terror and the March 1968 events.〔Andrzej Friszke, "(The March 1968 Protest Movement in Light of Ministry of Interior Reports to the Party Leadership )," Intermarium, Volume 1, Number 1, 1997; translated from Polish. Original published in Wiez (March 1994).〕 Many negative stereotypes originating from the cold-war literature on the subject have been challenged.〔Joshua D. Zimmerman, ( "The Polish Underground Home Army (AK) and the Jews: What Survivor Memoirs and Testimonies Reveal" ) Yeshiva University〕 The Rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust suppressed by the Soviet-backed regime in an attempt to discredit the Polish resistance movements as reactionary has also been reasserted.〔
In 1993 the Union of Jewish Religious Communities in Poland (ZGWŻ) was established with the aim of organizing the religious and cultural life of the members of the Jewish communities in Poland. It helps the descendants of the Holocaust survivors in a variety of legal matters (communal as well as personal) such as, in the process of recovery and restoration of property once owned by the Jewish Kehilla (קהלה) and nationalized in communist Poland. Jewish religious practise has also been helped financially with grants from the Ronald Lauder Foundation. The Polish Jewish community employs steadily two rabbis, runs a network of Jewish schools and summer camps, and sustains several Jewish periodicals and book series.
Academic Jewish studies programs were established at Warsaw University and the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. Kraków became home to the Judaica Foundation,〔( ''Judaica.pl'' homepage. Programs. )〕 which has sponsored a wide range of cultural and educational programs on Jewish themes for a predominantly Polish audience.
Poland was the first Communist Bloc country to recognize Israel in 1986 again, and restore full relations in 1990. Government relations between Poland and Israel are steadily improving, resulting in the mutual visits of presidents and the ministers of foreign affairs. The Polish government will finance the construction of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw.〔( ''Jewishmuseum.org.pl'' homepage. )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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