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Attack Made On
Warsaw Synagogue
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88
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1991
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Rome (JTA) — An attack
by six drunken teen-agers
on a Warsaw synagogue last
week has increased anxiety
in Poland over the spread of
anti-Semitic propaganda,
especially its use in the cur-
rent election campaign.
Maximilian Sznepf, a
member of the Jewish com-
munity staff housed in the
synagogue building, was
badly beaten when he and
another staff member, Pawel
Wildstein, confronted the
cursing, bottle-hurling
youths.
Mr. Sznepf, in his mid-70s,
was hospitalized with a
broken nose.
Details of the incident
were telephoned to the Jew-
ish Telegraphic Agency from
Warsaw by Stanislaw Kra-
jewski, Polish represent-
ative of the American Jew-
ish Congress.
He said the teen-agers
smashed bottles against the
synagogue doors and
shouted anti-SeMitic threats
such as, "There will be an-
other Hitler for you."
In the ensuing scuffle, two
men from the synagogue
seized one of the youths and
locked him in an office until
the police arrived. The police
eventually picked up three
more of the assailants, who
were 17 or 18 years of age.
Mr. Krajewski, who is also
a member of the newly form-
ed Presidential Council for
Polish-Jewish Relations,
said it was coincidental that
on the day of the attack the
council, which speaks in the
name of President Lech
Walesa, issued a strongly
worded appeal against anti-
Semitism in the current elec-
toral campaign.
The attack on the syn-
agogue, reported in the
leading Polish newspaper,
Gazeta Wyborcza, seems to
have been an isolated inci-
dent rather than part of an
organized anti-Jewish cam-
paign, Krajewski said, ad-
ding, however, that this was
not certain.
"I think there is need for a
public statement by the
police authorities," he said.
"Incidents like these may
not be very important in
themselves, but they do ex-
pose an atmosphere that can
become thicker, and action is
needed to prevent them," he
said.
In New York, the Anti-
Defamation League called
on President Walesa, the
Polish government and the
Catholic Church to "publicly
condemn" the anti-Semitic
attack in Warsaw.
"This blatant act of anti-
Semitism must not be
minimized as a youthful
prank," ADL National Di-
rector Abraham Foxman
said.
During last year's election
campaign, Mr. Walesa was
accused of using anti-
Semitic innuendo in his
campaign for the presidency.
He later apologized and per-
sonally denounced anti-
Semitism.
His Council on Polish-
Jewish Relations noted
"with concern the use of an-
ti-Semitic slogans" in the
current campaign.
"Although these occur-
rences are marginal, we ap-
peal to Polish society to de-
nounce and actively oppose
such shameful practices," its
statement said.
It was released two days
after Maciej Giertych, leader
of an extreme right-wing,
anti-Semitic nationalist par-
(
It was coincidental
that on the day of
the attack the
Presidential
Council for Polish-
Jewish Relations
issued a strongly
worded appeal
against anti-
Semitism.
ty, charged in a television
broadcast that Polish na-
tionalists were oppressed by
Jewish Bolsheviks and that
there was a Jewish-German
conspiracy to blame the
Holocaust on Poland and ab-
solve Germany.
In July, Gazeta Wyborcza,
which is the newspaper of
the Solidarity movement,
published an interview with
another anti- Semitic leader,
Boleslaw Tejkowski. Mr. Te-
jkowski, whose group is
called the Polish National
Organization, claimed that
Solidarity and the whole
Polish government are en-
tirely composed of Jews. He
made other comments that
mirrored those of Mr. Gier-
tych.
The newspaper article de-
scribed a reported attack by
skinheads on a girl who
looked like she was Jewish,
saying the assailants were <
linked to Mr. Tejkowski's
group.
There was a subsequent
skinhead attack on Poland's