Thursday, April 25, 2013
Poll reveals anti-Semitism still rages in Poland
A survey conducted in recent weeks among high school students in Warsaw, Poland,  presented disturbing results on the extent of hatred towards Jews, with a  shocking 44 percent saying they would not like to have a Jewish  neighbor.
One thousand two hundred and fifty students, aged 17-18, were  surveyed by a Homo Homini Institute of Public Opinion Research poll commissioned  by the Jewish community in Poland. Of these, 40% said they would not like to  have a Jewish classmate.
The survey found 60% of the respondents said  they would not like to have a Jewish partner, while 45% said they "would not be  happy" if they had a Jewish relative.
When asked about the Holocaust, the  Polish students did not hide their anti-Semitic opinions and showed poor  knowledge of Jewish history in Poland.
Most of the students believed that  the percentage of Jews living in Warsaw before World War II was 18%, while the  actual percentage of Warsaw's Jews was 30%. The survey also showed that 44%  believed that "Poles and Jews suffered equally during the  Holocaust."
Moreover, 27% said that the Jews suffered more and 24.7%  claimed that the suffering of the Poles was greater.
However, most of  students who took part in the survey, 55.8%, correctly named Mordechai  Anielewicz as the leader of the Jewish uprising.
The poll added that  68.3% knew the exact date of the uprising, while 23% thought "the uprising ended  with a victory of the rebels."
Joanna Korzeniewska, a spokesperson for  the Jewish community of Poland, said the results of the study will "help us in  planning social and educational activities in the future. As it now turns out,  we need them even more than we thought before."
http://www.jpost.com/Jewish-World/Jewish-News/Poll-reveals-anti-Semitism-still-rages-in-Poland-310458
             
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