Tablet Logo.
#Jedwabne5
  • Arts & Letters section icon
    The History and Future of Holocaust Research

    How newly opened archives, a wider European scope, transnational narratives, and integrated big data are changing our understanding of the Shoah

    byWendy Lower
  • Members of the Jewish community hold a protest against Britain's opposition Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn and anti-semitism in the Labour party, outside the British Houses of Parliament in central London on March 26, 2018.
    Members of the Jewish community hold a protest against Britain's opposition Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn and anti-semitism in the Labour party, outside the British Houses of Parliament in central London on March 26, 2018.
    News section icon
    In Britain and Poland, Anti-Semitism’s Ugly History Repeats Itself

    Jew-hatred is a form of derangement that, if unchecked, will destroy the societies that practice it

    byMelanie Phillips
  • Monika Weiss, Shrouds-Scenes, 2012, installation of 30 color photographs, 75 x 120 in. © Monika Weiss. Courtesy of the Artist and Monika Fabijanska Contemporary Art
    Monika Weiss, Shrouds-Scenes, 2012, installation of 30 color photographs, 75 x 120 in. © Monika Weiss. Courtesy of the Artist and Monika Fabijanska Contemporary Art
    Arts & Letters section icon
    The Lamentation Project

    Polish artist Monika Weiss’ ‘post-memory’ project in Zielona Góra asks who owns past Jewish suffering

    byFrances Brent
  • Arts & Letters section icon
    Jan Gross’ Order of Merit

    The groundbreaking scholar of Polish anti-Semitism is caught up in a toxic new nationalism that seeks to edit shameful persecution of Jews out of history

    byAnna Bikont
  • A man uses a pressure hose to clean the monument with Nazi swastikas painted over it in Jedwabne, September 1, 2011. Vandals daubed Nazi swastikas and SS signs on a monument in the town of Jedwabne, eastern Poland, which commemorates the mass killing of Jews burned alive by their Polish neighbors during World War II.
    A man uses a pressure hose to clean the monument with Nazi swastikas painted over it in Jedwabne, September 1, 2011. Vandals daubed Nazi swastikas and SS signs on a monument in the town of Jedwabne, eastern Poland, which commemorates the mass killing of Jews burned alive by their Polish neighbors during World War II.
    Arts & Letters section icon
    The Day We Burned Our Neighbors Alive

    Polish journalist Anna Bikont faces history in Jedwabne in her masterful new ‘The Crime and the Silence’

    byDavid Mikics
Terms of Service
Privacy Policy
Subscribe to our newsletter
Donate to Tablet
Follow us:
Twitter Logo.
Facebook Logo.
Instagram Logo.