The Real Palestinian Refugee Problem, and Mahmoud Abbas’s Indifference
Fatah thugs beat protestors in Lebanon.
April 19, 2021
Poles who saved Jews feared retribution, while those who turned them in were exonerated.
In the ten years following the end of World War II, special Polish courts tried over 30,000 suspected collaborators with the Nazis. Because of the timing of the decree creating these courts, these proceedings are known as the August trials, which is also the title of a new book about them by Andrew Kornbluth. Konstanty Gebert writes in his review:
Fatah thugs beat protestors in Lebanon.
The new ambassador parrots Russian and Chinese propaganda.
And some thoughts from an Israeli conservative.
Poles who saved Jews feared retribution, while those who turned them in were exonerated.
The emergentes.
In the ten years following the end of World War II, special Polish courts tried over 30,000 suspected collaborators with the Nazis. Because of the timing of the decree creating these courts, these proceedings are known as the August trials, which is also the title of a new book about them by Andrew Kornbluth. Konstanty Gebert writes in his review:
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