Poland marks second world war anniversary
World must not forget, says Polish PM
at dawn ceremony at site of Nazi Germany's opening assault on Poland 70
years ago Poland marks first shots of second world war.
The 70th anniversary of the outbreak of the second world war was
marked with a dawn service on the Baltic coast, close to the site where
the conflict began on September 1, 1939.
In the ceremony at the Westerplatte peninsula, the site of Nazi
Germany opening assault on Poland political and religious leaders spoke
of the struggle against
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September 1939: Polen, Bormann, Hitler and Rommel Picture
courtesy: Wikimedia |
Hitler's forces. It began at 4.45am, the time at which the German
battleship Schleswig-Holstein shelled a tiny Polish military outpost to
spark the beginning of the war, which lasted for nearly six years and
caused the deaths of more than 50 million people.
"Westerplatte is a symbol, a symbol of the heroic fight of the weaker
against the stronger," said the Polish president, Lech Kaczynski. "It is
proof of patriotism and an unbreakable spirit. Glory to the heroes of
those days, glory to the heroes of Westerplatte, glory to all of the
soldiers who fought in world war two against German Nazism, and against
Bolshevik totalitarianism."
The Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, warned of the dangers of
forgetting the war's lessons.
"We meet here to remember who started the war, who the culprit was,
who the executioner in the war was, and who was the victim of this
aggression," Tusk said.
"We meet here to remember this, because we Poles know that without
this memory, honest memory about the truth, about the sources of world
war two, Poland, Europe and the world will not be safe. We remember
because we know well that he who forgets, or he who falsifies history,
and has power or will assume power, will bring unhappiness again, like
70 years ago."
Later in the day, around 20 European leaders and officials including
the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, the Russian prime minister,
Vladimir Putin, his French counterpart, François Fillon, and the British
foreign secretary, David Miliband, will take part in a larger service on
Westerplatte.
Today's meeting takes place amid swirling tensions over who - apart
from Hitler - was responsible for starting the second world war. Over
the summer the Baltic states, led by Lithuania, blamed Hitler and Stalin
equally for the conflict. The claim provoked a furious reaction from
Moscow, with the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, on Sunday
dismissing it as "quite frankly, a flat-out lie".
Russia is today releasing documents from the secret archive of its
foreign SVR intelligence service which are likely to blame Poland.The
Kremlin says that Poland was a Nazi ally and a willing accomplice to
Hitler's partition of Czechoslovakia in 1938.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel holds a candle during a ceremony
marking the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II on
September 1, 2009 at Westerplatte Monument in Gdansk. All pacts
that European states agreed with Nazi Germany in 1934-39 were
“morally unacceptable,” including the 1939 Nazi-Soviet accord,
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said. AFP |
In a letter to Poles published in the Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza
yesterday, Putin struck a conciliatory tone. He described as "immoral"
the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact of August 1939, which saw Hitler and Stalin
carve up eastern Europe under a secret deal.
"Without doubt the Ribbentrop-Molotov pact can be fully condemned,"
Putin wrote. But he also pointed the finger at France and Britain for
signing the Munich agreement in 1938, making a Nazi attack eastwards on
Russia more likely.
While Poland's relations with Russia remain tense, Putin called for
"joint grief and forgiveness" in the hope that "Russian-Polish relations
will sooner or later reach such a high level of true partnership" as
Russian-German ties.
Angela Merkel welcomed her invitation to the events, pointing to it
as a "signal of reconciliation" between Germany and Poland. She called
September 1,"a day of mourning for the suffering" that Nazi Germany
brought on Europe and of "remembrance of the guilt Germany brought upon
itself" by starting the war.
Writing on his Foreign Office David Miliband said: "We have a duty to
remember the sacrifices, including of Poles fighting in and alongside
British forces, and to learn the right lessons - about confronting
racism and xenophobia, about standing up against tyranny, and about
building international co- operation.
"This will be a poignant return to Poland for me, as my mother
survived the war in hiding in Poland before coming to the UK in 1946."
Poland alone lost some 6 million citizens in the war, 3 million of
whom were Jews. |