Word: lubliners
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Beginning. Another kind of Polish issue began to brew last week. One of the worst of the London Poles' many mistakes was their claim to Teschen, which Poland took from Czechoslovakia in 1938, when the Czechs were in Hitler's grasp. The Lublin Poles originally took the opposite line, expressed a willingness to see Teschen go back to Czechoslovakia. But last week the Polish Communist press started an anti-Czech campaign for Teschen...
...addition to the movement of Poles westward into Germany, which the Western Allies had sanctioned, large blocks of the German population were being driven eastward to Russia. The Lublin radio broadcast that 7,500,000 Poles were to be moved into Poland's area of the old "eastern Germany...
...Lublin radio, in a Yiddish broadcast, announced last week that it had been decided to create a camp for Germans "and members of the German ethnical group" in the former Warsaw ghetto. The camp would be "a place of isolation on which everybody would look with disgust, a place to house those who wanted to murder and rape the entire world, a camp for men who have no right to the name of man but should be called beasts...
Commenting on the Polish Government in exile, he stressed the fact that the London Government represents Poland only up to 1939 while the Warsaw Provisional organization (Lublin) has its hand on the pulse of the Poland that exists today...
...direct contrast to Dr. Zlatowski, the second speaker, Professor Thaddeus Rasziuski, formerly of the University of Cracow, attacked the Warsaw Provisional Government as "a government organized in Moscow, by Moscow, and composed of a communistic element which did nothing to help defend Poland." After questioning the legality of the Lublin Government, Professor Rasziuski lauded the heroic efforts of Polish troops throughout the war, claiming that until these armies return to their homes and until Poland is "opened up to friendly nations and foreign press for unbiased study"-the real will of the Polish people cannot be expressed. "Poland today...