Updated 23 February 2021 at 19:32 IST

Historian with far-right past resigns in Poland

The head of the institute, Jaroslaw Szarek, said in a statement Monday that Greniuch offered his resignation and that it had been accepted.

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Historian with far-right past resigns in Poland | Image: self

A Polish historian resigned Monday from the government's historical institute after controversy erupted over his past ties with a far-right organization and photos emerged of him making a fascist salute. Tomasz Greniuch was recently appointed to head the Wroclaw office of the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), a state organization whose role is to document Nazi and communist crimes carried out on Polish soil.

The head of the institute, Jaroslaw Szarek, said in a statement Monday that Greniuch offered his resignation and that it had been accepted. Szarek said the circumstances surrounding the appointment had made it impossible for Greniuch to do his job. Outrage had been mounting over the appointment in Poland, a country that suffered enormously under Nazi German rule in World War II. However, the fact that Greniuch had even been appointed to the post was seen by some as evidence of right-wing extremism becoming mainstream under Poland's conservative ruling Law and Justice party.

The party has sought to prevent other right-wing parties from cutting into its base, which has led leaders to sometimes try to appeal to ultra-nationalist voters. Greniuch also authored a book, "The Way of the Nationalist," published in 2013, which glorifies Léon Degrelle, a Belgian collaborator of the Third Reich, according to the Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper.

Greniuch, who is in his late 30s, issued a public apology Friday for his past behavior. "I have never been a Nazi. I apologize once again for the irresponsible gesture from several years ago and I consider it a mistake," he said. He described his past behavior as "youthful bravado" and said he had never meant meant to glorify any form of totalitarianism.

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Outrage in Poland has grown as images have been published of Greniuch making the stiff-armed salute years ago and participating in demonstrations as a young man with the National Radical Camp, a far-right group that traces its roots to an anti-Semitic and openly fascist movement which existed before World War II. Greniuch had already been posted to lead the IPN office in the southwestern Polish city of Opole three years earlier. In a 2019 interview, he said he had not cut himself off from his earlier views but had changed his behavior.

(Image Credit: AP) 

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Published By : Associated Press Television News

Published On: 23 February 2021 at 19:32 IST