A Polish campaign group has filed the first legal action under the new Polish “Holocaust Law” which criminalizes any suggestion that Poland took part in crimes against the Jewish people during World War II.

The Polish League Against Defamation is suing Argentina’s Pagina 12 daily newspaper for using a photograph of Polish soldiers who fought against communists after the war to illustrate an article on the Jedwabne pogrom of 1941 in which Nazis and local Poles massacred at least 340 Jews.

“The combination of these two threads: information about the crime on Jews in Jedwabne during the German occupation and the presentation of fallen soldiers of the independence underground is manipulation, an act to the detriment of the Polish nation,” the organization said in a statement.

Pagina claimed not to have received any legal notice, only discovering the suit from international news agency reports.

Approximately 3 million Polish Jews were murdered by the Nazis – about half of all Jews exterminated in the Holocaust.  While thousands of Poles risked their lives to protect Jews during the war, notale Nazi extermination camps: Auschwitz, Sobibor, Treblinka and Majdanek were all located in Poland.

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