You’d think that by now, the story of the Polish refugee
children who were welcomed to New Zealand in 1944 would be well known. Alas, it
seems not.
To recap, the 732 refugees were exiled with their parents to Siberian labour camps after the Soviet Union
invaded their country in 1939, the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin having done a
secret deal with Adolf Hitler to divide Poland between them.
When Hitler turned on the Soviets in 1941, the Polish exiles
became a problem for Stalin, Nazi Germany having then become the common enemy, and
were allowed to leave. By that time many of the children’s parents had died
from cold, disease and starvation.
Along with many thousands of others, the Pahiatua children, as
they came to be known, were left to find their way through Central Asia to
Persia (now Iran) and thence to freedom in the West.
Accompanied by a small
number of adult survivors, they eventually came to New Zealand at the
invitation of prime minister Peter Fraser – our first official refugee intake.
Most remained here after the war and many went on to successful careers.
It’s a remarkable story and it’s back in the news because
this weekend marks the 75th anniversary of their arrival. A
celebratory reunion is being held in Pahiatua. But reporters keep getting things
wrong.
A story about the reunion on Stuff, having first misleadingly referred to Pahiatua as “a tiny
Tararua town” (it has a population of about 2500), went on to say that the
refugees had “fled Nazi-occupied Poland”.
Two mistakes, right there. They didn’t flee: they were
forced from their homes at gunpoint and loaded onto railway wagons by Soviet
soldiers. And the part of Poland they were exiled from wasn’t occupied by the
Germans, at least not then. It was only after Hitler declared war on his erstwhile
communist ally that Germany took control of the eastern part of Poland
previously occupied by the Red Army.
Admittedly the wartime history of Poland is complicated, but
these are facts that are easily checked.
An even more bizarre error occurred on today’s edition of Morning Report when a Radio NZ
journalist, interviewing two of the surviving Poles, said one had lost most of
her family in Serbian labour camps.
Serbian? Good grief.
Footnote: An article I wrote for The
Listener on the occasion of the last Pahiatua refugee reunion can be seen
here: https://www.noted.co.nz/archive/archive-listener-nz-2009/polish-orphan-refugees-found-sanctuary-pahiatua-new-zealand
8 comments:
Sadly most of the New Zealand media these days are simply lazy and incompetent. We are poorly served by them which is another reason why blogs like yours Karl are so valuable and enjoy expanding readerships.
The lack of knowledge in the West about the atrocities committed by communist Russia, communist China, communist Khmer Rouge, or any other communist failure cannot be an accident. It's wilful ignorance.
JOhn Roy Wojciechowski, one of them, should be mentioned
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=3551586
John Roy was mentioned in a sidebar to my Listener article in 2009.
John Roy was mentioned in a sidebar to my Listener article in 2009.
John Roy was mentioned in a sidebar to my Listener article in 2009.
Once would have sufficed. Not sure how that happened ...
Siberia, Serbia..close! I attended the Poles Apart film and talk at Turanga recently. Such an affecting piece of our history.
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