Ρότζερς, Μπάρμπαρα. "British Intelligence and the Holocaust: Auschwitz and the Allies Re-examined." The Journal of Holocaust Education 8.1 (1999): 89-106. quote: "The PGE, formed in Paris in 1939, had adopted a radically different stance from previous Polish administrations, which had implemented anti-Semitic measures, perceiving Jews as a 'foreign', economically burdensome, superfluous and a morally destructive element. The PGE under Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz and Wladyslaw Sikorski had pledged liberal democratic political order, upholding equal rights for Jews in Poland, although this view was not necessarily shared by a majority in Polish society. A letter sent to the British Foreign Office from Prince Radziwill in Warsaw, for example, explained that although Poles were against 'Jewish persecution', anti-Semitism was still strong 'among all spheres of the population', and that after the war Polish society would not permit the Jews to return to their 'dominating position' in the economic world, wholesale trade and industry. Radziwill stated that to his mind the PGE did not realise the intensity of Polish feeling; anti-Semitism had intensified due to the attitude quotesΑρχειοθετήθηκε 2023-02-06 στο Wayback Machine. of Polish Jews who had partly blamed the Poles for their suffering by unnecessarily provoking the war."
Ρότζερς, Μπάρμπαρα. "British Intelligence and the Holocaust: Auschwitz and the Allies Re-examined." The Journal of Holocaust Education 8.1 (1999): 89-106. quote: "The PGE, formed in Paris in 1939, had adopted a radically different stance from previous Polish administrations, which had implemented anti-Semitic measures, perceiving Jews as a 'foreign', economically burdensome, superfluous and a morally destructive element. The PGE under Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz and Wladyslaw Sikorski had pledged liberal democratic political order, upholding equal rights for Jews in Poland, although this view was not necessarily shared by a majority in Polish society. A letter sent to the British Foreign Office from Prince Radziwill in Warsaw, for example, explained that although Poles were against 'Jewish persecution', anti-Semitism was still strong 'among all spheres of the population', and that after the war Polish society would not permit the Jews to return to their 'dominating position' in the economic world, wholesale trade and industry. Radziwill stated that to his mind the PGE did not realise the intensity of Polish feeling; anti-Semitism had intensified due to the attitude quotesΑρχειοθετήθηκε 2023-02-06 στο Wayback Machine. of Polish Jews who had partly blamed the Poles for their suffering by unnecessarily provoking the war."