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Antisemitism: the foundation of the Polish nation?

Antisemitism was often used in the process of creating ethnic Poles as a way of overcoming the chasm between nobles and peasantry.

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Translators Recommend Women in Translation - Words Without Borders

For Women in Translation Month, a dozen translators recommend recent favorite books written and translated by women.

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The Watchlist: August 2023 - Words Without Borders

Tobias Carroll recommends new and exciting reads from Angola, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey.

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Cal Poly named top producer of Fullbright Scholars

Faculty awardees are teaching and researching in Poland, South Africa – Cal Poly has been recognized once again as a top producer of U.S. Fulbright […]

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In her last poem, this Jewish-Polish poet wrote about the neighbors who turned her over to the Nazis - Israel News

Get email notification for articles from Ofer Aderet Follow May. 25, 2021 11:46 AM Polish-Jewish poet Zuzanna Ginczanka wrote her last and most famous poem, commonly referred to as “Non Omnis Moriar,” (“Not all of me will die”), in 1943, as a last will and testament. It included testimony of the betrayal by her neighbors, who turned her over to the Germans during the Holocaust. Several months afterward, she was killed at age 27, her bright future cut short.

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