Difference between revisions 952182817 and 952188309 on enwiki

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{short description|1941 massacre of Jews in Poland}}

{{Infobox civilian attack
| title         = Jedwabne pogrom
| partof        = [[World War II]] and [[the Holocaust]]
| image         = A-438 Mogiła-pomnik, na cmentarzu żydowskim, 1941 Jedwabne.jpg
| image_size    = 
(contracted; show full)eandmail.com/news/world/jedwabne-mayor-resigns-over-memorial-to-jews/article4150944/ | title=Jedwabne mayor resigns over memorial to Jews |agency=Associated Press |date=7 August 2001}}</ref> He received the [[Jan Karski]] Award in 2002, along with Rabbi Jacob Baker, author of ''Yedwabne: History and Memorial Book'' (1980).{{sfn|Nowak-Jezioranski|2003|p=89, n.&nbsp;2}}

==Media==
===Documentaries===
[[File:Pogrom w Jedwabnem Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich.JPG|thumb|upright=1.3|
Jedwabne memorial, [[POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews]], Warsaw, 2014]]
Polish film-maker [[Agnieszka Arnold]] made two documentary films interviewing witnesses of the massacre. ''Gdzie mój starszy syn Kain'' ("Where is my elder son Cain", 1999), includes interviews with Szmul Wassersztajn and the daughter of the owner of the barn where the massacre took place. The second, ''Sąsiedzi'' ("Neighbors", 2001), deals with the subject in greater depth. Gross'(contracted; show full)[[Category:1941 in Judaism]]
[[Category:1941 in Poland]]
[[Category:Controversies in Poland]]
[[Category:Holocaust massacres and pogroms in Poland]]
[[Category:July 1941 events]]
[[Category:Mass murder in 1941]]
[[Category:Poland in World War II]]
[[Category:World War II crimes in Poland]]-->