Israel recalled its ambassador to Poland after the approval of a law that will hamper the ability of Jewish Holocaust survivors and their descendants to recover property seized by the Nazis and held afterward by communist authorities. The bill passed by Poland’s Parliament was signed by Polish President Andrzej Duda on Saturday.
The new law limits the ability of former nationals to recover confiscated property to up to 30 years, which would invalidate any pending or new property claims dating to properties confiscated during the communist era. Poland does not have a compensation fund for people whose property was seized during World War II and its aftermath.
Give the gift of hope
We practice what we preach:
accurate, fearless journalism. But we can't do it alone.
- On the ground in Gaza, Syria, Israel, Egypt, Pakistan, and more
- Our program trained more than 100 journalists
- Calling out fake news and reporting real facts
- On the ground in Gaza, Syria, Israel, Egypt, Pakistan, and more
- Our program trained more than 100 journalists
- Calling out fake news and reporting real facts
Join us.
Support The Media Line. Save democracy.
Israel’s newly appointed ambassador to Poland, Yacov Livne, on Saturday was told to remain in Israel and the Polish ambassador to Israel, Marek Magierowski, who was vacationing out of the country, was told by Israel’s Foreign Minister Yair Lapid not to return to the country.
“Poland today approved – not for the first time – an immoral, antisemitic law,” Lapid tweeted. The Polish Foreign Ministry warned Israel that its decision has “seriously damaged” the relationship between the two countries.

