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From ethnic cleansing to affirmative action: exploring Poland's struggle with its Ukrainian minority (1944–89)*
Authors:ROSA LEHMANN
Institution:Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies and the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:ABSTRACT. The ambivalent attitude of Poland's communist leadership towards Poland's minorities – on the one hand violent and severely repressive, while on the other hand allowing for controlled liberties and offering protection – is the main focus of this article. In the mid‐1940s, Poland's new communist leadership proceeded to expel and deport millions of Germans, Lithuanians, Belarusians and Ukrainians from their native territories. A decade later, the communist government adopted a policy that aimed at the reduction of discrimination and the creation of equal social and economic opportunities for the country's residual minority populations. This article explores the background of the wavering communist nationalities policies by focusing on Poland's Ukrainians. It demonstrates how the seemingly contradictory policies of ethnic cleansing and affirmative action were prompted by the same underlying political motivations.
Keywords:affirmative action  communism  ethnic cleansing  national minorities  Poland  Ukrainians
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