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This chapter presents a fundamental change in Jewish–Christian relations and an overcoming of the anti-Jewish Christian tradition in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust, notably the impact of Nostra aetate. This period witnessed a rediscovery of the Jewishness of Jesus and Paul as well as the significance of the establishment of the State of Israel.
This chapter highlights the significance of the UNWCC in the development of ideas about ‘war crimes’, and the contribution made by the Polish War Crimes Office through interventions in internal UNWCC debates and through submitted Charge Files. The chapter considers post-war justice in the context of increasing East/West tensions and the decisions made by various Polish jurists to remain in exile or to return to Poland. The final part of the chapter discusses the continued relevance of the Polish War Crimes Office in relation to debates on collaboration, sexual and gender-based crimes and to understandings of Polish responses to the Holocaust.
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