Muslim girls in Poland studying Holocaust turned away from synagogue

Group says they were harassed by residents of Lublin, refused entry to house of worship because of head coverings

The Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva in Lublin, Poland. (CC BY-SA 2.5, Krzysztof Schabowicz, WIkipeda)
The Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva in Lublin, Poland. (CC BY-SA 2.5, Krzysztof Schabowicz, WIkipeda)

WARSAW, Poland — A group of Muslim girls from Germany was prevented from entering a synagogue in Lublin while on a visit to Poland to study the Holocaust.

The girls claim that they were refused entrance to the synagogue in Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva because they were wearing traditional Muslim headgear. The Jewish community of Lublin has denied this and said in a statement that the group was turned away because the hotel where the synagogue is located had been rented exclusively for “one of Europe’s” soccer teams.

According to the Polish media, the group’s leader called the synagogue to arrange a visit to the building. Upon arriving at the synagogue, the group was forbidden to enter. Instead the group received the keys to the gate of the 16th century Jewish cemetery in Lublin, which it visited.

On June 21, the group of Muslim girls visited the state museum of Majdanek in Lublin. One of the Muslim girls said she was spit on by a local resident, insults were shouted at others, and they also were turned away when they tried to buy bottles of water in a local shop. A request for police intervention was ignored, they said.

Lublin city spokesman, Andrzej Fijolek, told Polish media on Tuesday that a preliminary investigation shows that the police officers did not behave inappropriately, saying that the language barrier and background noise prevented them from understanding what the girls were talking about, and that their description of the events did not indicate any criminal wrongdoing. The group also did not file an official complaint with police, he said.

The girls, children of Muslim immigrant families living in Berlin, were visiting Poland to learn about the Holocaust. They visited sites in Lodz, Warsaw and Lublin. The president of Lublin, Krzysztof Żuk, condemned the racist behavior in the city, and said that he would do everything he could to make Lublin a safe city. The case also will be examined by the Polish Ombudsman.

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