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Why Is the Term “Polish Concentration Camps” Still  Used in Germany?  

In the German information space, instances of the term polnische  Konzentrationslager (“Polish concentration camps”) continue to appear.  Similar lapses have also often surfaced in articles and reports published by  opinion-forming outlets. 

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For example, in 2009 the weekly magazine Der Spiegel published an  article titled “Die Komplizen” (“The Accomplices”). The article states,  “Germany is responsible for the Holocaust, the mass murder of Jews  carried out on an industrial scale,” but adds: “we were not alone. The  executioners of orders and willing accomplices included Ukrainians,  French, Dutch, Latvians, Lithuanians, Croats, Spaniards, Hungarians,  Italians, and Poles.”[1]

The article argues that without the involvement of  these SS and Nazi helpers, mass extermination could not have been carried  out by Germans alone. This was intended to remind readers that the  Holocaust had a European dimension, not merely a German one. On the  one hand, the article does not absolve Germany of responsibility — it  acknowledges that Germans were the primary organisers and perpetrators.  On the other hand, the structure of the text indicates an attempt to  relativise German guilt, shifting part of the responsibility onto other  nations. The Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs documents such instances  [2] .

On 26 January 2018, the Polish Parliament (the Sejm) passed a law,  prepared by the Ministry of Justice, aimed at protecting the good name of  Poland. The law is to counteract attempts to shift responsibility for crimes  committed during World War II by the Third Reich onto Poland and Poles  [3].

The term “Polish concentration camps” obscures Germany’s responsibility  for the crimes of the Third Reich. It constitutes a distortion of history. The  concentration camps located in Poland were German, established and  managed by the Third Reich. The concept of polnische  Konzentrationslager undermines the memory of the victims who suffered  and perished there. The consequences of such “mistakes” are serious. This  is because media errors of this kind can take on a life of their own. Even a  single article in a local newspaper using this terminology can be cited,  copied, or used by extreme right-wing groups. It may also be used as  propaganda against Poland Russian disinformation eagerly seizes on such  examples, using them to spread narratives about alleged “Polish co responsibility for the Holocaust,” “Polish camps,” or supposed Polish crimes against Jews. These messages are then intentionally pushed into the  German information space to undermine Polish-German relations, sow  distrust, and shift part of the historical burden of World War II onto Central  European countries.

Do Germans respond? Yes — but always post factum.  Many German media outlets have already introduced stylebook guidelines  for this issue. Only after protests from Polish diplomats and Jewish  organisations do German editorial offices (e.g., Die Welt, Der Spiegel,  Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung) regularly correct such errors. Yet these  terms should never have appeared in their publications in the first place!

Imprecise Language  

 The term “Polish concentration camps” appears in Germany for several  reasons, none of which are correct or justified. Most often, it stems from  imprecise language, where authors — especially less experienced  journalists or individuals outside the field of historical research — use  shorthand referring to the geographical location of camps situated in  present-day Poland. In this context, “Polish” is meant to indicate “located  in Poland,” but in practice it leads to a dangerous blurring of responsibility  for their creation and operation, which rests solely with Germany and the  structures of the Third Reich. This linguistic error subconsciously suggests  Polish agency, which is a gross distortion of history and an injustice to the  victims.

Shifting Responsibility — the “Memory Competition” 

In parts of the German public debate, a phenomenon known as “memory  shift” has emerged, in which the focus is redirected from German  responsibility to other nations. While this is not a dominant narrative, it  appears in journalism and in extreme circles. Transferring blame to the  “East,” particularly to Central and Eastern European countries, can be part  of a conscious or unconscious effort to ease Germany’s historical burden  or to equate the atrocities committed by the German state under Adolf  Hitler with those committed by other nations at the time during the same  period. Such narratives fit into a broader tendency to relativise history and  reinterpret World War II through the lens of contemporary political  tensions.

Insufficient Historical Knowledge Among New Generations

In Germany — as in many other countries — younger generations often  lack detailed knowledge about the geography of Nazi camps. This makes  them susceptible to simplistic associations such as: “Auschwitz is in  Poland, therefore it’s a Polish camp.” There is insufficient awareness that  Poland was occupied and that Poles were victims. This issue also affects  foreign media, but in Germany it carries particular sensitivity, as it  concerns crimes committed by their own state. Many people know  Auschwitz only as a place located in modern-day Poland, without  understanding that the country was occupied and that Poles were among  the first victims of Nazi persecution. This educational gap fuels  misunderstandings and careless terminology. Furthermore, even isolated  mistakes in regional media or online spaces can be copied and quoted,  eventually becoming detached from their original context and beginning  to take on a life of its own.

Russian Disinformation  

There is also another particularly significant factor: active Russian  disinformation. For years, Russian media and entities linked to the  propaganda apparatus have attempted to spread the narrative of alleged  Polish co-responsibility for the Holocaust. Such content also appears in the  German informational space, where it is used instrumentally to weaken  Polish-German relations and sow distrust between societies. Russian  propaganda deliberately employs the term “Polish camps,” as its very  linguistic structure lends itself to manipulation.

All these factors contribute to the persistence of this incorrect term, despite  its historical falsehood and ethical unacceptability. Concentration and  extermination camps were created, managed, and staffed by Germans —  on occupied territories, not “Polish” ones. This phenomenon persists  because it results from a combination of linguistic inaccuracies,  educational deficiencies, memory disputes, and the influence of  contemporary propaganda.

Prof. Marek Melnyk

[1] https://www.spiegel.de/ /politik/ausland/polnische-reaktionen-auf-spiegel-titel-welle-der-empoerung-a-626150.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com [pobranie 12.11.2025].

https://mistewicz.dorzeczy.pl/ _f//elements/2020-10/DoRzeczy-dodatek-Niemiecka-polityka-historyczna.pdf [pobranie 10.11.205].

[2] https://www.gov.pl/web/ gov/szukaj?scope=dyplomacja&query=polskie+obozy+koncentracyjne [pobranie 12.11.2025].

[3] https://www.gov.pl/web/ sprawiedliwosc/ustawa-chroniaca-dobre-imie-polski-uchwalona [pobranie 12.11.2025].

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