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New director of Poland’s Jewish museum vouches independence

By Associated Press
Published: February 28, 2020, 8:48am
2 Photos
The new director of Poland's landmark POLIN museum of Jewish history, Zygmunt Stepinski, left, and the head of a private Jewish association representing donors, Piotr Wislicki, right, talk before a news conference following Stepinski's appointment that ended a yearlong stalemate with the government, at the POLIN museum, in Warsaw, Poland, Friday, Feb. 28, 2020.
The new director of Poland's landmark POLIN museum of Jewish history, Zygmunt Stepinski, left, and the head of a private Jewish association representing donors, Piotr Wislicki, right, talk before a news conference following Stepinski's appointment that ended a yearlong stalemate with the government, at the POLIN museum, in Warsaw, Poland, Friday, Feb. 28, 2020. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski) Photo Gallery

WARSAW, Poland — The landmark Jewish museum in Poland’s capital retained its independence and can carry on with its mission now that a new director is in place after a year-long stalemate with the government, museum managers said Friday.

The POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews emerged from leaderless limbo after Poland’s Culture Ministry approved naming former deputy director Zygmunt Stepinski to a three-year term as director.

Stepinski said Friday that he will focus on developing the Warsaw museum’s potential. The impasse over its director led private donors to freeze some $10 million in funds, raising questions about its prospects.

The institution opened in 2014 as a joint project of a private Jewish historical association, the city of Warsaw and the Culture Ministry.

A joint commission agreed to extend the term of the previous director, but Culture Minister Piotr Glinski refused to sign off on the extension. The government opposed the previous director, Dariusz Stola. for being too openly critical of its policies. An apparent reason was that the director had been critical of the government at times.

Stola said the government had used “false pretexts” against him but agreed last week to step aside. He said he was acting to prevent any damage to the institution, though he insisted it was his legal right to be director.

The private Jewish historical association backed Stepinski in a compromise. Piotr Wislicki, the head of the private Association of the Jewish Historical Institute, said that the appointment protects the museum from outside pressure and gives it a new impulse.

“We have defended the museum’s independence, and we are sure it will stay that way,” Wislicki said.

The museum showcases the 1,000-year Jewish presence in Polish lands and is one of the country’s most-visited museums.

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