Hotel Polski

Facade of the former Hotel Polski in Warsaw.
Rear facade of the former Hotel Polski in Warsaw.
A monument commemorating the fighting in Hotel Polski location during the Warsaw Uprising

Hotel Polski (lit. Polish Hotel), opened in 1808, was a hotel in Śródmieście, Warsaw, Poland, at 29 Długa street.

In 1943, in the mop up operation following the liquidation of Warsaw Ghetto, the hotel was used by Germans as bait for Jews hiding in Warsaw. There the German agents and their Jewish collaborators pretended Jews could buy foreign passports and other documents, and then as foreign citizens, leave territories occupied by Nazi Germany. Approximately 2,500 Jews fell for this trap, with most subsequently arrested, moved to Nazi concentration camps, and perishing in The Holocaust. This case is known as "Hotel Polski Affair".

In 1944 during the Warsaw Uprising the building housed a Polish insurgent stronghold called the "Holy Mother Redout", named after a painting located there.[1] The building was heavily damaged during the fighting and re-purposed following the war.

In 1965 the building was declared an object of cultural heritage and inscribed in the Polish heritage object registry.[2] A commemoration plaque was unveiled at the building in 2013.[3]

  1. ^ Agnieszka Haska (2006). "Jestem Żydem, chcę wejść": Hotel Polski w Warszawie, 1943. Wydawn. IFIS PAN. p. 149. ISBN 978-83-7388-096-2.
  2. ^ (in Polish) Zabytki_w_Polsce. Rejestr zabytkow. Zestawienia zabytkow nieruchomych. Mazowsze - Warszawa. Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
  3. ^ "Unveiling A Plaque at the Hotel Polski – Tablet Magazine". www.tabletmag.com. 2013-04-18. Retrieved 2018-08-27.

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