WARSAW 鈥 For Shoshana Greenberg, a new law making its way through the Polish parliament means abandoning any hope of compensation for the properties taken from her family during World War II.
Israel-based Greenberg, the daughter of a Holocaust survivor, launched a claim nine years ago on properties owned by her textile industrialist family in Lodz in central Poland.
鈥淚 feel like I lost a part of my body,鈥 the 74-year-old said of the planned new legislation.
The new law sets a time limit on legal challenges for properties confiscated after the war, many of them during the Communist era, and would end up axing thousands of claims.
The controversial legislation was approved by the lower house of parliament in June, igniting a row between Poland and Israel, and is due to go before the Senate this week.
鈥榃hole system unfair鈥
While the law covers both Jewish and non-Jewish former property owners and their heirs, lawyer Tomasz Ludwik Krawczyk said Jewish owners would be disproportionately affected because they were often late in making a claim.
鈥淔or obvious reasons after the war they were not in Poland and the ones who survived left Poland,鈥 said Krawczyk, who specializes in restitution claims.
Six million Poles, half of them Jewish, were killed during World War II in Poland.
After the war, Communist authorities nationalized vast numbers of properties that had often been left empty because their owners had been killed or fled.
Non-Jewish claimants include Polish aristocrats whose properties were confiscated by the Communists.
Once Communism fell in 1989, Poland never adopted a comprehensive restitution law like other countries in Central and Eastern Europe, leaving it up to individuals to take their chances in court.
鈥淚 think the lack of a property restitution act makes the whole system unfair,鈥 Krawczyk said.
鈥榃on鈥檛 pay for Germany鈥檚 crimes鈥
The new law sets a 30-year limit on claims against administrative decisions on the status of properties, such as nationalization.
It would also apply to ongoing proceedings, which Krawczyk said was 鈥渕anifestly unfair鈥 as many claimants are late through no fault of their own but because of delays in the justice system.
鈥淚 would say that this is an attempt to stop the restitution procedure鈥 done using a back door,鈥 he said.
The Polish government has said the new law will provide greater clarity on property rights and eliminate the problem of rampant corruption and fraudulent claims made with forged documents.
But the law has been heavily criticized by Israel and the United States.
Israel has condemned it as 鈥渋mmoral鈥 and 鈥渕ind-boggling鈥, with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid saying: 鈥淥n Polish soil, millions of Jews were murdered and no law will erase their memory鈥.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has said that Poland 鈥渨on鈥檛 pay for Germany鈥檚 crimes鈥.
鈥淣ot one zloty, not one euro, not one dollar,鈥 he said.
Claims being 鈥榚xtinguished鈥
The government has said claims can still be lodged with civil courts.
But Krawczyk said that in practice this was complicated because claimants would have to prove that the original confiscation decision breached Communist-era laws, which cannot be done without a preceding successful legal challenge.
The World Jewish Restitution Organization (WJRO), which advocates for the recovery of formerly Jewish-owned properties around Europe, has criticized the new law as effectively legitimizing the actions of Poland鈥檚 Communist government.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very disappointing,鈥 said Gideon Taylor, WJRO鈥檚 chair of operations.
鈥淔or many families, this property is a last tangible connection to a world that was destroyed鈥 This legislation is rejecting that connection,鈥 he said.
David Kotek, a 62-year-old Israeli, said he was making a claim for compensation for his grandfather鈥檚 house in the town of Sosnowiec that would be blocked by the new law.
Kotek said his grandfather and father were imprisoned but survived the Holocaust and moved to Israel and the property was eventually taken over by the municipality of Sosnowiec.
Their only thought after the war was to leave Poland, which meant they did not file a property claim in time.
For Kotek, the issue is also about justice and honoring the memory of Poland鈥檚 Jewish community 鈥 once the largest in Europe and now numbering only a few tens of thousands.
鈥淲e once had a big community in Poland and all these things will be forgotten,鈥 he said.