Is there Jewish life in Poland after the Shoah? Should there be?
How do present-day Polish Jews, children and grand-children of survivors, relate both to the wartime horrors and to the glorious history of Polish Jewry which preceded them? Konstanty Gebert was a witness and participant of many of the events he describes in his collection of essays on post-war Polish Jewry.
Konstanty Gebert is a well-known Polish journalist and writer, co-founder, in the Seventies, of the unofficial Jewish Flying University and, in the Nineties, of the Polish Council of Christians and Jews. He begun his journalistic career in the underground in the Eighties: under the pseudonym of David Warszawski he still uses, he was editor and columnist of an important clandestine publication.
After the democratic transformation of 1989, he joined the new daily Gazeta Wyborcza as international reporter and columnist, covering i.a. the wars in the Balkans, the Middle East, and human rights issues.
Since 2005 he is the representative of the Taube Foundation for Jewish Life and Culture, a US Jewish philanthropy, in Poland. His latest books in Polish include a set of commentaries on the Torah, a panorama of the European 20th century, and a history of the wars of Israel.