“This figurine is antisemitic and it’s time for us to realize it,” Robert Piaskowski, the city’s alderman for cultural affairs, was quoted as saying during a meeting Thursday by the Gazeta Wyborcza daily. “In a city like Krakow, with such a difficult heritage and a painful past, it should not be sold.”
The statement follows a campaign by some Polish Jews to stop the sale of the figurines, which some locals treat as charms for increasing revenues. Many variation of the figurines and paintings of Orthodox Jews that are sold in Polish marketplaces and beyond have elements pertaining to money – typically the Jew depicted is counting money.
Aming the Krakow activists leading talks with the municipality on the issue are Magda Rubenfeld Koralewska and her husband, Michael Rubenfeld, a Canada-born actor and founder of the FestivALT organization and arts festival, who has made several artworks and displays critical of the custom. Rubenfeld Koralewska also was involved in the talks with Piaskowski.
Advocates of the custom say it reflects nostalgia toward Jewish presence in Poland, where 3.3 million Jews lived before the Holocaust. Poland now has about 4,500 people who identify as Jewish and approximately 7,000 with at least one Jewish parent, according to a 2020 demographic study of European Jewry.
The city may deny market concessions to vendors who sell the Jewish figurines, according to Salon24.