WARSAW, Poland — Polish prosecutors launched a preliminary investigation after a far-right lawmaker described the gas chambers at the Auschwitz death camp as a ''fake."
Grzegorz Braun, a member of the European Parliament, has previously been accused of antisemitism, and extinguished Hanukkah candles in parliament with a fire extinguisher in 2023. He was a presidential candidate who won more than 6% of the votes in the first round of the election earlier this year.
Speaking to Poland's Wnet radio on Thursday, Braun said that ''ritual murder is a fact, and such a thing as Auschwitz with its gas chambers is unfortunately a fake,'' news agency PAP reported. The reporter then ended the interview.
Some Christians in medieval Europe believed that Jews murdered Christians to use their blood for ritual purposes, something which historians say has no basis in Jewish religious law or historical fact and instead reflected anti-Jewish hostility in Christian Europe.
A spokesperson for the Warsaw district prosecutor's office, Piotr Antoni Skiba, said prosecutors were conducting a preliminary investigation into Braun's potential denial of Nazi crimes.
The director of the Auschwitz museum, Piotr Cywinski, said he would file a separate complaint with prosecutors. He said that ''denying the fact that gas chambers existed is not only a manifestation of anti-Semitism and an ideology of hatred; in Poland it is also a crime.''
Nazi German forces murdered some 1.1 million people at the Auschwitz site in southern Poland, which was under German occupation during World War II. Most of the victims were Jews killed on an industrial scale in gas chambers, but also Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war, gay people and others.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk described Braun's words as ''a disgrace.'' He said that "we must do everything so that no one in the world associates Poland with such people, such faces and such actions.''