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Poland starts observances of WWII massacres by Ukrainians that have marred neighbourly ties

The head of Poland's Roman Catholic Church, Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki, left, and Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, second right, of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church hold a reconciliation religious service as part of observances honoring some 100,000 Poles murdered by Ukrainian nationalists in 1943-44, at St. John's cathedral in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday, July 7, 2023. (Czarek Sokolowski/AP Photo) The head of Poland's Roman Catholic Church, Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki, left, and Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, second right, of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church hold a reconciliation religious service as part of observances honoring some 100,000 Poles murdered by Ukrainian nationalists in 1943-44, at St. John's cathedral in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday, July 7, 2023. (Czarek Sokolowski/AP Photo)
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WARSAW, Poland -

Poland's prime minister and Catholic church leaders opened several days of observances Friday to honour victims of World War II massacres of tens of thousands of Poles by Ukrainian nationalists, which have marred the tightening strategic relations between the neighbouring nations.

"We can say that for many years this has been an unhealed wound in Polish-Ukrainian relations," said Rafal Bochenek, the spokesperson for Poland's ruling right-wing party.

"We would expect truth to be told and things to be called by their proper name," Bochenek said.

Poland says the 1943-44 massacre of some 100,000 Poles by Ukrainian nationalists was genocide. Entire villages were burned down and all their inhabitants killed by nationalists and their helpers who sought to establish an independent Ukraine state. The killings took place in Volhynia and in other regions of what was then eastern Poland under Nazi German and then Soviet occupation, and which are now in western Ukraine.

Warsaw is among the staunchest supporters of Kyiv in its war against Russia's aggression and the increasingly close ties seem to have provided an opportunity for the two nations to deal with their past. Many Poles still harbour grudges for family members who were brutally killed in the massacres. Some 15,000 Ukrainians were killed in retaliation at the time.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki traveled early Friday to Ukraine to visit massacre sites, the villages of Ostrowki and Puzniki that were wiped out by units of Ukraine's nationalist forces. He put up commemorative crosses and visited local cemeteries where some of the victims were buried. Not all burial sites are known.

"I will not rest until the last victim of that terrible Volhynia Massacre is found and buried with respect," Morawiecki said.

The leader of Poland's Roman Catholic Church, Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki, and Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church held a joint religious service Friday in Warsaw.

The observances will culminate on Tuesday, the 80th anniversary of the intensified violence.

Poland has long pursued Kyiv's permission for the search for burial sites, exhumations, identification and commemoration of the Polish victims.

Some of the Ukrainian nationalist leaders who were responsible for instigating the massacres are lauded in Ukraine for fighting for the nation's independence during World War II, leading to strains in relations with Poland. But Ukraine's authorities recently signaled a more open approach to Poland's wishes.

Polish leaders insist that bringing the full truth into the open will strengthen bilateral relations with Ukraine and neutralize vulnerabilities that could be exploited by third countries seeking to undermine these ties.

"We must be aware, Poles and Ukrainians, that without the full clarification and full record of the Volhynia crimes, Russia will always be using this card to drive a wedge between Poles and Ukrainians," Morawiecki said.

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