(JTA) – Ivanka Trump, the Jewish daughter of President Donald Trump, laid a wreath at the memorial for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in Poland a day after her father was rebuked by Jewish leaders in that country for not visiting the same site. Ivanka Trump, a convert to Judaism, was at the Monument for the Ghetto Heroes in Warsaw early Thursday afternoon, July 6, shortly before her father laid a wreath and began a speech at the nearby Warsaw Uprising Memorial, which celebrates the acts of resistance fighters from the general population of Poland who launched a bloody rebellion against the Germans in 1944. The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes, located approximately a mile east of the uprising memorial at Krasinski Square, commemorates specifically Jewish partisans who rose up against the Germans in a doomed uprising in 1943.
The president’s daughter was accompanied by Rabbi Michael Schudrich, the chief rabbi of Poland. After laying a wreath at the ghetto memorial, she visited the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. Ivanka Trump’s visit to the memorial was a late addition to her schedule in Poland, the French news agency AFP reported.
In a statement issued by the White House, she said of her visit to the monument and the POLIN Museum, “The monument, erected on the rubble of the Warsaw Ghetto, symbolizes the fight for freedom. I am profoundly grateful for those who fought and all those who continue to fight today.”
Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, chief curator of the core exhibition of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, told JTA: “I think what is important is that she came. She was very respectful, very interested and I think she was really genuinely moved. My hope is that she will come back and she will bring her family with her.”
Schudrich told AFP that Ivanka Trump’s visit to the memorial was “very, very important … But it’s sad because her father, President Trump, is the first U.S. president in 25 years not to visit the Warsaw Ghetto Heroes Monument.”
The rebuke of the president Wednesday by Schudrich, Anna Chipczynska, the president of Jewish Community of Warsaw, and Leslaw Piszewski, the president of Union of Jewish Communities of Poland, came in a joint statement in which they called the absence of a presidential visit to the Monument to the Heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto a “slight.”
According to the statement, “ever since the fall of Communism in 1989, all U.S. presidents and vice presidents visiting Warsaw had made a point of visiting” the site, representing Americans “who had played such a central role in bringing down Fascism.” The monument, they said, was a “universal commemoration of the victims of the Shoah, and condemnation of its perpetrators.”
During his speech at the Warsaw uprising memorial, the president acknowledged the decimation of Poland’s Jewish population by the Nazis while recalling Poland’s turbulent history. “Under a double occupation, the Polish people endured evils beyond description: the Katyn forest massacre, the occupations, the Holocaust, the Warsaw Ghetto and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the destruction of this beautiful capital city, and the deaths of nearly one in five Polish people,” Trump said. “A vibrant Jewish population – the largest in Europe – was reduced to almost nothing after the Nazis systematically murdered millions of Poland’s Jewish citizens, along with countless others, during that brutal occupation.”