. . . . . . . . "320"^^ . . "320"^^ . . . "right"@en . . . . . "I miss you, Jew!"@en . . "The inscription \"I miss you, Jew\" at ul. Brzeska 8 in Warsaw"@en . . . . . . . . . "I miss you, Jew! (Polish: T\u0119skni\u0119 za tob\u0105, \u017Bydzie) was a nationwide performative action organized by Polish artist Rafa\u0142 Betlejewski, aimed at expressing the longing of Poles for Polish Jews, who have largely disappeared from the country following the events of the Holocaust. As part of the initiative Betlejewski painted the slogan \"I miss you, Jew\" on public walls and encouraged others to copy this gesture. Places where this slogan showed up included Piotrkowska Street in \u0141odz, as well as along Brezeska Street in Warsaw and in the town of Jedwabne. All of these sites have significance to the once-vibrant Jewish community in Poland; Piotrkowska Street in \u0141odz was the site of roundups and pogroms during the Holocaust, while Brezeska Street in Warsaw once formed part of the boundary for the Warsaw Ghetto. Jedwabne was the site of a pogrom perpetrated by the local Polish population in 1941. At the same time, the artist asked Poles to photograph themselves in public space, in places once associated with Polish Jews, along with an empty chair and a kippah on it. He also actively sought memories of Jews who were murdered in the Holocaust. Another component of the project took place on 11 July 2010 \u2013 the day after the 69th anniversary of the Jedwabne pogrom \u2013 under the name \"P\u0142onie stodola\", or \"The barn is burning\". Betlejewski set fire to a specially constructed barn in the village of Zawada, but only after he placed symbolic white cards from people who were \"burdened with unkind thoughts toward Jews\". Betlejewski said of the project, \"I think that for a Pole it is like exploring the subconscious mind, which is a source of fears, phobias, psychoses but on the other hand wonderful dreams. As a Pole, I would like to realize what is hidden in my oblivion, discover the area of what I call active forgetfulness and which was a conscious political and cultural activity.\" In 2010, he was also quoted as saying to the newspaper Gazete Weborcza, \"I want to reclaim the word 'Jew,' snatch it from anti-Semites, who in this country are the only ones using it freely ... I aim to build a platform used to express positive emotions towards the people known as the Jews.\" To document the action, Betlejewski created a website with a virtual archive where users can present memories of Jews in Poland, express their emotions associated with these memories, and also post photographs related to the initiative."@en . . . . . . "64542611"^^ . "5163"^^ . . "1072647500"^^ . . . "I miss you, Jew! (Polish: T\u0119skni\u0119 za tob\u0105, \u017Bydzie) was a nationwide performative action organized by Polish artist Rafa\u0142 Betlejewski, aimed at expressing the longing of Poles for Polish Jews, who have largely disappeared from the country following the events of the Holocaust. As part of the initiative Betlejewski painted the slogan \"I miss you, Jew\" on public walls and encouraged others to copy this gesture. Places where this slogan showed up included Piotrkowska Street in \u0141odz, as well as along Brezeska Street in Warsaw and in the town of Jedwabne. All of these sites have significance to the once-vibrant Jewish community in Poland; Piotrkowska Street in \u0141odz was the site of roundups and pogroms during the Holocaust, while Brezeska Street in Warsaw once formed part of the boundary for the "@en . . .