"Emmanuel Ringelblum, the founder of the Oneg Shabbat ghetto archive, reflected on the nature of Jewish-Polish relations under occupation. He wrote his last study in Warsaw, in the winter of 1944, hidden in an underground bunker with a score of other Jewish refugees. Although cut off from the outside world, the Jewish historian possessed an impressive knowledge of the issue -- of the brighter and less rosy aspects of Polish-Jewish co-existence during the war. His understanding was based on years of work with his colleagues from Oneg Shabbat, his own experiences from 1939-193 period, and from the reading of thousands of testimonies, memoirs, and letters that arrived at Oneg Shabbat and passed through his hands. Ringelblum, like few others was able to fully understand the magnitude of the tragedy of the Jewish people, and to see the treats awaiting those who tried to survive among the 'Aryans.' "
Ringelblum acknowledges that Jews in rural areas had "found refuges with Polish neighbors, friends and acquaintances whom they had known and been friendly with for long years and even for generations." But, "[w]here the environment had been affected with anti-Semitism before the war, hiding Jews presented great difficulties, and denunciations by anti-Semitic neighbors were more to be feared there than the German terror."
Jan Grabowski, Hunt for the Jews: Betrayal and Murder in German-Occupied Poland (Indiana University Press, Bloomington & Indianapolis, 2013 English translation, pp 7,17).
Here's a Polish, Jewish survivor on the Poles' behavior during World War II:
"My survival was dependent upon the absence of hostile behavior of Poles who hated Jews. Poland is my motherland; Polish is my native language. Poles helped me to survive the Holocaust. I remember gratefully the few who were my protectors. I resent the many that harmed countless Jews, and the millions who were eager to do so. The trouble was not the lack of friends, but the multitude of enemies. The denunciation of the Jews who were hiding or were on false papers were not a sporadic activity, but an endemic problem. Virtually all Poles resisted, passively or actively, the German occupation. However, the majority of the Polish population assisted the Germans in their effort to annihilate the Jews. We should not expect ordinary, decent people to take heroic action. There is no moral obligation to be a hero, but it is a criminal offense to be an accessory to murder. Whoever denounced a Jew on false papers was a cowardly killer. The death of my cousin Miriam was a joint project of Poles and Germans."
From Emmanuel Tanay, Passport to Life: Autobiographical Reflections on the Holocaust (Ann Arbor, Mich.:Book Clearing House, 2004, pp 112-113).
So, why did Emanuel Ringelblum say Jewish Ghetto Police Nazi collaborators were more brutal than Polish Blue Police Nazi collaborators?
Heck he also said at times Jewish Ghetto Police Nazi collaborators by Jews were worse than German Nazis themselves.
But,everyone's wrong in this World but Jews.
Nobody worse than the polish Nazis.
You're a very dumb Jew, and should be treated as such.
Jews were some of the worst Nazi collaborators, and also Soviet collaborators.
No one worse than the polish Nazis.
Most of the Nazis were Germans, you dumb Jew.
No one worse than the polish Nazis.