You are reading

Schumer and Gillibrand call on Rex Tillerson to deport former Nazi guard who lives in Jackson Heights

Protest outside Palij’s Jackson Heights home earlier this year

Oct. 4, 2017 By Tara Law

U.S. Senators Charles E. Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand have urged the State Department to deport a former Nazi guard who is living in Jackson Heights.

The lawmakers addressed a letter to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Oct. 4, demanding that he deport Jakiw Palij, 92, who has lived in the neighborhood for decades.

The senators noted that Palij remains in the country despite being stripped of his citizenship in 2003 and then ordered to be deported.

Palij is still in the country, in part, because Germany, Poland and Ukraine refuse to accept him, according to officials. Nevertheless, say the senators, the deportation process has gone on for too long.

“Removing Mr. Palij from American soil will send a message not only to the citizens of New York, but to the entire world,” the letter read. “It will make clear that the United States does not condone hatred and will not shelter those who have committed atrocities against innocents.”

Palij was a guard at the Trawniki death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland during 1943.

After WWII, the Polish-born Palij came to America claiming he was a farmer, and was granted citizenship in 1957. Once his past was uncovered, he was subsequently stripped of his U.S. citizenship, which the government claimed was obtained illegally and under false pretenses–triggering the deportation process. His deportation order was upheld by the courts in 2004 but Palij remains a resident of Queens to this day.

In 2003 Palij told the New York Times, he never killed anyone during the war. He claimed that at the age of 18 he was taken to the camp and forced to work as a guard and wore a different uniform than the Nazis. Although the federal government never accused him of being directly involved in the killings, it claimed that as a Nazi guard, he ”directly contributed to their eventual slaughter” by preventing the victims from escaping.

Calls for Palij’s deportation have received bipartisan support. In June, almost 90 New York state assembly members addressed a letter to U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions to demand Palij’s deportation. In August, New York’s congressional delegation addressed a letter to Tillerson asking him to take action.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

3 Comments

Click for Comments 
Paul Hutchins

Andy describes “tough jobs no Americans would want.” Try a redo of freshman economics, Andy. And have the courage to call out your neighbors to mow their own lawns, clean their own apartments, raise their own kids and sear their own tuna.

Reply
Andy

You are so right. People coming here from other countries, working tough jobs that no American would want for hand to mouth wages just to make a better life for themselves are equivalent to Nazis that hunted down and killed millions of people and found against the United States in World War II.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Lawmakers secure federal funding to combat flooding in Queens after impact of Hurricane Ida and other storms

U.S. Congresswomen Grace Meng and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, along with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, announced on Jan. 7 that President Joe Biden has signed their legislation into law to address severe flooding in Queens.

The measure aims to mitigate future disasters like those caused by the remnants of Hurricane Ida in September 2021, which inundated the borough with record-shattering rainfall.

Op-ed | New York’s ground lease co-ops: Our families can’t wait any longer 

Jan. 14, 2025 By Michael Tang 

Last December brought a long-awaited victory for New York City. Our City Council adopted the historic City of Yes housing plan, paving the way for more than 80,000 new homes by 2040 with the promise of affordability. As a longtime resident of Flushing, Queens, I naturally welcomed the news – it’s a much-needed reprieve for New Yorkers as housing costs continue to soar in the midst of an unparalleled housing crisis. But entering 2025 on the heels of this win, we residents at  Murray Hill Cooperative remain at risk — our lives are virtually unchanged because we belong to the last class of unprotected “tenants” as ground lease co-op residents. Without legislative action, more than 25,000 New Yorkers face the threat of losing their homes — homes that we own — to landowners seeking to raise our ground rent to astronomical rates.