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This image released by Music Box Films shows Agata Trzebuchowska in a scene from "Ida," directed by Pawel Pawlikowski. The film is nominated for an Oscar for best foreign language film. The 87th Annual Academy Awards are held on Sunday, Feb. 22, 2015, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Music Box Films) Image Credit: AP

The director of Ida, the Polish movie that won this year’s Oscar for best foreign film, said on Monday that Poles should see it before calling it anti-Polish.

Ida premiered in Poland in 2013, but attracted little attention despite winning best picture in Poland’s main movie festival.

Now the Oscar and a slew of other international awards have generated intense debate about whether it’s unpatriotic, a charge levelled by right-wing politicians.

The movie is about Ida, a young woman preparing to be a nun, who discovers she is Jewish and that her parents were murdered by a Polish peasant during the Second World War.

Detractors argue that the movie lacks the historic background of terror under Nazi German occupation of Poland during the war. They say it fails to mention that many Poles saved Jews, despite the fact such actions were punishable by death.

Polish-British director Pawel Pawlikowski has brushed off the criticism, saying his movie is about identity not history.

At a meeting Monday with President Bronislaw Komorowski he suggested that not all those engaging in the debate had seen Ida.

“I’d rather you saw the film,” Pawlikowski said, “not debated it.”