U.S. President Donald Trump stands under the Warsaw Uprising Monument on Krasinski Square, a few blocks away from the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Monument, after laying down a wreath during the Three Seas Initiative Summit in Warsaw, Poland, July 6, 2017 | Janek Skarzynski/AFP via Getty Images Trump snubs Warsaw’s Jewish community, sends Ivanka to Ghetto monument Statement signed by chief rabbi speaks of president’s ‘disregard.’

WARSAW — Leaders of Poland's small Jewish community said they deeply regretted that Donald Trump didn't find time to visit the monument to the doomed 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, unlike all other U.S. presidents to visit Poland in recent years.

In an apparent response to the Jewish community's statement, which spoke of "disregard" and was signed by Chief Rabbi Michael Schudrich, the president dispatched his daughter Ivanka to visit the monument, just across town from the site of his speech Thursday in Krasiński Square.

Trump's tight schedule in Warsaw, after his arrival on Wednesday night, included a meeting with President Andrzej Duda, a gathering of 12 Central European leaders and delivering a keynote speech, before departing for the G20 summit in Hamburg at 2 p.m.

Ivanka Trump, who was not accompanied by her Orthodox Jewish husband Jared Kushner, laid flowers at the Ghetto Uprising monument as Schudrich recited kaddish. She then visited a nearby Jewish museum, and tweeted: "It was deeply moving to be able to visit The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes and the POLIN Museum of the History of the Polish Jews.”

The statement from the Jewish community, which was issued on Wednesday when it became clear that no presidential visit was scheduled, said: "We deeply regret that President Donald Trump, even though he’ll be speaking just a mile away from this monument, found it suitable to break with the tradition which is worthy of recognition. We believe that this manifestation of disregard does not represent attitudes and feelings of the American nation.”

Previously, visiting American presidents had seen fit to visit the monument to the ghetto heroes "in the name of the American nation, which played such a crucial role in defeating fascism and to share the universal commemoration of Holocaust victims and condemnation of perpetrators, expressed by people of all nationalities and religions.

"For Polish Jews, rebuilding life of their comunity in the democratic Poland, after horrors of Holocaust and destruction of Communism, this gesture meant confirmation, solidarity and hope,” the statement said.

The director of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Dariusz Stola, told POLITICO shortly before Ivanka's visit that he wasn't aware of any such plans and had already left on vacation.

Trump delivered his speech just a few blocks away from the ghetto monument, standing at a memorial to another World War II uprising which came a year later, in August 1944. It lasted two months before the massively outnumbered Polish fighters were overwhelmed by the Germans.

This article has been updated to clarify the name of the museum.