When apologizing to the Asian community for comments he made last month, D.C. councilmember Marion Barry may have offended another minority group on Thursday: Polish people.

Marion Barry FILE - In this July 6, 2009 file photo, former District of Columbia Mayor Marion Barry attends a news conference in Washington. Barry has been hospitalized in Las Vegas. Barry is currently a District of Columbia councilmember. His chief of staff told The Associated Press on Monday that Barry is resting comfortably and is expected to make a full recovery. AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File Former Mayor Marion Barry attends an Asian-American advocacy groups at the Matthews Memorial Baptist Church on Thursday, May 24, 2012. WTOP/Kathy Stewart Other speakers at the event were David Chung, a member of the city Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs commission, who sharply criticized Barry and what some called a "non-apology" for his Asian-American comments at a D.C. Council meeting last month. WTOP/Kathy Stewart Barry was at a meeting with Asian-American advocacy groups where he was expected to apologize for comments he made at an election night victory party. WTOP/Kathy Stewart ( 1 /4) Share This Gallery: Share on Facebook. Share on Twitter. Share via email. Print.

WASHINGTON – When apologizing to the Asian community for comments he made last month, D.C. councilmember Marion Barry may have offended another minority group on Thursday: Polish people.

Barry said the U.S. has had racial tensions since its founding.

“The Irish caught hell, the Jews caught hell, the Polacks caught hell,” Barry said. “We want Ward 8 to be the model of diversity.”

The word “Polack” is a derogatory term that describes people of Polish descent.

Barry was at a meeting with Asian-American advocacy groups at the Matthews Memorial Baptist Church where he was expected to apologize for comments he made at an election night victory party.

“We gotta do something about these Asians coming in, opening up these dirty shops,” he said on April 3. “They got to go. I’ll say that right now.”

Other speakers at Thursday’s event were David Chung, a member of the city Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs commission, who sharply criticized Barry and what some called a “non-apology” for his Asian-American comments at a D.C. Council meeting last month.

“The councilman joining us today is a positive first step toward healing racial tension,” Chung says.

He says the meeting opens a path for dialogue and for working together. They plan to work with the councilman in continuing dialogue in race relations.

Listen to Barry’s comments. Video courtesy of ABC 7:

WTOP’s Kathy Stewart contributed to this report. Follow WTOP on Twitter.

(Copyright 2012 by WTOP. All Rights Reserved.)