His remarks come on the day the Polish community led a silent march in Harlow, Essex, in memory of a factory worker who was killed in what police have called a possible hate crime.
Arkadiusz Jozwik, 40, died from head injuries after he and his friend were attacked outside a takeaway shop in the town on 27 August.
Six teenage boys were arrested on suspicion of murder and have been released on bail.
Police say they are looking into whether the Pole's killing was a hate crime, but stress the motive is still unclear.
Polish foreign minister Witold Waszczykowski held talks with British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson in Warsaw on Saturday.
After the meeting, Mr Waszczykowski said: "We're counting on the British Government and authorities responsible for the safety of British and European citizens, including Poles, to prevent the kind of xenophobic acts we've seen recently."
There was a sharp increase in the number of hate crimes reported in Britain around the time of the EU referendum.
And last week new figures showed a surge in suspected race hate crimes on UK railways since the Brexit vote.
Mr Johnson, the leading figurehead of the Leave campaign, insisted there was "absolutely no place for xenophobia in our society".
"The Polish contribution to our society and our culture, and above all to our economy, is absolutely immense," he added.
Mr Waszczykowski insisted that "the huge number of Poles living in Britain constitutes an important area of our cooperation".
In Harlow, hundreds of people, many of them Poles, gathered for the vigil for Mr Jozwik on Saturday.
During the day, the Polish national anthem was sung and many laid flowers at the scene of the killing.
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