Yet another Polish ‘long weekend’ break from the monotony of paid toil has just been officially added to the calendar for 2011 giving Thursday and Friday holidays for most Poles this week. A new holiday to commemorate the legend of Three Kings who journeyed to the birth of Christ has been declared after years of lobbying by the Church to have a state holiday to coincide with the religious feast of the Epiphany. (On this feast, Western Christians commemorate principally the visitation of the Biblical Magi to the Baby Jesus, i.e., his manifestation to the Gentiles – Wikipedia). It will now be enjoyed every year on 6 January. Apparently Catholic Poland has more of these ‘holy day’ breaks from toil than any other European country. They sit alongside the usual secular holidays such as 1 May or National Independence Day (11 November to commemorate the anniversary of Poland's assumption of independent statehood in 1918 after 123 years of partition by Russia, Prussia and Austria). The 11 November holiday falls shortly after All Saints Day on which many road deaths are recorded as people drive to cemeteries across the land to honour their ancestors, share a drink with their relative and then drive home. Invariably, if any of these holidays fall on a Tuesday or Thursday, an extra day off is taken. The table below lists only public holidays, i.e. holidays which are legally specified as non-working days.
1. 1 Jan - New Year’s Day
2. 6 Jan - Epiphany
3. Easter Sunday
4. Easter Monday
5. 1 May – State Day (formerly Labour Day in Communist times)
6. 3 May – Constitution Day
7. Pentecost Sunday (7th after Easter)
8. Corpus Christi Thursday (9th after Easter)
9. 15 August – Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
10. 1 Nov – All Saints Day
11. 11 Nov - Independence Day
12. 25 Dec – Christmas Day
13. 26 Dec – Second Day of Christmas
The following are national holidays in Poland, although they are not non-working days:
1. April 13 - World's Day of Remembrance for Victims of Katyn Massacre
2. May 2 - Flag Day anniversary of Polish flag in the aftermath of the battle of Berlin, 1945
3. June 28 - (since 2005) Day of Remembrance of the Poznań June 1956 protests
4. August 28 - Day of Polish Airforce on the anniversary of Polish victory in an airplane contest in Berlin in 1932
5. August 31 - Day of Solidarity and Freedom, commemorates the post-strike Gdansk August Agreement from 1980
6. October 14 - Day of National Education on the anniversary of the founding of the Commission of National Education
7. October 16 - Day of Pope John Paul II
Just to complete the record there are 15 other observances that offer an excuse for celebrations and present-giving:
1. Grandmother's Day on January 21,
2. Grandfather's Day on January 22,
3. Women's Day on March 8,
4. Fat Thursday on the last Thursday before Lent,
5. Śmigus Dyngus Day on Easter Monday (the day following Easter Sunday) is when traditionally the young (and young of heart) have water fights, in continuation of a pagan spring fertility ritual observed in many other cultures,
6. Mother's Day on May 26,
7. Children's Day on June 1
8. Ivan Kupala Day (Noc Kupały) on the night from June 21 to 22
9. Father's Day on June 23,
10. “Noc Świętojańska" on the night from June 22 to 23,
11. Boy's Day (Dzień Chłopaka) on September 30 - on this day girls give presents to boys
12. Teacher's Day on October 14,
13. St. Andrew's Day (Andrzejki) on November 30 - on this day people (mainly children and teens) are making prophecy by pouring candle wax by key hole to water and guessing what does the wax shape mean,
14. "Mikołajki" on December 6 - on this day Santa Claus gives presents to children,
15. Christmas Eve (Wigilia Bożego Narodzenia) on December 24,
A grand total of 34 days in the year (Easter Monday appears twice in the lists above), almost an average of one potential celebration every eleven days! Could this wealth of celebrations contribute to the Polish vodka-drinking stereotype? Or do Poles have more fun and consequently live longer than other less celebratory peoples?
A propos longevity, I came across a surprising item on the BBC website recently of particular interest to me now that I am a septuagenarian. It predicted that of the present population alive in the UK 20% would likely reach the age of 100 years:
‘Currently 11,800 people in the UK are aged 100 or over and fewer than 100 are over 110. The government figures suggest that of the more than 10m who will go on to reach 100, 3m are currently aged under 16, 5.5m are aged between 16 and 50, and 1.3m are aged between 51 and 65. About 875,000 are already aged over 65.’
Woody Allen once said that ‘nobody gets out of this world alive’ but, without tempting fate or naming names, I might reasonably expect some of my readers to make their centenary before the inevitable happens. George Vaillant’s account in “Aging Well” of the Harvard Medical School longitudinal study of aging explores the importance to longevity of: marriage and the impact of divorce; play and creative activity; the effects of tobacco, alcohol, and other mood elevators; the benefits of forming new friendships and social networks; and sustaining intellectual curiosity and lifelong learning. The 68-year longitudinal study of two socially different cohorts: 237 physically and mentally healthy Harvard college sophomores from the classes of 1939-1944, and a second cohort of 332 disadvantaged non-delinquent inner-city youths who grew up in Boston neighbourhoods between 1940 and 1945. The subjects were all male, white and of American nationality. The men were followed for 68 years until they reached the ages of 70 years for the inner-city group and 80 years for the Harvard cohort. As I read this book, recommended by Ted Wachter, many of my dear friends and readers seem to belong to the Happy-Well category in contrast to the two other broad categories used: Sad-Sick and Dead. Broadly, retirement years can be seen as our ‘Golden Years’ enjoyed by the Happy-Well or as years of terminal decline, the fate of the Sick-Sad; although such polarisation might better be expressed as slow rather than fast decline. Chance plays a major part of course but the study concluded that six descriptors contributed to ‘Graceful Aging’:
1. Remains socially useful, open to new ideas, cares about others
2. Shows integrity, accepts the past and is sustained by past accomplishments
3. Has trust and hope in life and a sensible degree of autonomy and initiative
4. Enjoys life, retains sense of humour, capacity for joy and play
5. Cheerfully accepts ‘the indignities of old age’, accepts dependence gracefully, is a model patient
6. Cultivates relationships with surviving old friends and succeeds in making new ones
Not a bad set of descriptors to aspire to in one’s later years while physical and mental health allow.
Wednesday, 26 January 2011
Sunday, 19 December 2010
Better than Rio and catching up with liberal values
The devout inhabitants of Swiebodzin in conservative western Poland have recently been featured in the global news media by out-competing the iconic Brazilian statue of Christ in Rio de Janeiro:
Holy unveiling - The world’s largest statue of Christ was unveiled last Sunday in the western town of Swiebodzin. Standing at an impressive 52 metres and weighing 440 tons, the total project cost an approximate PLN 4.5 mln. “It looks amazing,” said one woman who was there to witness the ceremony. “That’s the only word I can use to describe it.” But not everyone is in agreement. Some have argued that the money could have been spent more wisely and that the statue borders on “megalomania”. A group of faithful gathers around the giant Christ statue soaring 36 metres (118 feet) towards the heavens. The Christ of Swiebodzin wears a crown of gold dethroned the landmark Jesus of Rio de Janeiro as the world's tallest statue of Christ.
Two items in the news this week testify to Poland’s gradual emergence as a liberal democratic and increasingly tolerant society. The first is from the BBC website:
John Abraham Godson, a Polish citizen born and raised in Nigeria, has been sworn in as the first black member of Poland's parliament. Mr Godson had served as a councillor in the city of Lodz before taking up a parliamentary seat, vacated by a party colleague after local elections. His entry into parliament has created a media stir in the mainly white country. He came to Poland in the 1990s, opening an English-language school and working as a pastor in a Protestant church. He has since married a Polish woman and the couple have four children.
A member of the centre-right Civic Platform party, he was appointed to the seat vacated by party colleague Hanna Zdanowska after she became mayor of Lodz. It is still quite rare to see black people even in the Polish capital Warsaw, Poland's most cosmopolitan city. Racism is still a problem in Poland, where it is not uncommon for well-educated people to make racist jokes. Mr Godson was beaten up twice in the early 1990s but he says attitudes to black people in Poland are changing for the better, particularly since the country joined the EU six years ago. Speaking earlier to Polish radio, Mr Godson said: "I am from Lodz, I will live here, I want to die here and I want to be buried here." I could mirror these sentiments, except possibly inserting a preference to be cremated!
The second item was the news of the first lesbian marriage of two Polish women. Admittedly, it took place in Sweden, but it was featured in a documentary film on a much watched TVN private channel and also on the news on the two state TV channels. Slowly the gay rights movement is establishing itself despite Kaczynski’s PiS party and Catholic Church condemnations. We saw the programme the day after we had watched the biographical film about Harvey Milk, brilliantly played by Sean Penn, controversially a ‘straight’ actor. Milk was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in the US, in San Francisco in the mid-70s and soon afterwards was made into a martyr when he and the open-minded mayor were assassinated by a rival politician. It will probably be 50 years after the US took this big step forward that such an event will happen here in Poland, but the advance into the political arena of a different, but also abused, minority figure, John Godson, moves us forward towards a greater degree of tolerance, despite the entrenched values of the still dominant church who teach love but deny the right of many to express it.
Holy unveiling - The world’s largest statue of Christ was unveiled last Sunday in the western town of Swiebodzin. Standing at an impressive 52 metres and weighing 440 tons, the total project cost an approximate PLN 4.5 mln. “It looks amazing,” said one woman who was there to witness the ceremony. “That’s the only word I can use to describe it.” But not everyone is in agreement. Some have argued that the money could have been spent more wisely and that the statue borders on “megalomania”. A group of faithful gathers around the giant Christ statue soaring 36 metres (118 feet) towards the heavens. The Christ of Swiebodzin wears a crown of gold dethroned the landmark Jesus of Rio de Janeiro as the world's tallest statue of Christ.
Two items in the news this week testify to Poland’s gradual emergence as a liberal democratic and increasingly tolerant society. The first is from the BBC website:
John Abraham Godson, a Polish citizen born and raised in Nigeria, has been sworn in as the first black member of Poland's parliament. Mr Godson had served as a councillor in the city of Lodz before taking up a parliamentary seat, vacated by a party colleague after local elections. His entry into parliament has created a media stir in the mainly white country. He came to Poland in the 1990s, opening an English-language school and working as a pastor in a Protestant church. He has since married a Polish woman and the couple have four children.
A member of the centre-right Civic Platform party, he was appointed to the seat vacated by party colleague Hanna Zdanowska after she became mayor of Lodz. It is still quite rare to see black people even in the Polish capital Warsaw, Poland's most cosmopolitan city. Racism is still a problem in Poland, where it is not uncommon for well-educated people to make racist jokes. Mr Godson was beaten up twice in the early 1990s but he says attitudes to black people in Poland are changing for the better, particularly since the country joined the EU six years ago. Speaking earlier to Polish radio, Mr Godson said: "I am from Lodz, I will live here, I want to die here and I want to be buried here." I could mirror these sentiments, except possibly inserting a preference to be cremated!
The second item was the news of the first lesbian marriage of two Polish women. Admittedly, it took place in Sweden, but it was featured in a documentary film on a much watched TVN private channel and also on the news on the two state TV channels. Slowly the gay rights movement is establishing itself despite Kaczynski’s PiS party and Catholic Church condemnations. We saw the programme the day after we had watched the biographical film about Harvey Milk, brilliantly played by Sean Penn, controversially a ‘straight’ actor. Milk was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in the US, in San Francisco in the mid-70s and soon afterwards was made into a martyr when he and the open-minded mayor were assassinated by a rival politician. It will probably be 50 years after the US took this big step forward that such an event will happen here in Poland, but the advance into the political arena of a different, but also abused, minority figure, John Godson, moves us forward towards a greater degree of tolerance, despite the entrenched values of the still dominant church who teach love but deny the right of many to express it.
PO ascendent in local elections; Catholic Church exploits the Internet
In the November local elections in Poland, the rank order of results predicted in the run up to the elections by the New Poland Express were accurate, although the margins predicted by the polls were, as usual not so wide and PiS nationally managed 23% against Platforma’s 32%. The SLD managed 15% as did the Peasants’ party (PSL) the latter’s best ever results. Of course in the local elections there are many minor party and locally independent candidates who take the rest of the votes. In Tychy the PO president was re-elected deservedly as he has greatly enhanced the public spaces and amenities of our town in recent years.
Donald Tusk’s Civic Platform party looks set for a comfortable win in Sunday’s local elections with the main opposition party in disarray after a number of its members abandoned ship. As the clock ticks down to the weekend vote, opinion polls give Civic Platform (PO) a commanding 18 percent lead over Law and Justice (PiS) with 38 percent of the vote. To make matters worse for PiS, the polls give it just a slender lead over the third place party, the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), while another poll shows that 44 percent of the electorate has a negative opinion of the party. Although Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the PiS leader, can take heart that in the past opinion polls have tended to underestimate the support his party actually enjoys, when the results come in, the broad gap lead PO enjoys over PiS will heap more woe on the embattled party. In the past few weeks a steady trickle of its members have abandoned the PiS colours, and some of them have now formed a new political association: a move that many political commentators have interpreted as the first step to forming a rival political party to PiS. Entitled ‘Poland is the Most Important’ (‘Polska jest najwazniejsza’), its president is Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska - a leading light in the PiS ranks before she was recently expelled. Speaking at a press conference she said that PiS had failed to provide serious opposition to PO.
One can hope that this is yet another demonstration of the decreasing popularity of the paranoid PiS leader.
The next NPE snippet shows how the Catholic Church in Poland is exploiting the internet:
“Churches are now looking to the internet in an attempt to reach out to people. The parish of St.
Wojciecha in Lublin already has an ‘on-line congregation’ of 40 but is hoping to recruit more as the word spreads. “Establishing our Facebook profile was a joint decision by all our priests. While the
Head Vicar acts as administrator, I do take a look in from time to time,” says Father Jacek Wargocki.
“The creation of our profile does not mean it will replace the activity of parishioners or the personal participation in Mass,” adds Fr. Wargocki. “It can only be used as a supplement to everyday religious
practices.” But this new trend is not consigned to just a few parishes. Adam Bugiel, owner of webkoncept.pl, says that an increasing number of churches are beginning to get onboard the social networking bandwagon. “Contrary to popular belief, priests are very receptive to technological innovations”.
Donald Tusk’s Civic Platform party looks set for a comfortable win in Sunday’s local elections with the main opposition party in disarray after a number of its members abandoned ship. As the clock ticks down to the weekend vote, opinion polls give Civic Platform (PO) a commanding 18 percent lead over Law and Justice (PiS) with 38 percent of the vote. To make matters worse for PiS, the polls give it just a slender lead over the third place party, the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), while another poll shows that 44 percent of the electorate has a negative opinion of the party. Although Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the PiS leader, can take heart that in the past opinion polls have tended to underestimate the support his party actually enjoys, when the results come in, the broad gap lead PO enjoys over PiS will heap more woe on the embattled party. In the past few weeks a steady trickle of its members have abandoned the PiS colours, and some of them have now formed a new political association: a move that many political commentators have interpreted as the first step to forming a rival political party to PiS. Entitled ‘Poland is the Most Important’ (‘Polska jest najwazniejsza’), its president is Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska - a leading light in the PiS ranks before she was recently expelled. Speaking at a press conference she said that PiS had failed to provide serious opposition to PO.
One can hope that this is yet another demonstration of the decreasing popularity of the paranoid PiS leader.
The next NPE snippet shows how the Catholic Church in Poland is exploiting the internet:
“Churches are now looking to the internet in an attempt to reach out to people. The parish of St.
Wojciecha in Lublin already has an ‘on-line congregation’ of 40 but is hoping to recruit more as the word spreads. “Establishing our Facebook profile was a joint decision by all our priests. While the
Head Vicar acts as administrator, I do take a look in from time to time,” says Father Jacek Wargocki.
“The creation of our profile does not mean it will replace the activity of parishioners or the personal participation in Mass,” adds Fr. Wargocki. “It can only be used as a supplement to everyday religious
practices.” But this new trend is not consigned to just a few parishes. Adam Bugiel, owner of webkoncept.pl, says that an increasing number of churches are beginning to get onboard the social networking bandwagon. “Contrary to popular belief, priests are very receptive to technological innovations”.
Friday, 26 November 2010
November 2010 update on political happenings
There seems to be no end to the political shenanigans that beset this country now over 20 years into its life as a liberal parliamentary democracy. Graham Crawford in the New Poland Express offered this opinion on a recent alarming debate that has followed the murder of two PiS political workers in Lodz:
“What is happening to Polish politicians? A few hours after a Law and Justice (PiS) party worker was shot dead and another had his throat slit, in Lodz last week, one PiS politician shouted at a press conference, “Stop killing us!” This may have been said under the influence of strong emotions, but politicians ought to keep wise counsel in moments of duress. If that cry was emotional, then the
analysis provided by Jaroslaw Kaczynski soon after was delivered with cold calculation. He said that the murder was a political killing and that the blame for the death lies squarely with the aggressive language used by Civic Platform (PO) and is a direct result of a massed attack by the media on PiS.
Now, the fact that Mr Kaczynski should concoct a vicious, illogical argument based on little more than paranoid assertions is no surprise at all. But why on earth are the rest of Poland’s politicians arguing with him on his terms? The majority of them have been sucked into a debate about aggressive language in politics, as if the actions of the deranged Lodz killer were inspired by insults and invective. They weren’t. This kind of cod-psychology is rife, and is extremely stupid. For decades, violence has been blamed on computer games like Doom, in the 80s it was video nasties, and in the 70s my gran thought Tom and Jerry threatened the moral fabric of youth. Well, my dear old gran would be surprised, because despite watching lots of Loony Tunes cartoons in my childhood, I never turned into a homicidal maniac, and listening to the inane ramblings of Mr Kaczynski won’t unhinge me either.”
Kaczynski’s megalomania is captured by his comment at the funeral of the murdered PiS worker Marek Rosiak in Lodz that: “He died for me. He died so that I could continue my work and serve the country the best I can.” However, PiS leader Kaczynski stayed silent about the next story about a member of his party to hit the headlines:
“An MP has come under investigation after she allegedly told policemen to kiss her posterior after they pulled her over for a driving offence. Anna Sikora, a Law and Justice (PiS) member of parliament, apparently got hot under the collar when the officers demanded a PLN 200 fine for driving while talking on a mobile telephone. “The lady started cursing at us, and before we could even open our mouths she was waving around her MP identification,” one of the officers involved told the tabloid
newspaper Super Express. According to the officer, Ms Sikora said: “You can kiss my xxxx. I’m an MP.” Police also claim that she refused to hand over the money, and accused them of trying to trick her. Unhappy with the MP’s behaviour and language the police drew up a report for the prosecutor’s office. “We can confirm that we have received a notice from the police regarding the behaviour of Ms Sikora, and we will provide more details later,” said Katarzyna Szyfer, from the prosecutor’s office in
Zoliborz, the Warsaw suburb where the alleged offence took place. While the police remain adamant that Ms Sikora told them to “kiss her xxxx”, the MP has denied everything. “I wasn’t talking on the phone when driving. I only used the phone when I had a stopped in front of a bank,” said a combative Ms Sikora during an interview for the TVN24 television news channel. “Then I heard a knock on the car window. They didn’t want to identify themselves and were aggressive.” She only produced her MP’s identity documents, she claimed, after they had demanded the fine. Angry with her alleged treatment at the hands of the police she has sent a formal complaint to Andrzej Matejuk, head of
the police, and Andrzej Seremet, the prosecutor general.
This is, apparently, not the first time that the MP has used colourful language in the presence of law-enforcement officers. Back in July when city guards and private security guards cleared traders from a covered market next to Warsaw’s Palace of Culture, Ms Sikora gave them a verbal pummelling, calling them “bastards” and “peasants” and telling them that they should go and “pick asparagus in
Germany”. Law and Justice leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski has made no comment on the case.”
Meanwhile the breakaway Platforma MP Janusz Palikot speaking ahead of the demonstrations that took place in major cities around the country organised by his new political movement to protest about the ban on IVF (in-vitro fertilisation condemned by the Catholic church as ‘murder’ of the cells that are discarded thus persuading most politicians here to oppose it) concluded that “The Church has stolen the State ... Bishops should not teach women how to have children.”
It is hard to imagine that life here in Poland will become boring!
Last weekend was local election time in Poland and the rank order of results predicted in the run up to the elections by the New Poland Express were accurate, although the margins predicted by the polls were, as usual not so wide and PiS nationally managed 23% against Platforma’s 32%. The SLD managed 15% as did the Peasants’ party (PSL) the latter’s best ever results. Of course in the local elections there are many minor party and locally independent candidates who take the rest of the votes. In Tychy the PO president was re-elected deservedly as he has greatly enhanced the public spaces and amenities of our town in recent years.
Donald Tusk’s Civic Platform party looks set for a comfortable win in Sunday’s local elections with the main opposition party in disarray after a number of its members abandoned ship. As the clock ticks down to the weekend vote, opinion polls give Civic Platform (PO) a commanding 18 percent lead over Law and Justice (PiS) with 38 percent of the vote. To make matters worse for PiS, the polls give it just a slender lead over the third place party, the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), while another poll shows that 44 percent of the electorate has a negative opinion of the party. Although Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the PiS leader, can take heart that in the past opinion polls have tended to underestimate the support his party actually enjoys, when the results come in, the broad gap lead PO enjoys over PiS will heap more woe on the embattled party. In the past few weeks a steady trickle of its members have abandoned the PiS colours, and some of them have now formed a new political association: a move that many political commentators have interpreted as the first step to forming a rival political party to PiS. Entitled ‘Poland is the Most Important’ (‘Polska jest najwazniejsza’), its president is Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska - a leading light in the PiS ranks before she was recently expelled. Speaking at a press conference she said that PiS had failed to provide serious opposition to PO.
“What is happening to Polish politicians? A few hours after a Law and Justice (PiS) party worker was shot dead and another had his throat slit, in Lodz last week, one PiS politician shouted at a press conference, “Stop killing us!” This may have been said under the influence of strong emotions, but politicians ought to keep wise counsel in moments of duress. If that cry was emotional, then the
analysis provided by Jaroslaw Kaczynski soon after was delivered with cold calculation. He said that the murder was a political killing and that the blame for the death lies squarely with the aggressive language used by Civic Platform (PO) and is a direct result of a massed attack by the media on PiS.
Now, the fact that Mr Kaczynski should concoct a vicious, illogical argument based on little more than paranoid assertions is no surprise at all. But why on earth are the rest of Poland’s politicians arguing with him on his terms? The majority of them have been sucked into a debate about aggressive language in politics, as if the actions of the deranged Lodz killer were inspired by insults and invective. They weren’t. This kind of cod-psychology is rife, and is extremely stupid. For decades, violence has been blamed on computer games like Doom, in the 80s it was video nasties, and in the 70s my gran thought Tom and Jerry threatened the moral fabric of youth. Well, my dear old gran would be surprised, because despite watching lots of Loony Tunes cartoons in my childhood, I never turned into a homicidal maniac, and listening to the inane ramblings of Mr Kaczynski won’t unhinge me either.”
Kaczynski’s megalomania is captured by his comment at the funeral of the murdered PiS worker Marek Rosiak in Lodz that: “He died for me. He died so that I could continue my work and serve the country the best I can.” However, PiS leader Kaczynski stayed silent about the next story about a member of his party to hit the headlines:
“An MP has come under investigation after she allegedly told policemen to kiss her posterior after they pulled her over for a driving offence. Anna Sikora, a Law and Justice (PiS) member of parliament, apparently got hot under the collar when the officers demanded a PLN 200 fine for driving while talking on a mobile telephone. “The lady started cursing at us, and before we could even open our mouths she was waving around her MP identification,” one of the officers involved told the tabloid
newspaper Super Express. According to the officer, Ms Sikora said: “You can kiss my xxxx. I’m an MP.” Police also claim that she refused to hand over the money, and accused them of trying to trick her. Unhappy with the MP’s behaviour and language the police drew up a report for the prosecutor’s office. “We can confirm that we have received a notice from the police regarding the behaviour of Ms Sikora, and we will provide more details later,” said Katarzyna Szyfer, from the prosecutor’s office in
Zoliborz, the Warsaw suburb where the alleged offence took place. While the police remain adamant that Ms Sikora told them to “kiss her xxxx”, the MP has denied everything. “I wasn’t talking on the phone when driving. I only used the phone when I had a stopped in front of a bank,” said a combative Ms Sikora during an interview for the TVN24 television news channel. “Then I heard a knock on the car window. They didn’t want to identify themselves and were aggressive.” She only produced her MP’s identity documents, she claimed, after they had demanded the fine. Angry with her alleged treatment at the hands of the police she has sent a formal complaint to Andrzej Matejuk, head of
the police, and Andrzej Seremet, the prosecutor general.
This is, apparently, not the first time that the MP has used colourful language in the presence of law-enforcement officers. Back in July when city guards and private security guards cleared traders from a covered market next to Warsaw’s Palace of Culture, Ms Sikora gave them a verbal pummelling, calling them “bastards” and “peasants” and telling them that they should go and “pick asparagus in
Germany”. Law and Justice leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski has made no comment on the case.”
Meanwhile the breakaway Platforma MP Janusz Palikot speaking ahead of the demonstrations that took place in major cities around the country organised by his new political movement to protest about the ban on IVF (in-vitro fertilisation condemned by the Catholic church as ‘murder’ of the cells that are discarded thus persuading most politicians here to oppose it) concluded that “The Church has stolen the State ... Bishops should not teach women how to have children.”
It is hard to imagine that life here in Poland will become boring!
Last weekend was local election time in Poland and the rank order of results predicted in the run up to the elections by the New Poland Express were accurate, although the margins predicted by the polls were, as usual not so wide and PiS nationally managed 23% against Platforma’s 32%. The SLD managed 15% as did the Peasants’ party (PSL) the latter’s best ever results. Of course in the local elections there are many minor party and locally independent candidates who take the rest of the votes. In Tychy the PO president was re-elected deservedly as he has greatly enhanced the public spaces and amenities of our town in recent years.
Donald Tusk’s Civic Platform party looks set for a comfortable win in Sunday’s local elections with the main opposition party in disarray after a number of its members abandoned ship. As the clock ticks down to the weekend vote, opinion polls give Civic Platform (PO) a commanding 18 percent lead over Law and Justice (PiS) with 38 percent of the vote. To make matters worse for PiS, the polls give it just a slender lead over the third place party, the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), while another poll shows that 44 percent of the electorate has a negative opinion of the party. Although Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the PiS leader, can take heart that in the past opinion polls have tended to underestimate the support his party actually enjoys, when the results come in, the broad gap lead PO enjoys over PiS will heap more woe on the embattled party. In the past few weeks a steady trickle of its members have abandoned the PiS colours, and some of them have now formed a new political association: a move that many political commentators have interpreted as the first step to forming a rival political party to PiS. Entitled ‘Poland is the Most Important’ (‘Polska jest najwazniejsza’), its president is Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska - a leading light in the PiS ranks before she was recently expelled. Speaking at a press conference she said that PiS had failed to provide serious opposition to PO.
Thursday, 23 September 2010
September 2010 Letter from Zwakow-Suble
Our preoccupation with the antics of the nationalistic extremists and the divisive behaviour of Jaroslaw Kaczynski is still being fed by their increasingly provocative behaviour. A couple of days ago Kaczynski led a torchlight procession to the still-in-place wooden cross behind its concrete barriers outside the presidential palace in Warsaw. There he gave what was little short of an incitement to hatred speech(MPs are immune from prosecution for this) saying that Poland was now ‘a condominium of Germany and Russia’, that the new president was illegally elected by means of cooking the results, that he and Tusk the Prime Minister should ‘disappear’ and that they were responsible for the Smolensk disaster along with the Russians because his brother had to arrange his own flight instead of joining the official event to commemorate the Katyn massacre. A fortnight earlier on 31 August, he was publically embarrassed when Lech Walesa refused to attend the 30th Anniversary commemoration of the Solidarity strike. Walesa considers the current incarnation of Solidarity as too political, dominated as it is by PiS and anti-liberal members. “I don’t intend to attend. We struggled and we achieved democracy. So then I proposed that Solidarity finishes with politics,” he said. “But it continues to be political, instead of occupying itself with trade union issues.” One of the original Solidarity women signatories of the ‘round table agreement’ (at that time a tram-driver) that led to the first semi-open election in 1980 went up to the conference stage, took to the microphone and lambasted Jaroslaw (not a signatory) for his recent provocative behaviour and expressed her dismay at his colleagues in the audience who had heckled the Prime Minister as he spoke at the event.
Fortunately splits are beginning to appear in the PiS party of Kaczynski as the more reasonable members see the lurch into extremism as potentially alienating the younger electorate in particular.
Marek Migalski, a Law and Justice MEP, criticised the party leader for being too combative and warning him that his presence as leader could be damaging PiS’s election prospects. “Without you we won’t survive, [yet] but with you we won’t win,” wrote the MEP in a rare and public sign of discontent with the Mr Kaczynski, who has long dominated the party. His aggressive and abrasive politics that have long been a hallmark of PiS have now, for some in the party, become a liability rather than a bonus. Political commentators have said that PiS could benefit from a more moderate face to present it as a party of consensus and conciliation. Reformists in PiS ranks are also aware of the need to expand its pool of voters. In the past Mr Kaczynski has appealed to a strong core of older and conservative voters, often located in rural areas. While this has provided PiS with a bedrock of support, it has also meant the party has struggled to attract new and younger voters. But sources close to PiS claim that Mr Kaczynski plans to remain in control, opting for a long-term strategy. Writing off next year’s elections as unwinnable he will, apparently, focus on winning those in six years’ time.
He has begun to remove from their responsibilities a few of these dissenting voices, including the lady who master-minded his ‘makeover’ as a consensus builder during the presidential election campaign that quickly evaporated. Dorota sees worrying signs of demagogic potential and a cult of Kaczynski who is claiming that PiS and the church must ‘win back Poland’ at all costs. He is courting the extremists and she fears that the threatening language that he is using may encourage hotheads to dangerous levels. It is to be hoped that the economy remains reasonably robust for some time for large-scale unemployment could exacerbate the divisions that are being fomented in the country by this increasingly outrageous political behaviour.
In a similar vein that exposes the intolerant illiberal values of many still in this country, the following report appeared in the New Warsaw Express recently:
A gay rights group has slammed a school text book for suggesting that homosexuality is an illness that can be cured. Intended for high-school pupils, the book, entitled “On the Road to Adulthood”, drew criticism from Association of Diversity owing to its apparent old-fashioned and Catholic view on homosexuality. “(The book) remains silent on the problems of homophobia and discrimination and presents the theory that homosexuality is something one can reject and that one can return to ‘normality’,” said Przemek Szczeplocki, a spokesman from the association. “This kind of attitude deepens the lack of acceptance for gays, lesbians and bisexuals and perpetuates a belief that some sexual orientations are weird, and this is hurtful,” he said about the book intended for sex education classes. He added that he considered the book to be based on a “pseudo science” in which everyone is born heterosexual, and only become gay from either watching too much pornography or opting for it as a lifestyle choice. The book, Mr Szczeplocki claimed, also said that homosexuality was reversible.
The book added fuel to the debate in Poland about homosexuality between a growing liberal voice and conservative Catholics, who remain opposed to what they regard as the insidious and unwelcome advance of relaxed attitudes towards homosexuality from western Europe. Controversies over the portrayal of sexuality or unusual sexual preferences in school books are nothing new to Poland. A few years ago one book generated public attention after it printed an article on how some men like to dress up as women next to a picture of a kilted Scotsman.
Fortunately splits are beginning to appear in the PiS party of Kaczynski as the more reasonable members see the lurch into extremism as potentially alienating the younger electorate in particular.
Marek Migalski, a Law and Justice MEP, criticised the party leader for being too combative and warning him that his presence as leader could be damaging PiS’s election prospects. “Without you we won’t survive, [yet] but with you we won’t win,” wrote the MEP in a rare and public sign of discontent with the Mr Kaczynski, who has long dominated the party. His aggressive and abrasive politics that have long been a hallmark of PiS have now, for some in the party, become a liability rather than a bonus. Political commentators have said that PiS could benefit from a more moderate face to present it as a party of consensus and conciliation. Reformists in PiS ranks are also aware of the need to expand its pool of voters. In the past Mr Kaczynski has appealed to a strong core of older and conservative voters, often located in rural areas. While this has provided PiS with a bedrock of support, it has also meant the party has struggled to attract new and younger voters. But sources close to PiS claim that Mr Kaczynski plans to remain in control, opting for a long-term strategy. Writing off next year’s elections as unwinnable he will, apparently, focus on winning those in six years’ time.
He has begun to remove from their responsibilities a few of these dissenting voices, including the lady who master-minded his ‘makeover’ as a consensus builder during the presidential election campaign that quickly evaporated. Dorota sees worrying signs of demagogic potential and a cult of Kaczynski who is claiming that PiS and the church must ‘win back Poland’ at all costs. He is courting the extremists and she fears that the threatening language that he is using may encourage hotheads to dangerous levels. It is to be hoped that the economy remains reasonably robust for some time for large-scale unemployment could exacerbate the divisions that are being fomented in the country by this increasingly outrageous political behaviour.
In a similar vein that exposes the intolerant illiberal values of many still in this country, the following report appeared in the New Warsaw Express recently:
A gay rights group has slammed a school text book for suggesting that homosexuality is an illness that can be cured. Intended for high-school pupils, the book, entitled “On the Road to Adulthood”, drew criticism from Association of Diversity owing to its apparent old-fashioned and Catholic view on homosexuality. “(The book) remains silent on the problems of homophobia and discrimination and presents the theory that homosexuality is something one can reject and that one can return to ‘normality’,” said Przemek Szczeplocki, a spokesman from the association. “This kind of attitude deepens the lack of acceptance for gays, lesbians and bisexuals and perpetuates a belief that some sexual orientations are weird, and this is hurtful,” he said about the book intended for sex education classes. He added that he considered the book to be based on a “pseudo science” in which everyone is born heterosexual, and only become gay from either watching too much pornography or opting for it as a lifestyle choice. The book, Mr Szczeplocki claimed, also said that homosexuality was reversible.
The book added fuel to the debate in Poland about homosexuality between a growing liberal voice and conservative Catholics, who remain opposed to what they regard as the insidious and unwelcome advance of relaxed attitudes towards homosexuality from western Europe. Controversies over the portrayal of sexuality or unusual sexual preferences in school books are nothing new to Poland. A few years ago one book generated public attention after it printed an article on how some men like to dress up as women next to a picture of a kilted Scotsman.
Tuesday, 13 April 2010
Looking for something positive from the Polish disaster
This inspiring article The Glory of Poland by Roger Cohen appeared in today’s New York Times.
“NEW YORK — My first thought, hearing of the Polish tragedy, was that history’s gyre can be of an unbearable cruelty, decapitating Poland’s elite twice in the same cursed place, Katyn. My second was to call my old friend Adam Michnik in Warsaw. Michnik, an intellectual imprisoned six times by the former puppet-Soviet Communist rulers, once told me:
“Anyone who has suffered that humiliation, at some level, wants revenge. I know all the lies. I saw people being killed. But I also know that revanchism is never ending. And my obsession has been that we should have a revolution that does not resemble the French or Russian, but rather the American, in the sense that it be for something, not against something. A revolution for a constitution, not a paradise. An anti-utopian revolution. Because utopias lead to the guillotine and the gulag.”
Michnik’s obsession has yielded fruit. President Lech Kaczynski is dead. Slawomir Skrzypek, the president of the National Bank, is dead. An explosion in the fog of the forest took them and 94 others on the way to Katyn. But Poland’s democracy has scarcely skipped a beat. The leader of the lower house of Parliament has become acting president pending an election. The first deputy president of the National Bank has assumed the duties of the late president. Poland, oft dismembered, even wiped from the map, is calm and at peace.
“Katyn is the place of death of the Polish intelligentsia,” Michnik, now the soul of Poland’s successful Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper, said when I reached him by phone. “This is a terrible national tragedy. But in my sadness I am optimistic because Putin’s strong and wise declaration has opened a new phase in Polish-Russian relations, and because we Poles are showing we can be responsible and stable.”
Michnik was referring to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s words after he decided last week to join, for the first time, Polish officials commemorating the anniversary of the murder at Katyn of thousands of Polish officers by the Soviet Union at the start of World War II. Putin, while defending the Russian people, denounced the “cynical lies” that had hidden the truth of Katyn, said “there is no justification for these crimes” of a “totalitarian regime” and declared, “We should meet each other halfway, realizing that it is impossible to live only in the past.”
The declaration, dismissed by the paleolithic Russian Communist Party, mattered less than Putin’s presence, head bowed in that forest of shame. Watching him beside Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, I thought of François Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl hand-in-hand at Verdun in 1984: of such solemn moments of reconciliation has the miracle of a Europe whole and free been built. Now that Europe extends eastward toward the Urals.
I thought even of Willy Brandt on his knees in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1970, a turning point on the road to a German-Polish reconciliation more miraculous in its way even than the dawning of the post-war German-French alliance. And now perhaps comes the most wondrous rapprochement, the Polish-Russian.
It is too early to say where Warsaw-Moscow relations are headed but not too early to say that 96 lost souls would be dishonored if Polish and Russian leaders do not make of this tragedy a solemn bond. As Tusk told Putin, “A word of truth can mobilize two peoples looking for the road to reconciliation. Are we capable of transforming a lie into reconciliation? We must believe we can.”
Poland should shame every nation that believes peace and reconciliation are impossible, every state that believes the sacrifice of new generations is needed to avenge the grievances of history. The thing about competitive victimhood, a favorite Middle Eastern pastime, is that it condemns the children of today to join the long list of the dead.
For scarcely any nation has suffered since 1939 as Poland, carved up by the Hitler-Stalin nonaggression pact, transformed by the Nazis into the epicenter of their program to annihilate European Jewry, land of Auschwitz and Majdanek, killing field for millions of Christian Poles and millions of Polish Jews, brave home to the Warsaw Uprising, Soviet pawn, lonely Solidarity-led leader of post-Yalta Europe’s fight for freedom, a place where, as one of its great poets, Wislawa Szymborska, wrote, “History counts its skeletons in round numbers” — 20,000 of them at Katyn.
It is this Poland that is now at peace with its neighbors and stable. It is this Poland that has joined Germany in the European Union. It is this Poland that has just seen the very symbols of its tumultuous history (including the Gdansk dock worker Anna Walentynowicz and former president-in-exile Ryszard Kaczorowski) go down in a Soviet-made jet and responded with dignity, according to the rule of law.
So do not tell me that cruel history cannot be overcome. Do not tell me that Israelis and Palestinians can never make peace. Do not tell me that the people in the streets of Bangkok and Bishkek and Tehran dream in vain of freedom and democracy. Do not tell me that lies can stand forever.
Ask the Poles. They know.”
An update from a less lofty perspective - the party of the dead President is already moving to make his twin brother a candidate for the next presidential election that will be held within the next 60 days. In my view this would be a backward move for the country in terms of its progress towards liberal modernity and improved international relations. Jaroslaw Kaczynski was the leader of the PIS (Law & Justice) party who, while PM, effectively manoeuvred his brother into power. He was always a tougher and more aggressive figure than his twin and is seen as the real Machiavellian power of the nationalistic and populist PIS party. The party will now win a populist surge of emotional support unrelated to their policies, not only from the sympathy and shock over Lech and his wife's tragic death but also because the majority of the dead members of parliament in the entourage were PIS members personally invited to travel with the President. Lech Kaczynski who notably failed to rise above party political preferences once he assumed presidential office.
Fingers crossed for the warming of Russo-Polish relations to which Cohen’s article refers. This optimistic momentum will be curtailed if another Kaczynski attains presidential office. He would be even less of a 'statesman' than his brother has been and would likely step up the simmering conflict with the Prime Minister that has marred his brother's term in office as well as renewing the animosity towards Russia.
The body of Mrs Kaczynski will be returned in state today with similar ceremony and TV coverage as her husband's received. Hundreds of thousands of people are still out on the streets in Warsaw paying their shocked tributes by lighting their candles and making mountains of flowers. Two marches will take place in Katowice today, one organised by the Institute of National Remembrance whose director died in the tragedy. There are no adverts on TV channels, just emotion-provoking images of the presidential couple, accompanied by uplifting music. It is a remarkable example of media's power to massage the masses and fan the emotions. There is a level of engagement here that is well beyond politics and is deeply tied to a sense of national, even tribal identity with one's leader(s), something perhaps encoded by evolution into our psyches.
“NEW YORK — My first thought, hearing of the Polish tragedy, was that history’s gyre can be of an unbearable cruelty, decapitating Poland’s elite twice in the same cursed place, Katyn. My second was to call my old friend Adam Michnik in Warsaw. Michnik, an intellectual imprisoned six times by the former puppet-Soviet Communist rulers, once told me:
“Anyone who has suffered that humiliation, at some level, wants revenge. I know all the lies. I saw people being killed. But I also know that revanchism is never ending. And my obsession has been that we should have a revolution that does not resemble the French or Russian, but rather the American, in the sense that it be for something, not against something. A revolution for a constitution, not a paradise. An anti-utopian revolution. Because utopias lead to the guillotine and the gulag.”
Michnik’s obsession has yielded fruit. President Lech Kaczynski is dead. Slawomir Skrzypek, the president of the National Bank, is dead. An explosion in the fog of the forest took them and 94 others on the way to Katyn. But Poland’s democracy has scarcely skipped a beat. The leader of the lower house of Parliament has become acting president pending an election. The first deputy president of the National Bank has assumed the duties of the late president. Poland, oft dismembered, even wiped from the map, is calm and at peace.
“Katyn is the place of death of the Polish intelligentsia,” Michnik, now the soul of Poland’s successful Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper, said when I reached him by phone. “This is a terrible national tragedy. But in my sadness I am optimistic because Putin’s strong and wise declaration has opened a new phase in Polish-Russian relations, and because we Poles are showing we can be responsible and stable.”
Michnik was referring to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s words after he decided last week to join, for the first time, Polish officials commemorating the anniversary of the murder at Katyn of thousands of Polish officers by the Soviet Union at the start of World War II. Putin, while defending the Russian people, denounced the “cynical lies” that had hidden the truth of Katyn, said “there is no justification for these crimes” of a “totalitarian regime” and declared, “We should meet each other halfway, realizing that it is impossible to live only in the past.”
The declaration, dismissed by the paleolithic Russian Communist Party, mattered less than Putin’s presence, head bowed in that forest of shame. Watching him beside Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, I thought of François Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl hand-in-hand at Verdun in 1984: of such solemn moments of reconciliation has the miracle of a Europe whole and free been built. Now that Europe extends eastward toward the Urals.
I thought even of Willy Brandt on his knees in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1970, a turning point on the road to a German-Polish reconciliation more miraculous in its way even than the dawning of the post-war German-French alliance. And now perhaps comes the most wondrous rapprochement, the Polish-Russian.
It is too early to say where Warsaw-Moscow relations are headed but not too early to say that 96 lost souls would be dishonored if Polish and Russian leaders do not make of this tragedy a solemn bond. As Tusk told Putin, “A word of truth can mobilize two peoples looking for the road to reconciliation. Are we capable of transforming a lie into reconciliation? We must believe we can.”
Poland should shame every nation that believes peace and reconciliation are impossible, every state that believes the sacrifice of new generations is needed to avenge the grievances of history. The thing about competitive victimhood, a favorite Middle Eastern pastime, is that it condemns the children of today to join the long list of the dead.
For scarcely any nation has suffered since 1939 as Poland, carved up by the Hitler-Stalin nonaggression pact, transformed by the Nazis into the epicenter of their program to annihilate European Jewry, land of Auschwitz and Majdanek, killing field for millions of Christian Poles and millions of Polish Jews, brave home to the Warsaw Uprising, Soviet pawn, lonely Solidarity-led leader of post-Yalta Europe’s fight for freedom, a place where, as one of its great poets, Wislawa Szymborska, wrote, “History counts its skeletons in round numbers” — 20,000 of them at Katyn.
It is this Poland that is now at peace with its neighbors and stable. It is this Poland that has joined Germany in the European Union. It is this Poland that has just seen the very symbols of its tumultuous history (including the Gdansk dock worker Anna Walentynowicz and former president-in-exile Ryszard Kaczorowski) go down in a Soviet-made jet and responded with dignity, according to the rule of law.
So do not tell me that cruel history cannot be overcome. Do not tell me that Israelis and Palestinians can never make peace. Do not tell me that the people in the streets of Bangkok and Bishkek and Tehran dream in vain of freedom and democracy. Do not tell me that lies can stand forever.
Ask the Poles. They know.”
An update from a less lofty perspective - the party of the dead President is already moving to make his twin brother a candidate for the next presidential election that will be held within the next 60 days. In my view this would be a backward move for the country in terms of its progress towards liberal modernity and improved international relations. Jaroslaw Kaczynski was the leader of the PIS (Law & Justice) party who, while PM, effectively manoeuvred his brother into power. He was always a tougher and more aggressive figure than his twin and is seen as the real Machiavellian power of the nationalistic and populist PIS party. The party will now win a populist surge of emotional support unrelated to their policies, not only from the sympathy and shock over Lech and his wife's tragic death but also because the majority of the dead members of parliament in the entourage were PIS members personally invited to travel with the President. Lech Kaczynski who notably failed to rise above party political preferences once he assumed presidential office.
Fingers crossed for the warming of Russo-Polish relations to which Cohen’s article refers. This optimistic momentum will be curtailed if another Kaczynski attains presidential office. He would be even less of a 'statesman' than his brother has been and would likely step up the simmering conflict with the Prime Minister that has marred his brother's term in office as well as renewing the animosity towards Russia.
The body of Mrs Kaczynski will be returned in state today with similar ceremony and TV coverage as her husband's received. Hundreds of thousands of people are still out on the streets in Warsaw paying their shocked tributes by lighting their candles and making mountains of flowers. Two marches will take place in Katowice today, one organised by the Institute of National Remembrance whose director died in the tragedy. There are no adverts on TV channels, just emotion-provoking images of the presidential couple, accompanied by uplifting music. It is a remarkable example of media's power to massage the masses and fan the emotions. There is a level of engagement here that is well beyond politics and is deeply tied to a sense of national, even tribal identity with one's leader(s), something perhaps encoded by evolution into our psyches.
The latest Polish tragedy
We awoke on Saturday 10 April to hear on the news an inconclusive report of an air crash near Smolensk. It took a little time to establish that the 20-year old Russian-built plane carrying the President of Poland Lech Kaczynski and his entourage was the plane that has crashed and that all 96 on board were killed. There were initially reports of four gravely wounded passengers but these were later discounted. The enormity of the loss to the nation’s cadre of leaders was revealed only gradually, as it was not clear that the passenger list matched the actual travellers. The invitation to travel with the President’s separately arranged trip to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre was his private initiative and normal ticketing and check-in procedures are not followed on such occasions. The first list was only of those invited. There is an unpleasant history of conflict between the President and the Prime Minister about attending international events and Kaczynski had foregone the opportunity to attend the official international ceremony with PM Tusk and Vladimir Putin two days before. In addition to his disagreements with the Polish Prime Minister, arch-nationalist Kaczynski was disinclined to be seen with Putin and had taken no part in Tusk’s move to rebuild the frosty post-World War II relations with Russia. Putin had taken a major step in acknowledging that it was the Soviets and not the Nazis who had murdered 22000 Polish officers (although without giving a formal apology) and this seemed to herald a better and more open relationship between the two countries.
It is a terribly dark irony that this peacetime disaster happened as a consequence of that much greater wartime tragedy so long ago. "This is so very much like Katyn, where our head was cut off," said former President Lech Walesa. “It could only happen to Poland” said another commentator, reflecting the pessimism arising from the tragic history of this vulnerable nation. Also adding to the irony is the fact that the abrasive and largely unpopular president who was avoiding normal international courtesies to organise his own Polish-only commemoration at Katyn has now been elevated to the status of a national martyr. The tragic accident, possibly an act of Polish aviational bravura, took the lives of the top military commanders, over 30 members of the parliament, the head of the national bank and so many other key people belonging to the ruling class. Russian investigators suspect pilot error caused the crash. They say the pilots were warned that they were flying too low just before the plane clipped tree-tops in heavy fog, as it was coming in to land.
Here are some of the victims:
National leaders - President Lech Kaczynski and wife Maria; Ryszard Kaczorowski Former President-in-exile
Top civil servant - Slawomir Skrzypek National Bank of Poland chairman
Other politicians - Wladyslaw Stasiak chief of the president's chancellery; Aleksander Szczyglo chief of the National Security Office; Jerzy Szmajdzinski deputy speaker of the lower house Andrzej Kremer Foreign Ministry's undersecretary of state Stanislaw Komorowski deputy minister of national defence Przemyslaw Gosiewski Law and Justice party deputy chair
Military figures - Franciszek Gagor chief of the general staff; Andrzej Blasik head of the air force; Andrzej Karweta head of the navy; Tadeusz Buk land forces commander; Aleksander Szczyglo head of the National Security Office
Cultural figures - Andrzej Przewoznik head of Poland's Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites; Tomasz Merta chief historical conservator
No doubt after the many upcoming funerals questions will be asked about the policy of placing so many top people on a single airplane for a day trip to a ceremonial event. It is, of course, hard to refuse a personal invitation from the President himself, especially when the event commemorates a national tragedy, only unwittingly to become another national tragedy.
We are now in a 7-day period of national mourning. All shops were closed on Sunday and national TV has stopped all entertainment programmes to give 24 hour coverage of the event and its consequences. Canal +, the private subscription channel on which I see live UK Premiership soccer games, ran the weekend matches without the commentary in Polish. The return of the president’s body, one of only 24 yet to be identified, was covered and repeated endlessly on TV. Some of the images are available on http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/8614296.stm including a poignant picture of Jaroslaw Zaczynski, the President’s twin brother, kneeling by the coffin after it landed on Polish territory. The cortege reminded me of that of Princess Diana’s, as did the throwing of flowers by the masses of people along the route as it passed.
One possible silver lining to this unprecedented cloud on Poland’s peacetime history is pointed to in this BBC News website item:
‘The Russian authorities have announced that they will meet all of the expenses of the Polish relatives coming to Moscow, and provide counselling alongside Polish colleagues. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin flew to Smolensk just hours after the crash and sought to console his Polish counterpart, Donald Tusk. Russia's handling of the tragedy has won some admiration in Poland. Witold Waszczykowski, deputy head of Poland's National Security Bureau and one of the few Kaczynski aides not to have been on Saturday's ill-fated flight, was quoted by Reuters as saying: "We did not expect this gentle, kind approach, this personal involvement from Putin. "Naturally it will have a positive impact on the relationship between our countries." Poland's ambassador to Russia, Jerzy Bahr, told Polish TV: "We can sense Russian solidarity at every step of the way."
Russians have also been deeply moved by this extraordinary tragedy. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday an official day of mourning with flags flying at half mast and television channels cancelling all entertainment programmes. Large numbers of flowers have been laid outside the Polish embassy In Moscow. It is just one of many indications of how the disaster on Saturday may ultimately help Russia and Poland bring to an end the hostility which has characterised their relations for so long’.
Sadly Jaroslaw Kaczynski did not contribute to this momentum when he refused the offer of PM Tusk and Vladimir Putin to accompany him in laying down a wreath to the dead when he visited Moscow to identify his brother’s body. And predictably, the conspiracy theorists are coming out of the woodwork to construct fantasies about the crash being a Russian plot. Der Spiegel the German newspaper has already speculated the Jaroslaw could become the next president on a wave of emotional voting when Parliamentary Speaker Bronislaw Komorowski calls for early elections within 14 days, in line with the constitution. The vote must be held within another 60 days. The people with whom we normally engage, sincerely hope that this does not happen. But this is a classic example of the non-linearity and unpredictability of how our human systems work. Poland will adapt and, as with Kennedy’s assassination and 9/11 we will always remember where we were on first hearing of that awful day of national loss.
It is a terribly dark irony that this peacetime disaster happened as a consequence of that much greater wartime tragedy so long ago. "This is so very much like Katyn, where our head was cut off," said former President Lech Walesa. “It could only happen to Poland” said another commentator, reflecting the pessimism arising from the tragic history of this vulnerable nation. Also adding to the irony is the fact that the abrasive and largely unpopular president who was avoiding normal international courtesies to organise his own Polish-only commemoration at Katyn has now been elevated to the status of a national martyr. The tragic accident, possibly an act of Polish aviational bravura, took the lives of the top military commanders, over 30 members of the parliament, the head of the national bank and so many other key people belonging to the ruling class. Russian investigators suspect pilot error caused the crash. They say the pilots were warned that they were flying too low just before the plane clipped tree-tops in heavy fog, as it was coming in to land.
Here are some of the victims:
National leaders - President Lech Kaczynski and wife Maria; Ryszard Kaczorowski Former President-in-exile
Top civil servant - Slawomir Skrzypek National Bank of Poland chairman
Other politicians - Wladyslaw Stasiak chief of the president's chancellery; Aleksander Szczyglo chief of the National Security Office; Jerzy Szmajdzinski deputy speaker of the lower house Andrzej Kremer Foreign Ministry's undersecretary of state Stanislaw Komorowski deputy minister of national defence Przemyslaw Gosiewski Law and Justice party deputy chair
Military figures - Franciszek Gagor chief of the general staff; Andrzej Blasik head of the air force; Andrzej Karweta head of the navy; Tadeusz Buk land forces commander; Aleksander Szczyglo head of the National Security Office
Cultural figures - Andrzej Przewoznik head of Poland's Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites; Tomasz Merta chief historical conservator
No doubt after the many upcoming funerals questions will be asked about the policy of placing so many top people on a single airplane for a day trip to a ceremonial event. It is, of course, hard to refuse a personal invitation from the President himself, especially when the event commemorates a national tragedy, only unwittingly to become another national tragedy.
We are now in a 7-day period of national mourning. All shops were closed on Sunday and national TV has stopped all entertainment programmes to give 24 hour coverage of the event and its consequences. Canal +, the private subscription channel on which I see live UK Premiership soccer games, ran the weekend matches without the commentary in Polish. The return of the president’s body, one of only 24 yet to be identified, was covered and repeated endlessly on TV. Some of the images are available on http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/8614296.stm including a poignant picture of Jaroslaw Zaczynski, the President’s twin brother, kneeling by the coffin after it landed on Polish territory. The cortege reminded me of that of Princess Diana’s, as did the throwing of flowers by the masses of people along the route as it passed.
One possible silver lining to this unprecedented cloud on Poland’s peacetime history is pointed to in this BBC News website item:
‘The Russian authorities have announced that they will meet all of the expenses of the Polish relatives coming to Moscow, and provide counselling alongside Polish colleagues. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin flew to Smolensk just hours after the crash and sought to console his Polish counterpart, Donald Tusk. Russia's handling of the tragedy has won some admiration in Poland. Witold Waszczykowski, deputy head of Poland's National Security Bureau and one of the few Kaczynski aides not to have been on Saturday's ill-fated flight, was quoted by Reuters as saying: "We did not expect this gentle, kind approach, this personal involvement from Putin. "Naturally it will have a positive impact on the relationship between our countries." Poland's ambassador to Russia, Jerzy Bahr, told Polish TV: "We can sense Russian solidarity at every step of the way."
Russians have also been deeply moved by this extraordinary tragedy. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday an official day of mourning with flags flying at half mast and television channels cancelling all entertainment programmes. Large numbers of flowers have been laid outside the Polish embassy In Moscow. It is just one of many indications of how the disaster on Saturday may ultimately help Russia and Poland bring to an end the hostility which has characterised their relations for so long’.
Sadly Jaroslaw Kaczynski did not contribute to this momentum when he refused the offer of PM Tusk and Vladimir Putin to accompany him in laying down a wreath to the dead when he visited Moscow to identify his brother’s body. And predictably, the conspiracy theorists are coming out of the woodwork to construct fantasies about the crash being a Russian plot. Der Spiegel the German newspaper has already speculated the Jaroslaw could become the next president on a wave of emotional voting when Parliamentary Speaker Bronislaw Komorowski calls for early elections within 14 days, in line with the constitution. The vote must be held within another 60 days. The people with whom we normally engage, sincerely hope that this does not happen. But this is a classic example of the non-linearity and unpredictability of how our human systems work. Poland will adapt and, as with Kennedy’s assassination and 9/11 we will always remember where we were on first hearing of that awful day of national loss.
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