Postawy adaptacyjne duchowieństwa wobec władzy w okresie PRL
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Wrona, Janusz
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 129, Studia Politologica 9 (2013), s. [46]-55
Język: pl
Data: 2013
Metadata
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After World War II, the authorities intensively monitored the attitudes of the priests. It was an
element of the wide-ranging policy of weakening the position of the Church and disintegration
of the clergy. In their reports, the apparatus of the Polish United Workers’ Party and the
workers of the Ministry of Public Security of Poland and the Security Service of the Ministry of
Internal Affairs placed the attitude of the priests into three groups: “reactionists”, “positive”
and “undecided”. In the 1960s the third group was also called “moderate.” The biggest group
of adaptive attitudes towards the existing system of the power consisted of priests classified
by the authorities as “positive” and so-called “undecided” or “passive” priests. They tried to
adapt to the tough conditions and to find their place in the existing reality to survive. They
wanted to live peacefully. Many priests, due to their age, had no power to face the increasing
confrontation with the authorities. Their attitude meant accepting the existing social and
political order and limiting their activity only to the priestly activity. One also needs to take
into consideration the various activities that were undertaken by the institutional Church and
the priests who tried to make their activities more effective and adjust them to the evolving
social and political conditions of the Polish People’s Republic. Co-operation of few of the
priests with the Security Service is considered a specific and extreme form of the adaptive
attitude.