Poland stands tall, proud of its deep cultural ties with religion; one of the unofficial slogans of the Republic is “Bóg, Honor, Ojczyzna” or God, Honor, Fatherland. This article explores the way in which the Church stood as a unifying force in times of oppression in Poland, and how the concept of Poland as the “Christ of Nations” emerged thanks to the works of Adam Mickiewicz. This narrative became fundamental to Polish cultural resistance in both the Partitions and the later Communist period. Yet, I will examine how the Catholic Church as this binding force slowly begins the break in the 21st Century, as Politics and Media begin to become involved with the Polish Catholic Church, and vice versa, how the Catholic Church becomes intertwined with Politics. How did this institution of hope and bastion of Polish culture, language and identity slowly start to become perceived as a controlling force. I will examine this change, the secularisation of youth in Poland, what the next steps are for Poland, the weaponization of religious rhetoric by the far-right in modern politics and how this rhetoric actually portrays the ideas presented by Christ in the Bible.
David Ostrowski (Tue,) studied this question.
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