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Wielgus collaborated with Stalinist secret service
Poland: Archbishops resignation exposes crisis of Catholic
Church
By Marius Heuser and Peter Schwarz
31 January 2007
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The recent resignation of Stanislaw Wielgus as the archbishop
of Warsaw has served to reveal the profound crisis of the Catholic
Church in Poland. The church, which has traditionally formed a
bulwark of reaction in Poland and played a significant role in
channelling mass opposition to the Stalinist regime behind capitalist
restoration, is increasingly losing influence.
Wielgus resigned on January 7 before taking his oath of office
following the release of documents just days before that proved
he had collaborated with the Polish state security services.
The government of the twin Kaczynski brothers (Lech is president,
Jaroslaw is prime minister) is deeply split over the Wielgus affair.
Sections of the conservative government campthe Samoobrona
party of Deputy Prime Minister Andrzej Lepper, the Catholic broadcasting
station Radio Maryja and the primate of the Catholic
Church, Cardinal Jozef Glempdefend Wielgus despite his past
collaboration with the Stalinist secret service. Others within
conservative circlessuch as the radical anticommunist newspaper
Gazeta Polska, which published evidence of Wielguss
activities as an informerhave vehemently attacked him.
For the Kaczynskis, the exposure of this high-ranking Catholic
dignitary has caused a considerable degree of inconvenience. Unable
to fulfil their social promises and becoming increasingly unpopular,
they are seeking to play the worn-out card of anticommunism. Scrutiny
of everyone who holds public office for a possible secret service
past is central to their government programme. The exposure of
a high-ranking Catholic dignitary as an informer of the Polish
security service has stymied the two Catholic bigots.
The Wielgus affair is only the tip of the iceberg. The Institute
of National Memory (IPN) in Warsaw, which administers the secret
service documents, assumes that 10 to 15 percent of all Polish
priests were in contact with the SB (domestic secret service).
Other estimates put the figure even higher.
According to the Polish newspaper Dziennik, documents
show that the secret service penetrated the highest levels of
the Church and even tried to influence the selection of primates.
The secret service records list the aliases of 12 bishops who
at the end of the 1970s were reporting on the internal proceedings
of the bishops conference.
The Stalinist regime and the Catholic clergy
This exposure makes clear that Wielgus and the other secret
service informants are not isolated cases. Despite the sometimes
fierce conflicts between the Catholic clergy and the Stalinist
regime, they were agreed on one fundamental question: both feared
the development of a revolutionary movement that expressed the
interests of the Polish population.
The Stalinist regime rightly perceived the major strike movements
of 1956, 1970, 1976 and 1980 as threats to its rule. Since the
Russian Revolution of 1917, the Catholic Church, which has a centuries-old
tradition of the defence of the ruling class and private property,
has served as an international bastion of anticommunism. It was
no accident that the Catholic Church supported Francos fascists
in the Spanish Civil War.
When 10 million Polish workers formed the trade union Solidarnosc
in 1980, the Church used its influence in this traditionally Catholic
country to isolate the more progressive elements and to channel
the movement into a nationalist dead end. With its long experience
as a defender of power and order, it was conscious that it could
not simply passively oppose such a mass movement, but had to seek
to actively influence it in order to destroy it.
Pope John Paul II, nominated as the first Polish pontiff two
years earlier, played a very active role in this process. In 1980,
he invited a Solidarnosc delegation to attend an audience in the
Vatican. Pope John Paul worked closely with the US intelligence
services and used various channels to funnel at least $50 million
in support for the trade union. The substantial intervention of
the Vatican contributed considerably to the fact that any progressive
tendencies inside Solidarnosc were marginalised and the clerical-nationalist
wing around Lech Walesa could dominate.
The Solidarnosc advisors and leaders who were influenced by
the Church strove hard to prevent an open confrontation with the
government. The more violent the confrontations with the government
became, the more the Solidarnosc leadership intervened to rein
in the workers. When General Wojciech Jaruzelski proclaimed martial
law on December 13, 1981, locking up thousands of workers and
shooting dozens, the trade union was completely paralysed.
For Jozef Glemp, then-primate of the Polish Church, the most
important task was to maintain public order. In his 1982 Christmas
address, he called on Poles not to break open the wounds
of the last year at Christmas. He condemned certain measures
of the regime, particularly those carried out by local authorities,
who he claimed did not have the agreement of the central powers.
Despondence and apathy, passion and despair are dangerous
conditions for the soul, he warned potential firebrands.
One cannot easily develop a social order on such unstable
internal foundations.
In 1983 and 1987, Pope John Paul II undertook two pilgrimages
to his homeland, both times meeting with the ruling military power,
General Jaruzelski. According to some reports, their meetings
were quite heated. But the pope was primarily concerned with preventing
a revolutionary development and guaranteeing capitalist restoration.
It is notable that the pope received Jaruzelski at the Vatican
even after he was no longer head of government. In January 2002,
Pope John Paul granted a two-and-a-half hour audience to the general,
by then a private citizen.
And in January 2006, Vatican Radio announced: The last
communist president of Poland, General Wojciech Jaruzelski, will
speak as a witness during the beatification process of Pope John
Paul II.... In the beatification procedures for John Paul in the
Krakow diocese, Jaruzelski, who imposed martial law in 1981, will
speak particularly about the political profile of Pope Wojtyla.
The fact that the general who headed the putsch appeared as
a principal witness to help Pope Karol Wojtyla achieve sainthood
says more about the actual relationship between Stalinism and
the Church than all the official myths about the Churchs
alleged resistance.
The informant Wielgus
It is only logical that many men of the Church went one step
further and served as informers for the Stalinist secret service.
The Warsaw archbishops past does not seem to have disturbed
Cardinal Ratzinger, Wojtylas successor.
In his resignation speech, Wielgus said he had informed the
Vatican: I have told the Holy Father and the appropriate
Vatican authorities about the path my life has taken, including
the part of my past that concerns my involvement with the contacts
of the then security authorities, who were active in a totalitarian
state that was hostile to the Church.
The Vatican, for its part, has denied this. But similar accusations
against Wielgus were well known for a long time. So far, however,
the Church has largely prevented any real investigation of the
archives.
Wielgus brazenly denied having any meetings with the Stalinist
secret serviceuntil the documents were published and proved
the contrary. Among these papers is a written statement in which
Wielgus pledged to monitor the exile Polish community, and in
particular the Polish editorial board of the radio station Free
Europe during a foreign study visit at the beginning of
the 1970s.
In the following five years, it is said he met with the secret
service about 50 times. According to a secret service report,
he recruited informers at the Catholic University of Lublin, provided
profiles of priests and scientists, and gave an evaluation of
the mood of the teaching staff during the political crises of
1968 and 1970.
Wielgus denies that his activities harmed anyone. This is hardly
credible, however, in view of his previous statement denying any
contact with the secret service.
Just one day after Wielgus resigned, yet another high-ranking
clergyman also resigned because of contact with the secret service.
The prelate of the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Janusz Bielansk,
offered Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz his resignation, who accepted
it immediately.
Newsweek Polska has reported that numerous clergymen
from the environs of Cardinal Dziwisz were put under considerable
pressure to cooperate with the secret service. Dziwisz was chaplain
to Karol Wojtyla, and after his election as pope became his personal
assistant.
The publication of these documents has unleashed a fierce reaction.
Many newspapers have called for a thorough exposure of the role
of the Church. At the same time, there have been protests against
such proceedings. Cardinal Glemp defended Wielgus with the words,
Even the apostle Peter made mistakes. He denied Jesus, and
yet he was the first to lead Christianity.
Even the head of the government, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, usually
an aggressive proponent of exposing Stalinist informers, backpedalled
and defended Wielgus: The guilt of the executioner should
not be covered over by the guilt of those who have done bad things
and were broken, but were nevertheless victims.
The Polish Bishops Conference promised to allow the investigation
of all the secret service documents concerning bishops. The results
of this investigation, however, will not be made public and will
only be shown to the pope.
The Wielgus affair is a symptom of the crisis of the Catholic
Church in Poland. Its involvement with the most right-wing political
circles and the catastrophic social consequences of the introduction
of capitalism have discredited the Church in the eyes of many
Poles. The Church is rapidly losing support in a country in which
95 percent of the population are baptised Catholics. Twenty years
ago, over 80 percent of those in Warsaw went to church regularly
on Sundays; today, it is less than a third. The Church has only
been able to preserve its influence in the backward rural areas
of eastern Poland.
For three decades, the Catholic Church was an important bulwark
against all progressive social development in Poland. The present
governmentabove all the Law and Order Party (PiS) of the
Kaczynski brothers and the League of Polish Families (LPR)rely
on religious prejudices and backwardness in order to push through
a brutal programme against the general population. The crisis
in the Church threatens to topple the entire post-Stalinist regime
in Poland. In this light, the head of government Kaczynski is
quite correct when he says that the present crisis of the Catholic
Church of Poland is also a national crisis.
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