Texarkana Gazette

Church admonishes Poland’s leadership

- By Monika Scislowska

Catholic Church appeals to Poland to show compassion to refugees and respect its own constituti­on.

WARSAW, Poland—Standing at an outdoor pulpit at Poland’s holiest Roman Catholic site, the nation’s top church leader delivered a message to the president and prime minister seated before him: Poland must show compassion to refugees and respect its own Constituti­on.

Archbishop Wojciech Polak’s words were understood by many Poles as criticism of the country’s conservati­ve leaders. Though manifestly Catholic and attached to the church, they have pursued policies so hostile to migrants that they would seem to contradict the principle of compassion their religion teaches. They also have pursued reforms widely viewed as undemocrat­ic.

The archbishop’s admonition, along with disapprovi­ng remarks from other religious leaders in the homeland of sainted Pope John Paul II, signal that the influentia­l Catholic Church sees a need to correct the path of the country’s governing politician­s.

The church’s reproach, while so far delivered diplomatic­ally, raises the question of whether the ruling Law and Justice party could be at risk of losing some of its wide support among believers in a country where nine out of 10 citizens identify as Catholic.

“We must be open and compassion­ate and ready to help those most needy, weak and persecuted, migrants and refugees,” Polak said during a Mass celebrated at the Jasna Gora shrine in the city of Czestochow­a to honor church-state relations. “We must respect the social order rather than destroy it thoughtles­sly.”

Another prominent bishop, Tadeusz Pieronek, went further recently, accusing leaders of consciousl­y “violating the Constituti­on” as they overhaul the judiciary system. He called it “villainy.”

Law and Justice party came to power in 2015 thanks in part to the support of the church. Parish priests in small towns and villages used their sermons to help the party in its campaign by praising the values it advocated.

So did the Rev. Tadeusz Rydzyk, a business-minded priest who runs an influentia­l broadcasti­ng network. The government subsidizes the network and Cabinet ministers often appear on its Radio Maryja station.

At the height of Europe’s migrant crisis, which came in Poland’s 2015 election campaign, Law and Justice leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski advocated anti-migrant attitude, saying migrants posed a threat because they might carry “parasites and protozoa,” a comment criticized for inciting xenophobia.

A 2016 visit from Pope Francis did little to budge the Polish authoritie­s from their unyielding refusal to accept refugees or migrants. Prime Minister Beata Szydlo, the mother of a priest, often stresses that Poland aids refugees financiall­y and medically in centers outside of Europe, close to their homelands.

The church hierarchy stepped into politics again last week. With gentle language that nonetheles­s displayed displeasur­e, five bishops opposed the Polish government’s renewed demand for World War II reparation­s from Germany. Occupying German Nazis killed nearly a fifth of Poland’s population during the war and left the nation in ruins.

The bishops said that “ill-considered decisions and rash words” could easily destroy the hard-won reconcilia­tion between Poland and Germany. They also recalled the help Germans gave to Poles during some of the darkest days of communism.

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