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Canadian Polish Congress

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Canadian Polish Congress
Logo of the Canadian Polish Congress (KPK)
Established1944
PresidentJanusz Tomczak
Location
Websitewww.kpk.org

The Canadian-Polish Congress (Template:Lang-pl, KPK, CPC) is a Canadian not-for-profit organization federally integrated on the 7th of February 1933 in Winnipeg, Manitoba which was previously known as the Federation of Polish Societies in Canada. The Canadian Polish Congress serves as the central umbrella organization for some 150 affiliated Polish-Canadian social, cultural, charitable, educational and professional organizations throughout Canada.[1][2][3] The organisation listed on the WM Fares Wall of Tribute[4] was founded in 1944,[5] it is the main advocacy group for the Polish community in Canada and promotes awareness of Poland's history and cultural heritage, and the contribution of Polish Canadians to Canadian institutions, culture and society.[6][7][8][9] Its subdivided area of activity spreads all over Canada and includes districts of Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.[10]

History

The KPK was founded in 1944 as an umbrella association of 115 different organizations. From the beginning, prior to the arrival of exiled Polish combatants in 1946, the KPK was political, excluding communists from the organization and supporting the Polish government-in-exile.[11] In the post-war period, the KPK was dominated by WWII veterans associated with the Polish Combatants Association.[12]

In the 1950s, under the presidency of Tadeusz Brzeziński, the KPK was involved in the transfer of the Wawel Castle treasures and a number of Chopin manuscripts, under its safekeeping since World War II, to Poland.[13]

In 1973, the left of centre Polish Alliance of Canada (PAC, founded in 1907) left the KPK in disagreement over the proponents of total independence of Poland that controlled the KPK, the close ties between the KPK and the government in exile, and accusations that the PAC was pro-communist. The disagreement between the PAC and KPK started to surface in the late 1960s, with the PAC advocating that the main focus of Polish-Canadian organizations should be assimilation and integration in Canada while promoting Polish culture, and opposing a non-Canadian political focus. In 1982, following the emergence of Solidarity, the PAC rejoined the KPK.[11]

The KPK spearheaded the construction of the Katyn monument in Toronto in 1980, being the first such monument in the world erected in a public place.[14][15]

The KPK was a vocal supporter of Poland’s Solidarity movement.[16] In 1981 and 1982, the KPK staged widespread protests in Canadian cities in support of Solidarity and in opposition to the Soviet Union and the imposition of martial law in Poland. The KPK, in what Clements describes as "the most contentious tone the CPC [KPK] had recorded in its history", urged the Canadian government to take action against the Polish authorities and to accept Polish political refugees. KPK's demands were largely rejected by Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, though they did succeed in getting Trudeau to address Parliament in January 1982 in support of loosening the martial law restrictions in Poland.[12]

The KPK spearheaded the founding of the Chair of Polish History at the University of Toronto and established the Council for the Support of Polish Studies at the University of Toronto to sustain Polish language and literature studies.[17][18]

In 2014 the KPK was said to represent about 150 Polish-Canadian organizations.[19] That year also saw an academic conference in Poland dedicated to the history and activities of the KPK.[19] As of mid-2010s, the KPK is involved in the construction of a Memorial to the Victims of Communism – Canada, a Land of Refuge in Ottawa.[19]

Views

The KPK's ideology is conservative, anti-communist, and supportive of the Catholic Church.[20][21][12][22]

While Poland was under communist rule, the KPK distinguished between the government and people of Poland. Member organizations were forbidden to have contact with the Polish government, and communists or those sympathetic to communists were barred from positions in KPK member organizations.[12] The KPK supports the Catholic Church, and statements or resolutions in support of the Church have been made at nearly every KPK convention.[12]

The KPK is engaged in information-providing and anti-defamation activities, and was instrumental in securing two rulings by the Ontario Press Council regarding the misuse of “Polish concentration camps.”[23][19]

The KPK has advocated that a central focus of the "mass atrocities section" in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights should be on "the injury caused to Poles and other Eastern Europeans by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia".[24] The KPK protested against "rewriting history" in Our Class,[25] a theatre play whose historical accuracy has been questioned by others.[26][27]

Charitable Foundations

The following foundations are associated with the Canadian Polish Congress:[28]

  • Charitable Foundation of the Canadian Polish Congress
  • Canadian Polish Millennium Fund
  • W. Reymont Foundation
  • Adam Mickiewicz Foundation of Canada
  • Polish Heritage Foundation of Canada

See also

References

  1. ^ Henry Radecki (6 February 1980). Ethnic Organizational Dynamics: The Polish Group in Canada. Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-88920-639-7.
  2. ^ Przegląd polonijny. Zakład Wydawniczy "NOMOS". 1998. p. 162.
  3. ^ https://www.kpk.org/about-cpc/member-organization
  4. ^ "Canadian Polish Congress • Kongres Polonii Kanadyjskiej | Pier 21". pier21.ca. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  5. ^ Avery, Donald; Fedorowicz, J. K.; Association, Canadian Historical (1982). Les Polonais au Canada. Canadian Historical Association. ISBN 978-0-88798-098-5.
  6. ^ https://www.kpk.org/about-cpc/history
  7. ^ "Polish Day celebrated at Mississauga's Celebration Square". Mississauga.com. 2018-06-11. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  8. ^ "CANADIAN POLISH CONGRESS" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "Canadian Polish Congress, Hamilton and District | Red Book HPL". redbook.hpl.ca. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  10. ^ "Polish Organizations and Cultural Centers in Canada". Website of the Republic of Poland.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ a b Payseur, Eric L. "Gendering the Generations: Polish-Canadian Women in the 1950s and 1970s." Polish American Studies 68.2 (2011): 85-105.
  12. ^ a b c d e Clements, Chris. "Voluntary Ethnic Groups and the Canadian Polish Congress’ Role in Cold War Canada." Oral History Forum d'histoire orale. Vol. 1. 2015.
  13. ^ Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm (2 November 2017). Untold Stories of Polish Heroes from World War II. Hamilton Books. pp. 15–17. ISBN 978-0-7618-6984-9.
  14. ^ 1980 Katyn Memorial, Toronto, Ethno-Cultural Monuments in Canada, http://ethnoculturalmonuments.ca/portfolio-items/1980-katyn-memorial/
  15. ^ Jack Bauming, "Monumental Type." Torontoist, August 19, 2008, https://torontoist.com/2008/08/monumental_type/
  16. ^ Michal Mlynarz. “‘It’s Our Patriotic Duty to Help Them’: The Socio-Cultural and Economic Impact of the ‘Solidarity wave’ on Canadian and Polish-Canadian Society in the Early 1980s.” Past Imperfect, vol. 13 (2007): 56-83.
  17. ^ http://sites.utoronto.ca/slavic/polish/donors.html
  18. ^ https://csps.kpk.org/
  19. ^ a b c d "Kongres Polonii Kanadyjskiej ma 70 lat". dzieje.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  20. ^ Polec, Patryk. "From Hurrah Revolutionaries to Polish Patriots: The Rise of Polish Canadian Radicalism, 1918-1939." Polish American Studies 68.2 (2011): 43-66.
  21. ^ Patryk Polec. Hurrah Revolutionaries: The Polish Canadian Communist Movement, 1918-1948. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2015, p.180.
  22. ^ Henryk Radecki & Benedykt Heydenkorn, A Member of a Distinguished Family: The Polish Group in Canada. McLelland & Stewart, 1976, p. 72-77
  23. ^ Texts of 1988 & 1992 Ontario Press Council rulings on “Polish concentration camps,” http://kpk-toronto.org/wp-content/uploads/Ont-Press-Council-rulings1.doc
  24. ^ Dhamoon, Rita Kaur; Hankivsky, Olena (December 2013). "Which Genocide Matters the Most? An Intersectionality Analysis of the Canadian Museum of Human Rights". Canadian Journal of Political Science. 46 (4): 899–920. doi:10.1017/S000842391300111X. ISSN 0008-4239.
  25. ^ Levin, Laura, Belarie Zatzman, and Joel Greenberg. "Studio 180’s Political Engagements: Finding the Jewish Soul in Canadian Theatre." Canadian Theatre Review 153 (2013): 50-55.
  26. ^ Dominic Cavendish. “Is Our Class at the National Theatre really such a reliable history lesson?” Telegraph, November 9, 2009. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/6530381/Is-Our-Class-at-the-National-Theatre-really-such-a-reliable-history-lesson.html
  27. ^ Being Poland: A New History of Polish Literature and Culture Since 1918. University of Toronto Press, 2018, p. 556. According to Jacek Kopciński, Institute of Literary Research at the Polish Academy of Sciences, Our Class is “far from a historical reconstruction of the tragic events... The casting of Polish history as a Polish-Jewish war...is a gross simplification.”
  28. ^ Canadian Polish Congress. "CHARITABLE FOUNDATIONS". Retrieved April 3, 2014.

Further reading