Kraków's Disowned Soldiers
Інформація
місце видання
Kraków
рік видання:
2014
кількість сторінок
175
формат:
15 cm x 21 cm
Publication accompanies the exhibition of the same title in Schindler's Factory.
Soldiers Outcasts term refers to the anti-communist underground soldiers who defend the independent Polish fought for the right to self-determination and realization of aspirations of Polish society with a deadly weapon or in any other way , opposed the Soviet aggresion and imposed by force communist system.
The publication will find the story of 14 people-known name-which memory lives mostly among their relatives,rarely is cultivated by the institutions,and often the memory of them is close to seizing.
This crucial period of the history of contemporary Polish is almost completely unknown in the world.
It just got to know,popularized and introduced to the collective memory of the Poles.
It was not until 2011 that Polish parliament passed a law to establish Disowned Soldiers Remembrence Day,
which has since been officially honoured on 1 March.
The commemorative events are organized by central and local goverments as well as ordinary Poles who have heartfelt need to engage that attitude is particulary evident in Kraków.
Contents:
Foreword
About the Exhibition Kraków's Disowned Soldiers - Grzegorz Jeżowski
From the Home Army to the Disowned Soldiers - Filip Musiał
Kraków on the Map of the Armed Resistance Movement in Poland - Maciej Korkuć
Selected Bibliography
Biographical Entries
Przemysław Nakoniecznikoff (Krzysztof Tochman)
Jan Kanty Lasota (Teodor Gąsiorowski)
Jan Dubaniowski (Maciej Korkuć)
Józef Mika (Maciej Korkuć)
Jan Janusz (maciej Korkuć)
Bolesław Pronobis (Michał Wenklar)
Irena Odrzywołek (Grzegorz Jeżowski)
Stefan Balicki (Dawid Golik)
Stanisław Ludzia (Dawid Golik)
The Reverend Władysław Gurgacz (Dawid Golik)
Stanisław Ptak (Anna Ptak)
Jan Kot (Robert Hołda)
Henry Münch (Filip Musiał)
Józef Ostafin (Wanda Skawińska)
List of Exhibits
The publication will find the story of 14 people-known name-which memory lives mostly among their relatives,rarely is cultivated by the institutions,and often the memory of them is close to seizing.
This crucial period of the history of contemporary Polish is almost completely unknown in the world.
It just got to know,popularized and introduced to the collective memory of the Poles.
It was not until 2011 that Polish parliament passed a law to establish Disowned Soldiers Remembrence Day,
which has since been officially honoured on 1 March.
The commemorative events are organized by central and local goverments as well as ordinary Poles who have heartfelt need to engage that attitude is particulary evident in Kraków.
Contents:
Foreword
About the Exhibition Kraków's Disowned Soldiers - Grzegorz Jeżowski
From the Home Army to the Disowned Soldiers - Filip Musiał
Kraków on the Map of the Armed Resistance Movement in Poland - Maciej Korkuć
Selected Bibliography
Biographical Entries
Przemysław Nakoniecznikoff (Krzysztof Tochman)
Jan Kanty Lasota (Teodor Gąsiorowski)
Jan Dubaniowski (Maciej Korkuć)
Józef Mika (Maciej Korkuć)
Jan Janusz (maciej Korkuć)
Bolesław Pronobis (Michał Wenklar)
Irena Odrzywołek (Grzegorz Jeżowski)
Stefan Balicki (Dawid Golik)
Stanisław Ludzia (Dawid Golik)
The Reverend Władysław Gurgacz (Dawid Golik)
Stanisław Ptak (Anna Ptak)
Jan Kot (Robert Hołda)
Henry Münch (Filip Musiał)
Józef Ostafin (Wanda Skawińska)
List of Exhibits
Інформація
місце видання
Kraków
рік видання:
2014
кількість сторінок
175
формат:
15 cm x 21 cm