Paryska „Kultura” wobec wybranych wydarzeń z historii stosunków polsko-ukraińskich z lat 1919-1947
Abstract
Jerzy Giedroyc (1906-2000) was an editor of the Polish emigré monthly “Kultura" (1947-2000).
He created interesting and influential periodical presently regarded as an only independent centre
of Polish political thought after the Second World Was.
Within activity of the monthly there were initiatives and ideas how Poland should develop
the relationships with its neighbours, especially with Ukraine. In the view of “Kultura” Ukraine
as a future independent country should be strongly related with Poland. Owing to this Poland
could depend on partner relations with Russia.
Both Polish and Ukrainian publicists of “Kultura” showed the ways how to create the
future agreement between Poland and Ukraine. The one of its crucial links could be honest
and free of communist or nationalist rhetoric explanation of the events from common twentiethcentury
history. Jerzy Giedroyc’s circle considered it as an element of bilateral conciliation.
Publicists of “Kultura” wrote several articles on the Polish policy towards the Ukrainians in
interward Poland. In this topic there was emphasized unequal treatment of Ukrainian allies by
Poles during Polish-Bolshevik war (1919-1921) and proved discrimination against the Ukrainian
minority by the Polish government in the 30s.
The Second World War (1939-1945) brought especially many dramatic events in Polish-
Ukrainian history. Paris “Kultura wished to explicate a few problems. The first one was a question of political and practical responsibility for the death of Polish professors from Lvov in 1941. The
second one was an issue of mass murder of Polish inhabitants of Volhynia and East Galicia
committed by a part of Ukrainian nationalises in 1942-1944. In “Kultura” very important were
articles on widespread stereotypes of military supporting German Nazis by Ukrainian nationalists
during the putting down of the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. Other crucial topic was a problem of
cooperation of Polish and Ukrainian underground troops against the communist regime shortly after
the Second World War in the area of contemporary Poland.
The subject of twentieth-century Polish-Ukrainian history was relatively often presented in
“Kultura” and its “Zeszyty Historycznc". The specific of it among other things has consisted in
describing historical events according to Anglo-Saxon terminology in the humanities. The informative
purpose of “Kultura” in explaining problems from common history in several cases was
eclipsed by the didactic purpose - Paris “Kultura” consciously hyperbolized the examples of
Polish-Ukrainian cooperation because in Giedroyc’s conviction such a tactics would facilitate
neighbourly conciliation.
Other, definitely less controversial Giedroyc’s publicists’ work was created to Polish and
Ukrainian historians a platform of understanding and friendly climate for research into mutual
history.
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