Komentarze do wpisu 'Westerplatte - young people fight for the historical memory' http://historiaimedia.org/2007/09/04/westerplatte-young-people-fight-for-the-historical-memory/ Digitalizacja historii. Historia obecna w mediach. Wed, 20 Aug 2008 15:12:50 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.3.3 Przez: mw http://historiaimedia.org/2007/09/04/westerplatte-young-people-fight-for-the-historical-memory/#comment-25 mw Thu, 04 Oct 2007 00:04:55 +0000 http://historiaimedia.org/2007/09/04/westerplatte-young-people-fight-for-the-historical-memory/#comment-25 It is hard to say because it depends on the part of the society - older people have stronger connection to the war, younger - look mostly for the future. But success of the Warsaw Uprising Museum shows that II WW can be important for them. If you look into the history of the war you can very easy find how it can be so important for Poles - after the September 1939 there was no country and the nation was gathered by nazi Germany and Soviets with no right to live like a free people (with no right to have schools, literature, press, culture, own economy etc.). It is obvious. So - as a reaction for that memories - the war must have become a factor which unite a nation. You can see it even during the war - the Warsaw Uprising was supported by majority of underground organizations, which normally had a strong political antagonism (like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSZ and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armia_Krajowa). I don't know how the second world war today can unite Poles - I think it can be seen as a some kind of common experience, common tradition with defining "who I am" and affecting on the image of contemporary Germany and Russia - but of course it is only a one factor, maybe today not as strong as it was in the past. In my opinion Russians have with this case more problems because of the Stalin (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2821573.stm). The old communist propaganda describing Stalin as a "good father of the nation" is still in use as a national bonder. It is hard to say because it depends on the part of the society - older people have stronger connection to the war, younger - look mostly for the future. But success of the Warsaw Uprising Museum shows that II WW can be important for them. If you look into the history of the war you can very easy find how it can be so important for Poles - after the September 1939 there was no country and the nation was gathered by nazi Germany and Soviets with no right to live like a free people (with no right to have schools, literature, press, culture, own economy etc.). It is obvious. So - as a reaction for that memories - the war must have become a factor which unite a nation. You can see it even during the war - the Warsaw Uprising was supported by majority of underground organizations, which normally had a strong political antagonism (like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSZ and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armia_Krajowa). I don’t know how the second world war today can unite Poles - I think it can be seen as a some kind of common experience, common tradition with defining “who I am” and affecting on the image of contemporary Germany and Russia - but of course it is only a one factor, maybe today not as strong as it was in the past. In my opinion Russians have with this case more problems because of the Stalin (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2821573.stm). The old communist propaganda describing Stalin as a “good father of the nation” is still in use as a national bonder.

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Przez: Mark Stoneman http://historiaimedia.org/2007/09/04/westerplatte-young-people-fight-for-the-historical-memory/#comment-24 Mark Stoneman Wed, 03 Oct 2007 14:38:44 +0000 http://historiaimedia.org/2007/09/04/westerplatte-young-people-fight-for-the-historical-memory/#comment-24 This post and the one about the Warsaw Uprising Museum suggest that there is a powerful connection between the Second World War and Polish national identity. Is this impression accurate? (I do not know Polish, and I have never been to Poland, so my knowledge is sketchy at best.) This post and the one about the Warsaw Uprising Museum suggest that there is a powerful connection between the Second World War and Polish national identity. Is this impression accurate? (I do not know Polish, and I have never been to Poland, so my knowledge is sketchy at best.)

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