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Polish priest leads lonely crusade to get Church to come clean

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  • Polish priest leads lonely crusade to get Church to come clean

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 11, 2007 Thursday 12:34 PM GMT

    Polish priest leads lonely crusade to get Church to come clean about
    past

    by Maja Czarnecka

    WARSAW, Jan 11 2007


    Roman Catholic priest Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski is waging a lonely
    battle to get the Church in Poland to tell the whole truth about
    clerics who collaborated with the communists.

    The 50-year-old priest of Armenian origin launched his crusade in
    October 2005, when he had access to the file that the communist-era
    secret police, the Sluzba Bezpieczenstwa (SB), had kept on him when
    he was chaplain in the 1980s for the Solidarity trade union branch in
    Nowa Huta, a working class suburb of the southern city of Krakow.

    "I discovered that, among those who informed on me, there were
    priests. It came as a shock," recalled the bearded cleric, who was
    badly roughed up twice by the reviled SB for his anti-communist
    activities.

    Zaleski took his grim discovery to his superiors in Krakow, to warn
    them that the information in the archives "was a true time-bomb" for
    the Church, long seen as a pillar of resistance to the communists in
    Poland.

    "But the Church didn't do much," he said.

    Numerous commissions were set up "but they accomplished nothing."

    "A resolution passed in August last year, calling for a collective
    mea culpa, has remained a dead letter," he lamented, adding that all
    of Poland's bishops had signed it, including Stanislaw Wielgus, who
    on Sunday stood down after two days as archbishop of Warsaw amid a
    furore over his past.

    To Zaleski's mind, the scandal surrounding Wielgus -- the 67-year-old
    resigned as archbishop of Warsaw on Sunday after belatedly conceding
    that accusations he had collaborated with the communist SB were true
    -- was proof that his quest to make the Church come clean was just.

    "The Polish Church is going through its worst crisis now since the
    fall of communism. And it could have been avoided," Zalewski said.

    His own refusal to give in and collaborate with the SB meant that
    Zaleski was never granted a passport in the 1980s, and was therefore
    unable to travel abroad to study.

    He also recounts how he was conscripted into a demining unit when he
    did his military service. The communist-led military often placed
    priests in tough units as a means of getting them to shelve plans to
    pursue a career in the Church.

    Not only did the Church hierarchy ignore Zaleski's warnings about the
    dangers lurking in the communist archives, but the crusading father's
    higher-ups also tried to dissuade him from going further with his
    campaign.

    "Some advised me to burn everything," he said, referring to the
    manuscript of a book he has written about the communist-era archives.


    Zaleski was dubbed an enemy of the Church, an inquisitor, even a
    "super-spy" for the communist police by the Primate of Poland,
    Cardinal Jozef Glemp.

    "The Primate later apologised," Zaleski said.

    Archbishop of Krakow Stanislaw Dziwisz, the long-time personal
    secretary of the late pope John Paul II, ordered Zaleski to
    temporarily halt his research into the Church's communist past. The
    priest obeyed his superior.

    The Church is against Zaleski's mission because it believes that
    before attention is turned on collaborators -- seen as victims of
    communism -- all officials of the totalitarian regime that ruled
    Poland from the end of World War II until 1989 must be brought to
    justice, Zaleski said.

    "Those who bear true guilt are living blessed lives today," said
    Zaleski, who says that revealing now, amid feverish media coverage,
    the collaboration of a very few high-ranking clerics served only to
    detract from the stalwart role the Church played in Poland's long
    fight against communism.

    In his book, which is due to be published in the near future,
    relations between the Church and the communist secret police are
    broached only as of the seventh chapter. The greater part of the book
    is dedicated to those who did not cave in to pressure from the
    communists.

    "The Church has nothing to fear. Only 10 percent of priests
    collaborated. The others came out of the communist regime, their
    heads held high."

    According to the Polish media, Zaleski names and shames 39 Roman
    Catholic clerics, including four bishops, in his book.

    "There was a time a few years back when we could have calmly admitted
    to having had these few collaborators, and asked forgiveness, which
    society would certainly have given.

    "Ten years ago, when a priest confessed to having informed on me, I
    didn't hesitate to forgive him. Our faith is based on mercy and
    truth," he said.
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