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kow Says
No!
by John Horvat II
The city of Krakow would seem
to be an unlikely place for a heated debate over homosexual
“rights” and same-sex “marriage.”
Poland’s cultural capital is situated in a conservative
region in this overwhelmingly Catholic country.
The city’s homosexual population
is minute and insignificant. Indeed the issue has been largely
ignored by Polish media. Resistance to the idea of same-sex
“marriage” is strong and there is a tendency
to be complacent in the belief that such an aberration would
never enter the country.
This climate, however, has recently changed.
With Poland’s May 1 entry into the European Union,
many Poles are feeling the pressure to follow the example
of other member nations who have approved same-sex unions
and other such partnership benefits.
A March is Announced
This was further aggravated when a
small group of homosexual activists in Krakow announced
their intention to stage a protest march of “tolerance”
on the same day as the procession of St. Stanislaus, the
city’s patron and its largest religious event counting
on the presence of cardinals, bishops, local clergy, city
officials and multitudes of the faithful. The march was
to end with a festival with art music and films with “gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgendered themes.”
City leaders immediately reacted to what they did not hesitate
to call a “provocation.” It was only with difficulty
that the march was moved two days earlier to May 8. With
this, homosexual activists hoped to defuse protests and
parade unopposed.
It was into this charged atmosphere that
I unwittingly stumbled when I arrived in Krakow in early May.
Two months earlier, I had been invited to give a series of
informative talks on the homosexual movement and introduce
the American TFP’s book, Defending a Higher Law:
Why We Must Resist Same-sex Marriage and the Homosexual Movement.
The TFP-inspired Stowarzyszenie
Kultury Chrzescijanskiej im. Ks. Piotra Skargi (Fr. Peter
Skarga Association for Christian Culture) sponsored the tour.
At the time of the invitation, the talks were to speak about
a future threat. Now the threat was real.
Perceiving the need to protest against
this provocation, Fr. Peter Skarga Association for Christian
Culture sent nearly 280,000 flyers to Krakow residents.
Readers were urged to send protest postcards to the city’s
mayor and the rector of the sponsoring Jagiellonian University.
The issue quickly came to the fore. Over
30,000 protest post cards flooded both the town hall and
university offices.
A Whirlwind Tour
The Krakow debate made same-sex “marriage”
and homosexual rights an issue all over Poland. The liberal
tabloid Gazeta Wyborcz, took note of the debate
with the headline: “Krakow Says No to Gays.”
The controversy in Krakow only served to
spark interest in the scheduled talks. The one-week whirlwind
tour took us to Warsaw, Sandomierz, Lublin and Torun.
A few days before the march, the Fr. Peter
Skarga Association for Christian Culture organized a public
lecture on homosexuality at the ornate general chamber in
the historic Krakow City Hall. Noted Polish doctor and psychologist
Wanda Poltawski spoke at length of her observations and treatment
of homosexuality. I also spoke to those who filled the full
city chamber to tell them they were not alone: a majority
of Americans also oppose same-sex marriage.
At Warsaw’s Institute for Family
Studies, I spoke to a vibrant auditorium of university students
where we discussed at length about how to deal with media
and cultural pressure to accept homosexuality within their
own age group.
At the diocesan seminary in Sandomierz,
it was heartening to see a room full of 145 seminarians,
many in cassocks whose main concern were the pastoral aspects
of the homosexual problem as well as the recent Church documents
against same-sex unions.
Prof. Arkadiusz Robaczewski gathered members
of his Instytut Edukacji Narodowej
at Catholic University in Lublin where we discussed how the
fall of communism made the left change its field of action.
The new members of the proletariat of the left are the homosexual,
feminist and ecological activists who see themselves as oppressed
by Christian morality.
In Torun, north of Warsaw, we were part
of a symposium at a Redemptorist school of journalism on
the homosexual movement. A lively auditorium of young students
discussed many of the myths used by the homosexual movement
to promote their cause. These included the use of inflated
numbers and the idea that homosexuality is innate or genetic.
At nearby Radio Maryja, we visited this
impressive state-of-the-art Catholic radio and television
studio. Run by Fr. Tadeusz Rydzyk, the facility has millions
of listeners in Poland and abroad. On both television and
radio, I was invited to give an American perspective on
the homosexual movement and field questions from listeners
throughout Poland and even the United States.
Throughout the tour, Polish friends were
heartened to hear there are wholesome reactions to homosexuality
in America. They were encouraged to see they are not alone
and how all must be united against the actions of the worldwide
homosexual movement.
A Loud No
The march in Krakow took place as
planned but not without protests and opposition.
The promised huge march of homosexual activists
failed to materialize. Some 100-200 homosexual marchers were
joined by about 500 sympathizers from a menagerie of leftist
groups. Green Party supporters, feminists, anarchists and
socialists made up the ranks.
Several hundred pro-family supporters spontaneously
gathered to show their displeasure. The pro-homosexual march
quickly broke up as the marchers saw how unwelcome their
activism had become.
The headlines of the Gazeta Wyborcz
the next day were quite expressive: “Krakow: Two Cities.”
The homosexual issue had indeed polarized the city and forced
all to take a stand. However, the small homosexual minority
and their sympathizers could hardly be called a city. Rather
I would say the debate united the city on this grave moral
issue and the overwhelming majority said a loud “no”
to those who would force homosexuality upon them.
On Pilgrimage to Czestochowa
No visit to Poland is complete without
a visit to the ancient icon of Our Lady in Czestochowa.
There, this miraculous image reportedly painted by St. Luke,
reigns as queen of Poland. She has seen invading Swedes,
Russians and Austrians. She has stood firm in the face of
Nazism and decades of communism. Long lines of pilgrims
constantly move in and out as they have for centuries.
It is there at this sanctuary that you
sense the heavenly alliance that allowed the Polish people
to resist with such noble obstinacy so many attempts in
history to destroy their nation.
Today Poland is pressured to accept
a cultural revolution unlike any she has seen in the past
and which threatens her Catholic identity. Pornography,
homosexual activism and immoral fashions all enter with
impunity. In face of this cultural revolution, heavenly
recourse is greatly needed. As I looked upon the thousands
of pilgrims who hasten to her sanctuary with their modern
day problems, I could not help but united my prayers to
theirs. In their needs, Our Lady of Czestochowa will not
fail them. She will come to their aid.
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