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- <text id=91TT1064>
- <title>
- May 20, 1991: Poland:Power To The Pulpit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 20, 1991 Five Who Could Be Vice President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- POLAND
- Power to The Pulpit
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Roman Catholic Church has become omnipresent, critics say
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES L. GRAFF/WARSAW
- </p>
- <p> A bulwark against despair, a sanctuary of freedom, a
- subversive counterforce--during a decade of struggle against
- communist control, the Roman Catholic Church in Poland was all
- that and more, depending on the viewpoint. Its representatives
- stood courageously alongside the Solidarity trade union and
- suffered the consequences, when Father Jerzy Popieluszko, an
- activist priest, was murdered by government security agents in
- 1984. When the struggle ended in 1989 with a Solidarity-led
- government, the church emerged triumphant, solidly allied with
- an administration it had all but installed.
- </p>
- <p> A year later, the church, to which 97% of Poland's 38
- million people belong, is omnipresent and, in the view of some,
- virtually omnipotent. Bishops and priests bless the armed
- forces, schools and factories. The newly created post of
- superior chaplain to the army has been given the rank of
- general. To mark the 200th anniversary of the country's first
- liberal constitution earlier this month, President Lech Walesa,
- a devout Catholic, skipped ceremonies at parliament and instead
- visited the national shrine of the Black Madonna at Jasna Gora.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond such symbolic gestures, the church is exercising
- direct political influence in an often fractious country that
- has just begun to build democracy. Last August, after lobbying
- by church officials, the government introduced optional
- religious instruction in schools by administrative fiat rather
- than parliamentary vote. A poll released last week shows that
- the church is perceived as the single most powerful national
- institution, stronger than the government, the presidency, the
- military, the old communist nomenklatura and even Solidarity.
- The church's ascendancy has left many Poles uneasily wondering
- whether their country might someday be transformed into a
- clerical state, ruling in accordance with the dicta of Pope John
- Paul II (who makes his fourth papal visit to his native country
- next month).
- </p>
- <p> Recent statements by the Polish Episcopate have fueled
- apprehension. In late April the bishops urged that the new
- constitution exclude any provision for the separation of church
- and state. Instead, they suggested, "exceptional emphasis should
- be laid on the need for cooperation between the state and the
- Catholic Church."
- </p>
- <p> The church's gravest concerns--and most assiduous
- efforts--center on abortion, a volatile issue in a country
- where as many as 600,000 such procedures are performed each
- year. A liberal abortion law, which has been on the books since
- 1956, is still in effect, but the Senate has passed a bill that
- would impose a prison term of as much as two years on anyone
- performing the procedure unless the pregnancy threatened the
- mother's life or stemmed from rape or incest. Several variants
- on that bill, many of them even stiffer, are being considered
- by the Sejm, the lower house, which is due to vote this week on
- whether to submit the question to a national referendum. Earlier
- this month, the bishops' conference condemned that option.
- Meanwhile, the government has ended subsidies for birth-control
- pills. That move, which many suspect was church inspired, will
- triple the price of pills, putting them beyond the reach of many
- women.
- </p>
- <p> The church's stance on abortion has hardly endeared it to
- the 59% of the population that favors legalized abortion with
- or without limitations. Even some churchmen are uneasy. Says
- Father Roman Indrzej czyk, a parish priest in the Zoliborz
- district of Warsaw: "The church's role is to deepen morality,
- not to dictate it."
- </p>
- <p> The church's power stems less from mass popularity or
- direct intervention than from its pervasive influence on
- politicians. It vetted Solidarity's candidates in the
- parliamentary election of June 4, 1989, and their landslide
- victory was helped by unbridled electioneering from the
- country's pulpits. With Poland gearing up for new balloting
- later this year, notes Stanislaw Po demski, a commentator on
- legal issues for the weekly Polityka, "parliamentary Deputies
- won't speak openly against church positions for fear of being
- vilified as atheists by priests in their electoral districts."
- </p>
- <p> Politicians who think serving the church is the best way
- to further their careers might in fact be miscalculating. There
- are indications that public opposition is growing to the
- church's sometimes bumbling attempts to meddle in political
- issues. An April poll showed that public trust in the church had
- dropped to 69% from 78% in December. "The abortion issue and the
- fight over religion in the schools have had a negative effect
- on the future of the Catholic Church in Poland," says Zofia
- Kuratowska, a physician and deputy speaker of the Senate.
- "People don't want that kind of influence on their private
- lives."
- </p>
- <p> Some analysts say anticlericalism, which is deeply rooted,
- is gradually becoming an effective political issue again. "The
- church was a moral force under communism, but after 1989 some
- people began using their allegiance to it as a political
- tactic," says Bronislaw Geremek, the parliamentary leader of the
- centrist Democratic Union and a longtime Solidarity activist.
- "We're seeing a reaction to that now, and, step by step, we're
- returning to a healthy situation." As democratic institutions
- gain in stature and experience, the church is likely to be
- squeezed out of the political realm. But with the country still
- lurching through political and economic tribulations, the pulpit
- will remain a potent political force--as well as, for many,
- a bulwark against despair.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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