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EN
Presented here, and yet never printed, the article consists of an introduction, four small chapters, Teminations and Annex source. It was based on non-print sources: 1) religious, located in the archives of General House of the Missionary Benedictine Sisters in Otwock (ABMO), as well as the archives of the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) in Białystok, and the few studies concerning violence of totalitarian communist regime in the People’s Republic in the overall scale. The Introduction containts a brief history of Grajewo. The first chapter is shown origins and beginnings of the religious house of the Benedictine Sisters of Missionaries in that city and in the second – showing violence against the people’s sisters by unlawful use of evictions from nine to three rooms in the house sisters and quartered for this religious building at Marchlewskiego street 26, a number of multi-family. The theme of the third chapter is, lasting several years, defending religious institutions sisters who did not undergo passive people’s power and have not left, despite the harassment, his home. In the fourth chapter indicated a positive result of a previous home defense sisters in Grajewo in a document-decision of the Office for Religious Affairs in Warsaw, dated 26 Februrary 1975, revoking the decision of the Department of Religious Affairs PRN in Białystok on the dissolution of the religious house of sisters in Grajewo. It was pointed out that from now began to normal development of the religious institutions and describes the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the religious house erection. In conclusion briefly summarizes the reflections previous chapter article. The Annex contains: Decree erectile religious house in Grajewo, Letter of Fr. A. Jagłowskiego the Benedictine missionaries is Grajewo, semipublic decree of erection of the chapel in the hous of the Benedictine Sisters of Grajewo and against the local superiors in the same house in the years 1958–2008.
PL
Dyskursy podróżnicze obfitują w różnego rodzaju anegdoty. Zdaniem Stephena Greenblatta pośredniczą one pomiędzy sekwencją podobnych do siebie chwil, a ogólniejszym schematem, na którego istnienie wskazują. Niniejsza analiza dowodzi, że anegdota zawarta w dzienniku podróży Passenger to Teheran Vity Sackville-West (1926) stanowi nie tyle odosobniony przypadek, ile wpisuje się w szersze ramy strategii dotyczących reprezentacji podróży. Vita Sackville-West odbyła podróż z Londynu do Egiptu, Indii, Persji, a następnie wróciła do Anglii przez Rosję, Polskę i Prusy. Autor szczegółowo analizuje tę część relacji, kiedy podróżni zostali zatrzymani na polsko-pruskiej granicy i zmuszeni do opuszczenia pociągu. Konsekwencje tego, co mogłoby być wyłącznie anegdotą o „nieprzyjemnym incydencie”, są dalekosiężne. Do zajść granicznych dochodzi bowiem zawsze na tle rzeczywistości społeczno-politycznej, geopolitycznej, militarnej i ideologicznej. Bez względu na to, czy tego typu wydarzenia przedstawia się jako przygody czy poważne incydenty, mają one konsekwencje wykraczające poza „lokalny moment”. Celem eseju jest ukazanie niektórych mniej oczywistych implikacji polsko-pruskiego fragmentu książki Vity Sackville-West.
EN
Travellers’ discourses thrive on anecdotes. According to Stephen Greenblatt, they interpose between a series of similar, narrow experiences and a wider pattern they may indicate. This analysis deciphers how an anecdote from Passenger to Teheran (1926), the travelogue written by Vita Sackville-West, is not just an isolated flash but can indicate larger representational strategies. In her epic journey Vita Sackville-West travelled from London to Egypt, India, Persia, and then back to England, through Russia, Poland and Prussia; by boat, train and car. In the episode which is subject to a detailed analysis, the travellers were stopped at the Polish–East Prussian border and forced to leave the train. The consequences of what could be just an anecdote about an “unwelcome incident”, reverberate – as it turns out – far beyond the incidental because what is at stake at almost every border incident is a socio–political, geo–political, military and ideological reality. No matter whether such events are presented as adventures or in all seriousness, each border trouble has consequences beyond any “local moment”. To disclose some of the less obvious implications of the Polish–Prussian passage in Vita Sackville-West’s book is the aim of this essay.
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