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2015 | 9 | 84-114

Article title

Neopietyzm a postawy narodowe. Ruch gromadkarski na Mazurach w XIX i XX w. Część II (1945 – 1956)

Content

Title variants

EN
Neopietism contra National Standpoints. The Small Group Movement in Masuria in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century (1945 – 1956). Part II

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

The Polish Lutheran Church between the years 1945-1956 was unable to gain the full confidence of its new German worshippers. This resulted in the treatment of this Church as a foreign and imposed one. When, in the course of time, the worshippers came to terms with the status quo, acceptance of the Church increased, but as a factor distinguishing them from Polish Catholics. The distance dividing them from migrant Poles, caused by national factors and historical experiences, was increased by religious differences. A significant role in this situation was played by the Small Group Movement. It did not have an organized nature, but its mental revivalist structuressurvived the period of the Second World War. An awareness of war atrocities strengthened the spirit of eschatology among some of the Small Group Movement members, which is why some of them accepted the existing political situation, regarding it as a penalty for disregarding God’s rules. Some of the Small Group Movement members, especially those who were previously in opposition to German Christians, began to co-operate with the Polish Lutheran Church, which was new to them. On the other hand, for some of the worshippers who existed in unofficial structures, there was an opportunity to fulfill their basic religious needs, which the Polish Lutheran Church was unable to offer them due to its organizational weakness. From the very beginning the key problem of organization was that caused by language, which was a throw-back to the situation in the nine-teenth century and the first years of Weimar Republic, when German was still considered to be “the Church language”. This was the reason why a significant part of the Small Group Movement met with mistrust from the Polish Lutheran Church, which for various reasons was implementing a Polonisation policy, and the open hostility of the police-administrative machinery. On the other hand, inside the Small Group Movement, there was little unity but numerous scattered initiatives, and an escalation of German national spirit became in many instances equally important, or even more important than religious matters.

Year

Volume

9

Pages

84-114

Physical description

Contributors

  • ur. w 1957, pracownik Uniwersytetu Warmińsko-Mazurskiego w Olsztynie. Koncentruje się na badaniach dziejów Prus Wschodnich w XIX i XX wieku oraz powojennej historii Warmii i Mazur, ze szczególnym uwzględnieniem wyznań protestanckich. Autor m. in. monografii Kościół ewangelicki na Mazurach w XIX wieku (1817 – 1914), Olsztyn 2003 oraz części poświęconych Mazurom XIX wieku i w okresie międzywojennym [w:] Kościoły luterańskie na ziemiach polskich (XVI – XX w.), red. J. Kłaczkow, część II i III, Toruń 2012.

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-084d47f6-3967-4038-9d65-f9dc6aa81512
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