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       Notes

       Bibliography

       Index

      Illustrations

      PLATES

       Pope Benedict XV

       Józef Piłsudski and Mgr. Achille Ratti

       Nuncio Ratti aboard Polish hospital ship

       Pope Pius XI

       August Cardinal Hlond and Aleksander Cardinal Kakowski

       Hilaire Belloc and G. K. Chesterton

       Prince-Archbishop Adam Stefan Sapieha, Archbishop Andrei Sheptyts’kyi, and Archbishop Józef Teodorowicz

       Prince-Archbishop Adam Stefan Sapieha

       Pope Pius XII broadcasting appeal for peace, August 24, 1939

       Cardinal Hlond at Castel Gandolfo

      MAPS

       1. Diocesan organization of Poland, 1918–25

       2. Diocesan organization of Poland, 1925–39

      TABLE

       1.1. Population of Poland by religion and nationality, 1921

      Series Editor’s Preface

      ALTHOUGH THE TOPIC OF Rome’s Most Faithful Daughter: The Catholic Church and Independent Poland, 1914–1939, might seem to some readers fairly specialized and even arcane, Professor Neal Pease’s study of church-state affairs in interwar Poland is an original, engaging, and important examination of this central dimension of political and social affairs. Pease unfolds the narrative of a society and polity in the throes of a difficult transition, one abruptly cut short on September 1, 1939. Poland was a fulcrum for forces that moved the politics and foreign policy of both the European Great Powers and the United States at a critical moment in the twentieth century and shaped the contours of the postwar world order for the next fifty years.

      Gracefully written and meticulously researched, Rome’s Most Faithful Daughter charts the intricate relationship among Poland’s bishops, the Vatican, and the secular and anticlerical Piłsudski regime, even as international politics lurched toward crisis. The Church reached a tenuous arrangement with the Polish strongman, Marshal Józef Piłsudski, based on limited shared interests—the most important of which was halting the westward march of Bolshevism—but also, in large measure, on the personal friendship and mutual respect shared by the Polish general and Monsignor Achille Ratti, the apostolic nuncio to Poland (and future Pope Pius XI). Throughout the period, the Church pursued its own bureaucratic and ideological interests, but as Pease masterfully demonstrates, the former was no monolith, and the latter were far from unitary. The Polish episcopate, itself internally divided, frequently pulled and tugged in different directions from the Vatican over religious (and political) issues like Church-state relations, the evangelization of the Orthodox east, and the future of Poland. Pease portrays Poland’s bishops as complex men of contrasting styles, dispositions, subjectivities, and politics. Through the lens of Church policy, Pease sheds light on Polish-Ukrainian relations, the connection between religion and nationalism in modern Poland, and, of course, a central leitmotif in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Polish affairs, the “Jewish Question.”

      Rome’s Most Faithful Daughter is the tenth volume in the Ohio University Press Polish and Polish-American Studies Series. The series revisits the historical and contemporary experience of one of America’s largest European ethnic groups and the history of a European homeland that has played a disproportionately important role in twentieth-century world affairs. The series publishes innovative monographs and more general works that investigate under- and unexplored topics or offer new, critical, revisionist, or comparative perspectives in the area of Polish and Polish-American Studies. The series seeks manuscripts of interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary profile on Polish immigration and ethnic communities, the country of origin, and its various peoples in history, anthropology, cultural studies, political economy, current politics, and related fields.

      Publication of the Ohio University Press Polish and Polish-American Studies Series marks a milestone in the maturation of the Polish studies field and stands as a fitting tribute to the scholars and organizations whose efforts have brought it to fruition. Supported by a series advisory board of accomplished Polonists and Polish-Americanists, the Polish and Polish-American Studies Series has been made possible through generous financial assistance from the Polish American Historical Association, the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America, the Stanislaus A. Blejwas Endowed Chair in Polish and Polish American Studies at Central Connecticut State University, and the Piast Institute and through institutional support from Wayne State University and Ohio University Press. The series meanwhile has benefited from the warm encouragement of a number of other persons, including Gillian Berchowitz, M. B. B. Biskupski, the late Stanislaus A. Blejwas, Mary Erdmans, Thaddeus Gromada, James S. Pula, Thaddeus Radzilowski, and David Sanders. The moral and material support from all of these institutions and individuals is gratefully acknowledged.

       John J. Bukowczyk

      Preface

      MY WIFE EWA AND I happened to be living temporarily in Warsaw in June 1979, when the newly elected Pope John Paul II made his epochal first pilgrimage to his homeland. That experience, unforgettable on many levels, instilled in me an abiding interest in the role of the Catholic Church in the history of Poland. As time went on, I became struck by the scarcity of scholarly work on Catholicism in Poland during the period of my specialization, the phase of the independent Second Republic whose free existence began in 1918 and ended in 1939. This was outwardly an interval of “normal” church-state relations that lacked both drama and the noble theme of the Church as the defender of Polish culture and national identity against foreign oppressors, which is considered its chief historical merit. I guessed that there must be more to the story, and decided to try to find out.

      The resulting book you are reading is not intended to be a comprehensive history of the Catholic Church in Poland between the wars. Its more modest two goals are to describe and explain the significance of Catholicism in Polish politics from 1914 to 1939, and of Poland in the politics of the wider Catholic world. I hope it will be considered a worthwhile contribution to the fields of the history of Poland and the Catholic Church in general. It attempts to explore the issue of Catholicism in the public life of the interwar Second Republic in greater depth than has been done before. Along the way, maybe it will help to shed light on the important but somewhat overlooked pontificate of Pius XI, the first “Polish pope,” according to one way of looking at it, and add some useful words to the lively controversy over the conduct of Pope Pius XII during the Second World War.

      If the book manages to do these things, it is not due to any insight of mine, but to the advantage of having been able to carry out extensive original archival research in a variety of locations in four different countries. In particular, I have had the good fortune to examine collections of documents from the rich holdings of the Vatican Secret Archives only recently opened to scholars. While I owe a great deal to the earlier work of accomplished predecessors in the study of interwar Polish Church history, as the notes and bibliography will demonstrate, it may be fair to claim that mine is the first monograph on the subject to have the benefit of such a wealth of primary sources.

      Readers may deserve a brief explanation of my chosen usage of place-names, a tricky business in writing about a region of mixed populations, many languages, shifting frontiers, and long memories, where the adoption of one form or another may confuse,

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