Monday 6 February 2017

Is Museum of the Second World War not 'Patriotic' enough?


This is a cause I am very concerned abouit and is related too to the issue of what (and who) museums are for anyway. A text by the Mayor of Gdańsk, Poland: Pawel Adamowicz,' Is museum of the Second World War not patriotic enough?' 6th Feb 2017
Although not yet officially open to the visitors, the new Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk has already become a bone of contention between the residents with their local authorities and the central government in Warsaw. The city of Gdansk with its traditions of freedom and solidarity can't stand idly when the members of the ruling Law and Justice party want to take control over the museum, and to change its content.

Part of the exhibition in the museum.

 In December 2007 Poland's prime minister, Donald Tusk, now president of the European Council, presented the idea of creating a museum that would show Poland's tragic history in 1939-45 against a broad European background. It was to be located in Gdansk - the city where the war broke out in 1939. "It is not true that historians know all about the Second World War. It is not true that all the questions about that era have been answered. Most people are unaware of historians' ideas... We not only need works of synthesis about the Second World War, we badly need exhibitions, multimedia, ways of expanding knowledge about this cataclysm. And for this reason, this museum project is extremely welcome" - Norman Davies The mission of the Museum of the Second World War is to "create a modern institution that will present the history of the war as the greatest cataclysm of the 20th century. Despite the fact that over 70 years have passed since the outbreak of the Second World War, no museum in Europe treats its course and nature comprehensively. This makes our initiative timely." One of our museum's main goals is to show the wartime experiences of Poland and the other countries of East-Central Europe. These were often different from what the people of Western Europe and of countries outside Europe lived through, and tend to be little known there. This museum will focus on the stories of individuals, societies and nations; military events will serve as mere background to the narrative about the everyday lives of civilians and soldiers, the terror of the occupation and genocide, resistance to the occupying forces, diplomacy and great-power politics. This approach will convey the uniqueness of the Second World War, in which it was the civilian populations that suffered the most. When, a week ago, the museum opened its doors to historians and press, it presented a permanent exhibition, not yet complete, but very, very impressive. But our new populist government with its minister of culture in Warsaw refused to come. They had earlier decided that the museum was "not patriotic enough" and not presenting a full picture of Polish heroism during the war. They decided to change the entire concept of the museum, fire its present management and create one bigger institution with the addition of another museum or two. The city of Gdansk with its traditions of freedom and solidarity can't stand idly when the members of the ruling Law and Justice party want to take control over the museum, and to change its content. They seem to ignore the authors' vision of a unique in the world cultural and civic centre, bringing to the world the universal message of the horrors of war. Any war.

Protest in front of the museum.
[the sign reads: Politicians, hands off the [museum] display]
. the Museum is for citizens, not politicians]
 As mayor of Gdansk, I am doing what I can to defend the museum in its current form. I believe that the politicians should not use cultural heritage to their selective, short-term interests. We have filed complaint with the Administrative Court in Warsaw, which, to our satisfaction, has twice suspended the take-over by the government. However, the minister and the acting government are not giving up. We say: let's not be fearful and heed the eternal Gdansk motto: nec temere, nec timide (neither impudently nor timidly). I agree with our friend, Timothy Snyder, a Yale historian who is also a member of the museum's advisory board. "If this museum is lost, Gdansk, Poland, Europe and the world will lose the only chance to convey the experience of our common history to people from all of the world, not only in Poland, to understand the Second World War. That would be a dreadful civilization lost."  [I suspect there has been some misquote here PMB]
This so-called 'Law and Justice' Party is engaged in undermining liberal democracy in Poland, consolidating its hold on power by undermining the judicial system and has a nationalist form of 'patriotism' as one of its main tenets. The Party instead of focussing on the needs of Poland, in the centre of Europe facing a changing world, is bent on suppressing change and after thirty years of the building of a normal European democracy with its backwards-looking perspective and aim to 'right the wrongs of the past' is largely supported by aged malcontents who blame 'the communists' for all their current personal social and economic inadequacies and support the nationalist government which has promised to 'raise Poland from the ruins/its knees'.
Nationalist march in Białystok
Hmmm. Another government rabble rousing with alternative-facts. Nazis with their populist programme blamed certain minorities, PiS with its parallel social programmes and motifs blames 'communist agents'. This is the story they seem likely to want to impose on the Museum, dismantle existing displays and replace them with an introspective' one-sided presentation corresponding to their vision of history.

Actually, why do Museums have to be 'patriotic'? Have we not left that behind us in central Europe yet? Apparently the PiS Party and its Ministers seem unaware of this.
The House of German Art in Munich




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