“The party leader of Trzaskowski, the leader of the Civic Coalition, apparently still cannot come to terms with his defeat in the confrontation with Lech Kaczyński,” writes Prof. Andrzej Nowak in a column in “Gość Niedzielny”, referring to the lack of a street named after to the late President Lech Kaczyński in Warsaw.
Prof. Nowak recalled that the streets of late President Kaczyński are already in Georgia, Moldova, Lithuania, in Ukrainian cities, including Bucha, where the Russians committed a massive crime against the Ukrainian nation.
However, there is no such street in Lech Kaczyński’s hometown – Warsaw. It was, but after the decision of the Administrative Court, the old name was returned, glorifying the People’s Army: an instrument created on Stalin’s initiative and directed by an NKVD agent to subordinate Poland to Moscow. Warsaw city councilors could change this. But they don’t
writes the historian.
Andrzej Nowak remembers the promise of Rafał Trzaskowski, who announced the restoration of ul. Lech Kaczyński after the presidential election. The promise has not yet been fulfilled.
Trzaskowski’s party leader, the leader of the Civic Coalition, apparently still cannot come to terms with his defeat in the confrontation with Lech Kaczyński for the presidency of the Republic of Poland in 2005. Or maybe he and the executors of his policy of tributes and concessions to Vladimir Putin, carried out by the PO-PSL government in 2008-2014, are plagued by the significance of symbolic opposition to this, at best, myopic and erroneous policy?
– we are reading.
Memory of the Smolensk catastrophe
Prof. Nowak also remembers the words of Prof. Bartoszewski, who claimed after the Smolensk disaster that no one would remember in 50 years.
Will we finally be able to break through this volcano of media lies about that presidency? About that disaster? Some readers of this text may find out in 37 years
– writes Prof. Andreas Nowak.
READ ALSO: Andrijanić: I can’t understand that there is still no Kaczyński Street in Warsaw. For me as a Croatian this is incomprehensible
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Source: wPolityce