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<text id=91TT1064>
<title>
May 20, 1991: Poland:Power To The Pulpit
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
May 20, 1991 Five Who Could Be Vice President
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 40
POLAND
Power to The Pulpit
</hdr><body>
<p>The Roman Catholic Church has become omnipresent, critics say
</p>
<p>By JAMES L. GRAFF/WARSAW
</p>
<p> A bulwark against despair, a sanctuary of freedom, a
subversive counterforce--during a decade of struggle against
communist control, the Roman Catholic Church in Poland was all
that and more, depending on the viewpoint. Its representatives
stood courageously alongside the Solidarity trade union and
suffered the consequences, when Father Jerzy Popieluszko, an
activist priest, was murdered by government security agents in
1984. When the struggle ended in 1989 with a Solidarity-led
government, the church emerged triumphant, solidly allied with
an administration it had all but installed.
</p>
<p> A year later, the church, to which 97% of Poland's 38
million people belong, is omnipresent and, in the view of some,
virtually omnipotent. Bishops and priests bless the armed
forces, schools and factories. The newly created post of
superior chaplain to the army has been given the rank of
general. To mark the 200th anniversary of the country's first
liberal constitution earlier this month, President Lech Walesa,
a devout Catholic, skipped ceremonies at parliament and instead
visited the national shrine of the Black Madonna at Jasna Gora.
</p>
<p> Beyond such symbolic gestures, the church is exercising
direct political influence in an often fractious country that
has just begun to build democracy. Last August, after lobbying
by church officials, the government introduced optional
religious instruction in schools by administrative fiat rather
than parliamentary vote. A poll released last week shows that
the church is perceived as the single most powerful national
institution, stronger than the government, the presidency, the
military, the old communist nomenklatura and even Solidarity.
The church's ascendancy has left many Poles uneasily wondering
whether their country might someday be transformed into a
clerical state, ruling in accordance with the dicta of Pope John
Paul II (who makes his fourth papal visit to his native country
next month).
</p>
<p> Recent statements by the Polish Episcopate have fueled
apprehension. In late April the bishops urged that the new
constitution exclude any provision for the separation of church
and state. Instead, they suggested, "exceptional emphasis should
be laid on the need for cooperation between the state and the
Catholic Church."
</p>
<p> The church's gravest concerns--and most assiduous
efforts--center on abortion, a volatile issue in a country
where as many as 600,000 such procedures are performed each
year. A liberal abortion law, which has been on the books since
1956, is still in effect, but the Senate has passed a bill that
would impose a prison term of as much as two years on anyone
performing the procedure unless the pregnancy threatened the
mother's life or stemmed from rape or incest. Several variants
on that bill, many of them even stiffer, are being considered
by the Sejm, the lower house, which is due to vote this week on
whether to submit the question to a national referendum. Earlier
this month, the bishops' conference condemned that option.
Meanwhile, the government has ended subsidies for birth-control
pills. That move, which many suspect was church inspired, will
triple the price of pills, putting them beyond the reach of many
women.
</p>
<p> The church's stance on abortion has hardly endeared it to
the 59% of the population that favors legalized abortion with
or without limitations. Even some churchmen are uneasy. Says
Father Roman Indrzej czyk, a parish priest in the Zoliborz
district of Warsaw: "The church's role is to deepen morality,
not to dictate it."
</p>
<p> The church's power stems less from mass popularity or
direct intervention than from its pervasive influence on
politicians. It vetted Solidarity's candidates in the
parliamentary election of June 4, 1989, and their landslide
victory was helped by unbridled electioneering from the
country's pulpits. With Poland gearing up for new balloting
later this year, notes Stanislaw Po demski, a commentator on
legal issues for the weekly Polityka, "parliamentary Deputies
won't speak openly against church positions for fear of being
vilified as atheists by priests in their electoral districts."
</p>
<p> Politicians who think serving the church is the best way
to further their careers might in fact be miscalculating. There
are indications that public opposition is growing to the
church's sometimes bumbling attempts to meddle in political
issues. An April poll showed that public trust in the church had
dropped to 69% from 78% in December. "The abortion issue and the
fight over religion in the schools have had a negative effect
on the future of the Catholic Church in Poland," says Zofia
Kuratowska, a physician and deputy speaker of the Senate.
"People don't want that kind of influence on their private
lives."
</p>
<p> Some analysts say anticlericalism, which is deeply rooted,
is gradually becoming an effective political issue again. "The
church was a moral force under communism, but after 1989 some
people began using their allegiance to it as a political
tactic," says Bronislaw Geremek, the parliamentary leader of the
centrist Democratic Union and a longtime Solidarity activist.
"We're seeing a reaction to that now, and, step by step, we're
returning to a healthy situation." As democratic institutions
gain in stature and experience, the church is likely to be
squeezed out of the political realm. But with the country still
lurching through political and economic tribulations, the pulpit
will remain a potent political force--as well as, for many,
a bulwark against despair.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>