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63 YEARS OF SERVICE TO POLONIA
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Index
MILESTONES IN THE STORY
OF
THE POLISH AMERICAN CONGRESS
The First Fifty Years - 1944 - 1994

Part 1:
1944 - 1980
1944: Founding of the
Polish American Congress at a massive rally in Buffalo,
New York, May 28-June 1, 1944. Some 2,600 delegates from
Polish American communities around the country take part
in this significant event of World War II.
At their first Congress, the delegates resolve to underscore
American Polonia's patriotic commitment to the U.S. war
effort against Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Further,
they call on the U.S. government to support the freedom
and sovereignty of Poland, a wartime ally of our
country, once the War is over.
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Leadership meeting in Chicago to plan the Polish
American Congress, March 1944. |

October 11, 1944: President Roosevelt greets PAC
delegation headed by Rozmarek (right) for Pulaski Day
ceremonies while Polish uprising in Warsaw is being
obliterated. |
Charles Rozmarek, President
of the Polish, fraternal insurance society, is elected
President of the PAC. Honorata Wolowska, President of
the Polish Women's Alliance, Teofil Starzynski,
President of the Polish Falcons of America, John Mikuta
of the Polish National Union fraternal, and Frank
Januszewski and Max Wegrzynek of an organization of
patriotic activists favoring Poland's cause in America,
the National Committee of Americans of Polish Descent,
are all elected PAC Vice Presidents.John Olejniczak,
President of the Polish Roman Catholic Union of America,
is elected Treasurer. Stanislas Gutowski, President of
the Pulaski Foundation, becomes National Secretary of
the new Polish American Congress.

Ten thousand Polish Americans, over 2,600 delegates from
26 states and nearly 7,000 guests, attended the opening session of
the first convention of the Polish American Congress in Buffalo, N. Y., in
1944. 1945: Following
President Franklin Roosevelt's return from his
conference at Yalta with British Prime Minister
Churchill and Soviet leader Stalin, Rozmarek and the PAC
are among the first in America to publicly denounce the
Great Power agreements on Poland and Eastern Europe as a
betrayal of the United States reasons for participating
in the World War. These are found in the "Atlantic
Charter" in which the rights of all nations small and
great are to be the cornerstone of a just and peaceful
international order. The Soviet take-over and
communization of all of Eastern Europe in the next few
years proves Rozmarek correct. The seeds are thus sown
for what will be an often-tense Cold War between the
United States and the U.S.S.R., one that will end only
with the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991.
Rozmarek
heads a PAC delegation to the founding meeting of United
Nations in San Francisco where he asserts Poland's right
to freedom and sovereignty. The renowned historian Oskar
Halecki, himself a founder of the Polish Institute of
Arts and Sciences of America and the Polish American
Historical Association, is in the PAC delegation.
The PAC strongly backs Poland's new western borders,
borders that include lands that were part of pre World
War II Germany. The Congress' position on this issue is
ultimately vindicated when the U.S. signs the Helsinki
Accords in 1975 and again at the time of the
reunification of the two Germanys in 1991.
1946: Rozmarek, in Germany and France to observe
the conditions of thousands of Polish displaced persons
living in camps throughout western and central Europe,
angrily denounces the handling of the refugee problem by
UN authorities and calls for immediate changes. While in
Paris, Rozmarek calls for free elections in Poland to
determine the country's future. (When the elections are
held in January 1947, they are conducted in an
atmosphere of terror and the final results are
themselves grossly falsified.)
In America, the PAC initiates a one million dollar
fund drive to place its political action work on a sound
footing. The drive is headed by Adam Tomaszkiewicz of
Chicago.
1948: The PAC lobbies successfully for special
Congressional legislation signed by President Harry
Truman that leads to the admission of 140,000 Polish
displaced persons, war victims and veterans of the
Polish armed forces in Western Europe to settle
permanently in the United States. Walter Zachariasiewicz,
the Reverend Felix Burant, Pittsburgh Judge Blair
Gunther, Edward Plusdrak, the Reverend Joseph Karpinski,
Honorata Wolowska and Adele Lagodzinska of the Polish
Women's Alliance, Joseph Kania of the Polish Roman
Catholic Union, and Francis Swietlik and Wanda Rozmarek
of the Polish National Alliance among many others, play
major roles in the work to help resettle the newcomers
in this country. |
1949: The PAC backs
the creation of Radio Free Europe as a voice of truth to
the peoples of communist-enslaved Eastern Europe.
Years later, in 1991, the former director of the Polish
Department of R.F.E., Jan Nowak, is elected a Vice
President of the Polish American Congress.
1952: A special Committee of the U.S. Congress
strongly endorsed by the PAC investigates the murder of
more than 14,000 Polish Army officers at the beginning
of World War 11 in the Soviet Union.
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Polish displaced persons arrive in Chicago, 1949. |
The U.S.S.R. bitterly
denounces this action, claiming Nazi Germany culpable
for the massive war crime. After an exhaustive review,
the Committee finds the Soviet regime and its security
police responsible for the atrocity. (In 1992, the
Russian government makes files available from a 1940
meeting of Soviet Communist leadership. These show that
Stalin ordered the Katyn Massacre.)
Chief Investigator for the special U.S. Congressional
Committee is Roman Pucinski, who in 1958 is elected to a
seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Pucinski is
later elected a Vice President of the Polish American
Congress.
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President Harry Truman and members of the Committee
investigating the Katyn Massacre in 1951. From left:
U.S. Congressmen Foster Furcolo, George Dondero,
Thaddeus Machrowicz, Chairman Ray Madden, Alvin D'Konski,
Daniel Flood, Committee Counsel John Mitchell, Timothy
Sheehan. |

President Dwight Eisenhower discusses
the rapidly changing situation in Eastern Europe with
width= Rozmarek on September 28, 1956. Within weeks, Poland's
Stalinist regime will be displaced by one both committed
to limited change and accepted in Moscow. In Hungary,
reform efforts end in tragedy due to a bloody Soviet
intervention. |
The PAC endorses the 1952
Republican platform, which calls for the liberation of
Eastern Europe from Soviet domination. Though many
traditionally Democratic Party-voting Polish Americans
switch over to support Republican nominee Dwight
Eisenhower for the Presidency, Eisenhower upon winning
repudiates the idea of liberation in favor of
"containing communism" to where it already holds power.
While the PAC opposes this position, the U.S. government
and its NATO allies follow the containment policy when
they opt to take no military action in support of the
Hungarian Freedom Fighters in their failed revolution in
1956.1957: Following the collapse of the Stalinist
regime in Poland in 1956 and its replacement by a new,
seemingly reform-minded Communist regime headed by
Wladyslaw Gomulka, the PAC backs a U.S. government
foreign aid initiative aimed at weaning Gomulka away
from Moscow's authority. Several hundred million dollars
are expended in this effort, which continues on into the
late 1960s, without however attaining its objective. At
the same time immigration to the U.S. is renewed,
enabling thousands of Polish families to be reunited in
this country.
More normalized contacts between the two countries
after 1957 also means new opportunities for Polish
Americans to visit their old homeland and thus
reestablish personal ties with their relatives. These
renewed contacts strengthen both American Polonia's
cultural vitality and the Polish people's desire for
freedom for their own country.
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1960: Eisenhower is
the first U.S. President to speak at a meeting of the
Polish American Congress when he addresses the fifth PAC
convention in Chicago. Senator John Kennedy, the
Democratic Party's presidential nominee, also speaks to
the assembly. In later years, Presidents Johnson, Nixon,
Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton will all address
the Polish American Congress or its leaders on issues
pertaining to PAC concerns.
1964 The PAC
endorses President Lyndon Johnson's policy of "Building
Bridges" to "peacefully engage" the peoples of Eastern
Europe and to encourage the democratization and
independence of the entire region, from Soviet
domination. |

President and Mrs. Lyndon Johnson view
the unveiling of a painting of the Czestochowa Madonna
in a Rose Garden commemoration of Poland's Millennium,
June 17, 1966. President Rozmarek heads the Polonia
delegation; Maine Senator Edmund Muskie stands fourth
from left. |
1968
Aloysius Mazewski, newly elected President of the Polish
National Alliance, is elected President of the PAC at
the Congress' seventh convention in Cleveland,
succeeding Charles Rozmarek. Mazewski continues his
predecessor's policies on all fronts while giving new
attention to what will later be called the "American
Agenda" of the PAC--namely, more appointments of worthy
Polish Americans to responsible posts in government and
greater concern for broad public appreciation of
Poland's and Polonia's culture and history.
1969: The first formal dialogs between the PAC and leaders of the
American Jewish community begin in an effort to create
new understanding and communication between two peoples
who lived together in Poland for seven centuries until
the Nazi occupation and devastation of Poland and their
ruthless annihilation of the Jewish people. In 1979,
this dialog is revived under sponsorship by the PAC and
the American Jewish Committee; it presently operates as
the National Polish-American Jewish-American Council.
Initially headed by Polonia activists Reverend Leonard
Chrobot and Professor Ronald Modras and AJC leaders
Harold Gales and George Shabad, the Council is later
co-chaired by Maynard Wishner of the AJC and John Kordek,
former Executive Director of the PAC.

1972:
Leaders of the Polish American Congress during the
"roundtable" meeting in the White House with President Richard Nixon.
1973: PAC promotes
the nationwide celebration of the 500th anniversary of
the birth of astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (Mikolaj
Kopernik in Polish). Later PAC cultural initiatives will
include the celebration of Polish American Heritage
Month, an annual event initiated in 1984, under the
direction of Michael Blichasz of Philadelphia. 1975:
The PAC endorses President Gerald Ford's signing of the
international treaty on security and cooperation in
Europe in Helsinki, Finland.
Among other things, the
"Helsinki Accords" legitimize a set of human rights for
the people living under Communist rule in the U.S.S.R.
and Eastern Europe. These include the rights to
political dissent, association, and emigration. In a
short time, courageous opposition groups such as the
Polish Workers Defense Committee (K.O.R.) are in
operation in several countries in the region. In Poland,
the rise of a democratic opposition is immeasurably
strengthened in 1978 by the election of Cardinal Karol
Wojtyla, Archbishop of Krakow as Pope John Paul II and
by his triumphal return to his homeland the next year. |
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1975:
Leaders of Polonia again in the White House meet
President Gerald Ford and the members of his
cabinet. |

1976: President Gerald Ford signs a special veterans
bill for Polish combatants with the delegation of the PAC and Pol-Am Vets
present. |
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President Ford signs the Pulaski Day Proclamation. In the
presence of Polonia's representatives, the President signs a proclamation designating October 11 as Pulaski
Day. Surrounding the presidential desk are from let to
right: Mitchell Kobelinski, Boleslaw Wierzbianski,
Dennis Voss, Lillian Miciak, Aloysius A. Mazewski,
Zbigniew Konikowski, Helen Wojcik, Robert Lewandowski, Henry Dende, John Krawiec, Kazimierz
Olejarczyk, Daniel Kij, Joseph Bialasiewicz, Stanley Krajewski and Leonard
Walentynowicz.

President Jimmy Carter hosts the Polish American
Congress delegation
in the White House
1980
The forming of the Solidarity Trade Union Movement in
Gdansk in August in a time of extreme economic and
political crisis brings an immediate PAC endorsement for
the union's cause under the leadership of President
Mazewski and Vice President Kazimierz Lukomski, a
veteran observer of the Polish scene and a member of the
World War II era Polish Combatants' Association. The
PAC, working in cooperation with Professor Zbigniew
Brzezinski, President Carter's National Security
Advisor, urges the United States to pressure the Soviet
Union against intervening in the crisis and calls on the
Polish government to negotiate responsibly with
Solidarity. The initial confrontation subsides. |
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PAC leaders at the U.S. State Department, June 1978.
From left: Zdzislaw Dziekonski, W. Bninski; Dr. Andrzej
Ehrenkreutz; unidentified; Boleslaw Wierzbianski;
Aloysius Mazewski; Undersecretary of State David Newsom;
Kazimierz Lukomski; Leonard Walentynowicz; Jan K. Miska;
Deputy Secretary of State for Eastern European Affairs
William Luers. |

John Paul II during his visit to the United States met
with the leaders of the
Polish American Congress in
Chicago
(Summer, 1979). |
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