Pole position
from THE SPECTATOR
London weekly, UK
HIGH LIFE/Taki/ Gstaad
June 17, 2004
As everyone who has ever read history knows, Poland is the country
most trodden on by bad guys, set as she is at the heart of Europe
between two, er, shall we say voracious powers, Germany and Russia.
Throughout the centuries bad guys have tried to enslave the Poles,
the bravest and most devout Christian people in Europe. They,
in turn, did not exactly roll over and play dead à la Belgians
in the first and second world wars.
They rose against the Russkies in 1830, 1863
and 1905; fought the Bolshies in 1920–1; finally rose against
the Nazis in 1944 only to be betrayed by the murderous Stalin
whose armies just sat across the Vistula outside Warsaw and watched
the capital reduced to rubble and hundreds of thousands of courageous
Polish fighters killed.
So much for those scummy types who until 1989
believed Uncle Joe to have been a nice sort of person. We, of
course, were not much better. We supposedly went to war against
Hitler for Poland, but in reality all we did was to declare a
state of war against Germany, which was not exactly the same thing
as going to war to help the beleaguered Poles. In fact, we did
the contrary.
The Poles retreated in orderly fashion in the
first two weeks of September 1939, hoping that an Anglo–French
expeditionary force would come to their aid. Count Potocki, who
had resisted the Anglo–French–Polish treaty, knew
that this was horsefeathers. Neither the Brits nor the French
were capable of helping anyone in 1939, so why sign the treaty?
On 17 September someone did come, in the name
of the Soviet hordes who attacked from the east. So what did we
do? Did we declare war on Stalin? Yes, we did, and if you believe
that you also believe that the Russian oligarchs are honest businessmen.
Mind you, if we had, the British trade unions
would have overthrown the government. So what
did the Poles do in return for the Allied betrayal? Easy. They
volunteered en masse, saved England with their airmen during the
Battle of Britain in the summer of 1940, and distinguished themselves
as the bravest soldiers fighting for the good guys. (Not such
good guys in my not
so humble opinion.)
And the Allies continued to thank them by betraying
them in Yalta when Churchill and Roosevelt connived to appease
Stalin by ceding Polish territory to him. No people have ever
been betrayed as much by so many. Even Napoleon, under the influence
of the wonderful Marie Walewska, betrayed Poland, although he
had 2,000 Polish lancers come all the way to Spain to break the
stubborn Spanish resistance in the Somosierra ridge. (Once the
Poles took it, Napoleon bared his head in saluting them, the only
time in his career he did so.)
What does all this have to do with ‘High
life’? Well, as some readers of this column may have noticed,
I am a very big Polish fan and try to praise them whenever the
opportunity arises. Sometime last winter I received a letter from
the Lady Belhaven and Stenton. Polish-born
and active in her country’s affairs, she suggested that
I have my portrait painted and hung
at the Polish Club, 55 Exhibition Road.
I agreed, and a very talented Polish artist,
Barbara Kaczmarowska Hamilton, finished it in pastel after just
three sittings. In return I gave a dinner at the Polish Club for
the unveiling. My friend Prince Radziwill, with typical Polish
generosity of spirit, flew back from Gstaad for the dinner, as
did the mother of my children. (John Radziwill’s uncle was
the same Count Potocki who was against the shameful treaty.) Barbara
Hamilton’s portraits are in the De Laszlo style, soft pastel
hues, lending her subjects a dream-like quality. I was very happy
with my portrait, wrinkles and all. Bravo, Basia.
Given that my own country Greece was, like Poland,
second to none in its gallant resistance to both the Nazi and
communist tyrannies, I felt extremely honoured by the unveiling.
The chairman of the Polish Hearth Club and the Polish Council
both pointed out this fact in brief speeches.
The Russians have never apologised to the Poles,
nor have Britain, France and the United States, for betraying
them as cruelly and cynically as they did. Mind you, neither the
Americans nor the British have ever apologised or recognised their
responsibilities for the murder of millions of innocent women
and children via their bombing.
At least the Germans have. The sacking of Warsaw
was no less a crime than the bombing of Dresden, Tokyo and Munich,
except for the fact that our ally Stalin could have prevented
it. I am very happy for my likeness to be near that of the great
General Sikorski. If there’s one person I could have chosen
to be near, it certainly would have been him.
Editorial response:
I have recently read your High Life column "Pole
Position" in The Spectator issue of July 17, 2004 (see above),
sent to me by a dear friend, as I do not subscribe to this otherwise
wonderful British magazine, regretfully, due to lack of time.
As a Pole of the late post-war generation, raised in the Polish
proletarian paradise of communism, I venture to humbly follow
in the otherwise not-so-gallant footsteps of Napoleon, and hereby
take my hat off (it is a straw summer hat, though, nothing to
compare to ever-so-cocky Napoleon's pompous fashion statements
. . .) to the gracious and indeed brilliant author of this column.
Chapeaux bas!
Your sweeping review of my beloved country's
history, ever-so-economically squished into less than four paragraphs
of your excellent column, does nevertheless give Poland its long
overdue credit. It is not only spotless journalism, but a 'par
excellence' presentation of history, understood to a 'T.' Yes,
we Poles have fought for the world right and left. Yes, we did
so, century after century, war after war, in an ever-futile, but
inextinguishable hope, that by supporting proclaimed allies, our
historically sterling and undefiled definition of honor would
match that of theirs.
We indeed still do, in Iraq, where our Polish
boys get killed on the desert sands of this world's currently
hottest spot, within every meaning of the word—with
hardly a cursory (forget honorary) mention in the Western media.
And we ever will do so, since Poles are a breed apart, a tribe
dedicated to freedom, folk unlike others. Yes, we will continue
to do so, as true example never gives up on the recalcitrance
of its so-called allies. Actions speak louder than words . . .
Please, allow me to offer one missing tribute
to the Poles—a paragraph or
two that did not fit into the column you so valiantly wrote, Sir.
It is about my Polish brothers and sisters in the Gdansk Shipyard
with whom I had a rare privilege to fight for you and my own,
to overthrow communism worldwide. Famous Polish Solidarity, a
movement in the 80ies, based in the grassroots of freedom loving
Poles, has indeed started the domino effect, which ultimately
toppled communist tyrannies around the world.
Understand, that it is the humble people who
work the land and build and toil in the factories, who are the
very foundation of life by their ethic of work. Overthrowing the
impostors and misrepresentatives of the people in the Communist
parties, in the Politburo and even in some labor unions in the
West took intensity and determination, well tested and excelled
at in every
historical battle fought and won throughout centuries by the Poles.
I tell you, the people of Poland were not looking
into the distance to preserve their lives or fortunes or sacred
honor! They did not make their decisions (as the Western powers
did and
still do) for the preservation of their banks and investments
before they decided to exercise sanctions against the root of
all evil in the Soviet Union! The West left Poles alone and on
their own again, while Russians approached in December 1980 from
the east . . .
Take then the lesson of Poland as an archetypal
pattern for every nation on earth. For every nation, Britain not
excluded, must pass through such fiery trial. The labor unions
must be purged, the economy and the government must be purged—not
in the fashion of Joseph Stalin, but in the fashion of honor and
valiant effort. And do not be caught up to impress the proud and
the high and the mighty who glad-hand the little people and stab
them in the back. Now see and understand the integrity of the
inevitable encounter.
With gratitude for your spirit, equanimity and poise,
Eva Victoria Butkiewicz-Tame, M.A., Dip.AL
TSL Poland Radio Station
http://www.live365.com/stations/victoriawispwest
TSL Poland Website 1
http://www.tslpoland.org
http://www.tslpl.org
TSL Poland Website 2
http://fiolet.org.pl
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