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Polish scholars in exile have made a signicant contribution to propagating Polish scien tic thought worldwide. Simultaneously, they would build a link between their homecountry and their country of residence. is article is dedicated to professor Andrzej Żaki – an outstanding archaeologist and historian. He lived in Switzerland for over 40 years. Professor Żaki was scientically aliated with Polish University Abroad in London for many years. He was also an organiser and a leading figure in the Association of Friends of the Polish University Abroad. e Association was created in Zurich in December 1977 with an aim to improve the quality of learning and the financial condition of Polish University in London. The Friends of Polish University Abroad constituted a strong, cultural and scientic centre for the community of Polish immigrants in Great Britain and have remained so for a long time.
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This paper presents an exchange of letters between the Polish-Scandinavian Research In stitute in Copenhagen and the Polish hero Jan Karski, Washington, DC. The Institutein Copenhagen, represented by its director (Eugeniusz S. Kruszewski), scientific secretary (Józef Parnas) and members of the management (Tadeusz Głowacki, Jørgen Mogensen), began to correspond with Jan Karski in 1986, and received a final letter from him in 2000. The main object of the correspondence was cooperation with the Polish-Scandinavian Research Institute in the area of World War II and the extermination of Jews in German-occupied Poland. We mediated between people from Germany, France, Great Britain and the USA who expressed their opinions about the Claude Lanzmann movie „Shoah”, and World War II reality in Poland during German occupation. Jan Karski visited Denmark and Sweden in 1988, and his lectures and interviews were very successful. It was a very fruitful collaboration
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Content available Obchody 500-lecia Mikołaja Kopernika w Danii
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The UNESCO proclaimed the year 1973 as Copernicus Year. Polish immigrants in Denmark, who left the Polish People’s Republic between 1969–1973, with the encouragement of the Editor-in-chief of the newspaper „Chronicle” in Copenhagen, took the initiative to celebrate the great jubilee and arranged a symposium. The main paper, by Professor Leon Koczy (Glasgow), was about Copernicus and the excellent Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe. Participants of the symposium also had the opportunity to listen to five other papers and to take part in a long discussion. The second day of the symposium was dedicated to Polish and international music – a mass was celebrated in memory of Polish scientists and artists who had perished or been killed, followed by a classical music concert performed by immigrant master-musicians. The jubilee celebration in Denmark was under the patronage of Edward Raczyński, Polish ambassador to the UK and one of the Polish political leaders in exile. For the new immigration this was the first great step in their new life, because the symposium was in support of WWII combatant emigration and the President of the Polish Republic in exile.
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