The process of the return unit is defined as a return to the past in order to rebuild the broken bond with her and take stock of life experiences. Each return full biographical dimension, social and historical, and thus fills the internal states on the needs of biographical belonging, a common fate of Polish- Jewish. Back is sometimes understood as coercion resulting from processuality biographical life experiences, the need to balance life, consolidation of facts, calm, ordering biography, to give it meaning and significance. The need for closure biography, ie,, zatoczenia wheels, ‘’ is needed in individuals who have experienced pain, suffering ,,cracks,, ‘’ discontinuity biographical experience. Meeting and dialogue in the proceeding rapidly towards supporting the development of social self-esteem and self-awareness unit and the identification of a common intercultural communication capabilities
The article aims to sketch the biography of a person who significantly contributed to the development of research on the history of the occupation in Poland, including the Holocaust, and who is wrongly marginalized in the Polish reflection on the evolution of this discipline. The text is based on the analysis of broadly understood historiographic sources. I focus primarily on the following problems: Dobroszycki’s intellectual biography; theoretical frameworks of his scientific work; his input to research on World War II and the Holocaust; last but not least Dobroszycki’s role in Polish-Jewish scientific dialogue.
Lucjan Dobroszycki (1925–1995) – a forgotten historian (not only) of the Holocaust The article aims to sketch the biography of a person who significantly contributed to the development of research on the history of the occupation in Poland, including the Holocaust, and who is wrongly marginalized in the Polish reflection on the evolution of this discipline. The text is based on the analysis of broadly understood historiographic sources. I focus primarily on the following problems: Dobroszycki’s intellectual biography; theoretical frameworks of his scientific work; his input to research on World War II and the Holocaust; last but not least Dobroszycki’s role in Polish-Jewish scientific dialogue.
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