Antoni Chołoniewski

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Antoni Chołoniewski
Antoni Chołoniewski-Myszka
Antoni Chołoniewski in 1915
Antoni Chołoniewski in 1915
Born(1872-10-23)October 23, 1872
DiedMay 13, 1924(1924-05-13) (aged 51)
Bydgoszcz, Poland  Poland
Resting placeNowofarny Cemetery, Bydgoszcz
Other namesKorczak, Pełka, Antoni Stanisław Olechnowicz, Strzała, Szary
OccupationJournalist, publicist, national activist
Spouse(s)Kamilla Chołoniewska
ChildrenMieczysław, Bolesław

Antoni Chołoniewski-Myszka (1872-1924), was a Polish journalist, publicist and a national activist.

Biography[]

Antoni Chołoniewski-Myszka, or Antoni Chołoniewski was born on October 23, 1872, in Kavske -then called Kawsko- near Stryi, now in western Ukraine. His family was from landed nobility, linked to the Korczak clan. His mother was Katarzyna née Hrynkiewicz. His father Ferdinand fought as a lieutenant under General Józef Bem during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. The property of the Chołoniewski family was confiscated by the Austrian authorities following Ferdinand's participation to this uprising.[1]

He attended a gymnasium in Stryi and lost his parents early in his youth. As a consequence, Antoni had to earn early his living by writing; as such, the first texts he penned were articles about the Podkarpacie region to be edited by Lwów newspapers.

In 1891, he moved to Lwów and started working in the editorial office of the Przegląd Lwowski, a biweekly scientific, literary and political journal.[2] In 1894, he opted for the editorial office of the Dziennik Polski.

There, he took over the department of culture and national affairs while working at the same time as a correspondent for other papers:

During this period, he wrote his first book, Nieśmiertelni. Fotografie literatów lwowskich (English: Immortals. Photographs of Lwów writers). Issued in 1898, Antoni described in it the journalistic and literary milieu of the city. In 1902, he released Życiorys Kościuszko (English: Biography of Kościuszko), which was a popular success.

In 1903, he relocated to Kraków, where after several stints, he took the position of chief editor of the local print of Warsaw biweekly Świat, just founded in 1906 by Stefan Krzywoszewski (1866-1950).[1] Quickly he turned towards journalism, visiting Silesia, Wielkopolska and Pomerania. In 1909, Chołoniewski visited for the first time Gdańsk: he was sent by the editors of Świat in order to survey the situation of Poles in these regions, so as to confirm the Germanization policy imposed by the authorities. [1]

In particular, he was a fervent champion of national Polish identity in the Western Borderlands. From 1913 onwards, he regularly advocated them in several of his publications.

Chołoniewski was the first Polish journalist to draw the attention of the Polish public to Gdynia, then a small fishing village. Furthermore, he contributed to the establishment of the first boarding house for Polish holiday goers.

Chołoniewski's villa in Bydgoszcz

He constantly highlighted the tensions in Wielkopolska and Pomerania and he expressed such thoughts in historical and political books.

He penned his most famous work in 1917: Duch dziejów Polski (English: The Spirit of Polish History), immediately translated into German, French, English, Romanian and Bulgarian.

After Poland regained independence, Antoni moved in 1919 to Sopot, then Gdańsk. In Sopot his wife Kamila bought buildings at then Sudstrasse 11-15 (today Grunwaldzka street) and Parkstrasse 6 (now Parkowa street) and opened there a guesthouse.[1] At this time, Antoni worked on further widespreading the idea of Polish nationalism. His ideas exposed him to harassment from the side of the Senate of the Free City of Danzig, which was administrating independently the area since 1920. In the spring of 1921, the Senate issued a decision to expel Antoni Chołoniewski from the territory of the Free City.[1] As a consequence, he moved to Bydgoszcz, where he had been previously treated by a local doctor.

Chołoniewski's villa in Sopot

In Bydgoszcz, Chołoniewski lived at 119 Gdańska Street. He resumed his journalistic activity devoted to "Polishness" in the Western Borderlands. Despite a deteriorating health, he published many articles, not only in his own magazine Zmartwychwstanie (English: Resurrection) in 1922, but also in the Christian Democrat periodicals Dziennik Bydgoski (English: Bydgoszcz Journal) and Dziennik Poznański.[3]

During this period, he additionally contributed to the creation in Wąbrzeźno of the Polish National Institute (Polish: Polski Instytut Narodowy), together with Stanisławe Jasiński and Włodzimierz Tetmajer from Kraków. This organization, one of the first of its kind in the area, aimed at educating, publishing Polish press and literature and spreading Polish culture.[4]

In his last year, Antoni edited a bimonthly Biblioteka Pomorska, dealing with art, science, literature and popular culture in Polish Pomerania.

He passed away on May 13, 1924, in Bydgoszcz, after a long illness. He was buried in the Nowofarny Cemetery of Bydgoszcz: in 1987 his grave was liquidated.[5]

The authorities of Sopot seized Chołoniewskis' property before the outbreak of World War II and in March 1940, the buildings were demolished and the area covered with grass. Out of the Chołoniewski's estate, only a small residential edifice is still preserved today at 11 Grunwaldzka street.[1]

Themes and works[]

  • Defence of the Polish national feeling or "Polishness" in the Western borderlands (eastern ragions of Pomerania, Wielkopolska , Warmia and parts of Upper Silesia). Chołoniewski tackled this topic in his following works:
    • Nad morzem polskim (English: On Polish seaside) 1913;
    • Gdańsk i Pomorze (English: Gdańsk and the Pomerania) 1919, translated into French;
    • Taniec wśród mieczów (English: Dance among swords) 1920.
  • Despite his national orientation, Antoni Chołoniewski was a writer free from any chauvinism and always referred to the most positive and beautiful Polish traditions, such as democracy or tolerance, like in his 1917 masterpiece Duch dziejów Polski.

He particularly championed the assimilation of Jews, fighting both Antisemitism and Jewish Autonomism.

  • Highlighting and repairing historical and political struggles involving Polish nationalism. He described this ideas in the following:[3]
    • Istota walki polsko-rosyjskiej (English: The essence of the Polish-Russian struggle) 1916;
    • Dialog o Polsce i małych narodach (English: Dialogue about Poland and small nations) 1916;
    • Państwo polskie, jego wskrzeszenie i widoki rozwoju (English: The Polish state, its resurrection and development views).
  • Chołoniewski's main work, Duch dziejów Polski (English: The Spirit of Polish History), depicts a synthetic outline of the historical development of an independent Poland with a particular emphasis on the positive factors.[6]

Family[]

Antoni, his two sons, Kamilla's mother and Kamilla, 1912
Plaque at 119 Gdanska Street
  • Kamilla Chołoniewska, his wife
    • Kamilla Florentyna Maria Chołoniewska - née Głuchowska (1877-1936), was a social activist, writer, journalist, teacher and entrepreneur. During the First World War, she organized help for Polish legionnaires and political prisoners. Later she was active in various women's associations, especially as the president of the "Association of Scientific Assistance for Women", allowing students to study higher education by granting scholarships. While in Bydgoszcz with Antoni, she founded and ran a workshop and a school. As a supporter of women's higher education, she co-founded the first female gymnasium in Lviv. In 1934, she took over the leadership of the "National School of Homework" in Warsaw.

wide study devoted to the spa values in the city of Rabka-Zdrój where he was working.

progeny.

  • Mieczysław and his wife Leandra had two children, a daughter Kamilla and a son, Jacek Chołoniewski. Born in 1957, Jacek is a Polish entrepreneur, independent journalist and economic expert, doctor of physical sciences.

Commemorations[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Maria (14 July 2016). "Miłośnik Gdańska i Pomorza". gdanskstrefa.com. Fundacja dla Gdańska i Pomorza. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Przegląd Lwowski". pbc.biaman.pl. University of Bialystok. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b Biskup, Marian (1999). Polska kultura i sztuka w Bydgoszczy w latach 1920-1939. Historia Bydgoszczy. Tom II. Część pierwsza 1920-1939:. Bydgoszcz: Bydgoskie Towarzystwo Naukowe. pp. 675–719. ISBN 8390132907.
  4. ^ Becker, Paweł (28 July 2011). "Polski Instytut Narodowy w Wąbrzeźnie". wabrzezno.com. Urząd Miejski Wąbrzeźno. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  5. ^ a b key (13 May 2013). "Patriota dokończył żywota w Bydgoszczy". bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl. Agora SA. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Duch dziejów Polski". Publio.pl. Publio. 2020. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  7. ^ "gen. Ludwik Mieroslawski (Pierre Louis Adam)". barmen.ch. 27 September 2007. Retrieved 4 January 2022. {{Dead link|date=January 2022

Bibliography[]

  • (in Polish) Błażejewski Stanisław, Kutta Janusz, Romaniuk Marek (1996). Bydgoski Słownik Biograficzny. Tom III. Bydgoszcz: Wojewódzki Ośrodek Kultury. pp. 50–51. ISBN 8385327320.

External links[]

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