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Poles in Lithuania

The Poles in Lithuania (Polish: Polacy na Litwie, Lithuanian: Lietuvos lenkai), also called Lithuanian Poles,[3][4] estimated at 183,000 people in the Lithuanian census of 2021 or 6.5% of Lithuania's total population, are the country's largest ethnic minority.

Poles in Lithuania
Polish minority marching in Vilnius (2008)
Total population
183,000 (2021 census)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Vilnius County
Languages
Polish, Lithuanian, Russian, Belarusian
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic[2]
Related ethnic groups
Poles, Lithuanians, Belarusians

During the Polish–Lithuanian union, there was an influx of Poles into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the gradual Polonization of its elite and upper classes. At the end of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, almost all of Lithuania's nobility, clergy, and townspeople spoke Polish and adopted Polish culture, while still maintaining a Lithuanian identity.[5] In the 19th century, the processes of Polonization also affected Lithuanian and Belarusian peasants and led to the formation of a long strip of land with a predominantly Polish population, stretching to Daugavpils and including Vilnius. The rise of the Lithuanian national movement led to conflicts between both groups. Following World War I and the rebirth of both states, there was the Polish–Lithuanian War, whose main focus was Vilnius and the nearby region. In its aftermath, the majority of the Polish population living in the Lithuanian lands found themselves within the Polish borders. However, interwar Lithuania still retained a large Polish minority. During World War II, the Polish population was persecuted by the USSR and Nazi Germany. Post-World War II, the borders were changed, territorial disputes were suppressed as the Soviet Union exercised power over both countries and a significant part of the Polish population, especially the best-educated, was forcefully transferred from the Lithuanian SSR to the Polish People's Republic. At the same time, a significant number of Poles relocated from nearby regions of Byelorussian SSR to Vilnius and Vilnius region. After Lithuania regained independence, Lithuania–Poland relations were tense in the 1990s due to alleged discrimination of the Polish minority in Lithuania.[6][7][8][9][10]

Currently, the Polish population is grouped in the Vilnius region, primarily the Vilnius and Šalčininkai districts. In the city of Vilnius alone there are more than 85,000 Poles, who make up about 15% of the Lithuanian capital's population. Most Poles in Lithuania are Roman Catholic and speak Polish, although a minority of them speak Russian or Lithuanian, as their first language. Together with Vilnius City, Poles inhabit an area of approximately 4000 km2.

Statistics edit

According to the Lithuanian census of 2021, the Polish minority in Lithuania numbered 183,421 persons or 6.5% of the population of Lithuania. It is the largest ethnic minority in modern Lithuania, the second largest being the Russian minority. Poles are concentrated in the Vilnius Region. Most Poles live in Vilnius County (170,919 people, or 21% of the county's population); Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, has 85,438 Poles, or 15.4% of the city's population. Especially large Polish communities are found in Vilnius District Municipality (46% of the population) and Šalčininkai District Municipality (76%).

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1825[11]100,000[a]—    
1897[12]260,000+160.0%
1942[13]356,000+36.9%
1944[14]380,000+6.7%
1947[14]208,000−45.3%
1959[15] 230,000+10.6%
1979 247,000+7.4%
1989 258,000+4.5%
2001 235,000−8.9%
2011[16] 200,000−14.9%
2021[1] 183,000−8.5%

Lithuanian municipalities with a Polish minority exceeding 15% of the total population (according to the 2021 census) are listed in the table below:

Poles in Lithuania according to the 2021 Lithuanian census[1][17]
Municipality name Area Total population Number of Poles Percentage
Vilnius city 401 km2 556,490 85,438 15.4%
Vilnius district 2,129 km2 96,295 45,020 46.8%
Šalčininkai district 1,491 km2 30,052 22,934 76.3%
Trakai district 1,208 km2 32,042 8,823 27.5%
Švenčionys district 1,692 km2 22,966 5,585 24.3%

Top 10 cities by number of Poles:[18]

Languages edit

The adoption of Polish cultural features by the nobles, townspeople, and clergy in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, combined with an influx of migrants from Poland, created a Lithuanian variant of the Polish language.[19] The local variety of Polish called Polszczyzna Litewska became the native tongue of the Lithuanian nobility in the 18th century.[20]

According to Polish professor Jan Otrębski's article published in 1931, the Polish dialect in the Vilnius Region and in the northeastern areas in general are very interesting variant of Polishness as this dialect developed in a foreign territory which was mostly inhabited by the Lithuanians who were Belarusized (mostly) or Polonized, and to prove this Otrębski provided examples of Lithuanianisms in the Tutejszy language.[21][22] In 2015, Polish linguist Mirosław Jankowiak [pl] attested that many of the Vilnius Region's inhabitants who declare Polish nationality speak a Belarusian dialect which they call mowa prosta ('simple speech').[23]

Out of the 234,989 Poles in Lithuania, 187,918 (80.0%) consider Polish to be their first language. 22,439 Poles (9.5%) speak Russian as their first language, while 17,233 (7.3%) speak Lithuanian. 6,279 Poles (2.7%) did not indicate their first language. The remaining 0.5% speak various other languages.[24] The Polish regiolect spoken by Lithuanian Poles is classified under Northern Borderlands dialect.[25] Most of Poles who live southwards of Vilnius speak a form of Belarusian vernacular called there "simple speech",[26] that contains many substratical relics from Lithuanian and Polish.[27]

Education edit

Absolute numbers with Polish language education at Lithuanian rural schools (1980)[28]
District municipality Lithuanian Russian Polish
Vilnius / Wilno 1,250 4,150 6,400
Šalčininkai / Soleczniki 500 2,050 3,200
Trakai / Troki 2,900 50 950
Širvintos / Szyrwinty 2,400 100 100
Švenčionys / Święciany 1,350 600 100
Varėna / Orany 6,000 0 50
Absolute number with Polish language education at Lithuanian urban schools was 5,600

As of 1980, about 20% of Polish Lithuanian students chose Polish as the language of instruction at school.[28] In the same year, about 60–70% of rural Polish communities chose Polish. However, even in towns with a predominantly Polish population, the share of Polish-language education was less than the percentage of Poles. Even though, historically, Poles tended to strongly oppose Russification, one of the most important reasons to choose Russian language education was the absence of a Polish-language college and university learning in the USSR, and during Soviet times Polish minority students in Lithuania were not allowed to get college/university education across the border in Poland. Only in 2007, the first small branch of the Polish University of Białystok opened in Vilnius. In 1980 there were 16,400 school students instructed in Polish. Their number declined to 11,400 in 1990. In independent Lithuania between 1990 and 2001, the number of Polish mother tongue children attending schools with Polish as the language of instruction doubled to over 22,300, then gradually decreased to 18,392 in 2005.[29] In September 2003, there were 75 Polish-language general education schools and 52 which provided education in Polish in a combination of languages (for example Lithuanian-Polish, Lithuanian-Russian-Polish). These numbers fell to 49 and 41 in 2011, reflecting a general decline in the number of schools in Lithuania.[30] Polish government was concerned in 2015 about the education in Polish.[31]

History until 1990 edit

Grand Duchy of Lithuania (before 1795) edit

 
Andrzej Jastrzębiec was the first Bishop of Vilnius.[32] He is depicted in the fresco "Baptism of Lithuania" by Włodzimierz Tetmajer

First Polish people in Lithuania were mainly enslaved war captives.[33] Poles started to migrate to the Grand Duchy in more noticeable numbers after Christianization of the country and establishment of the union between Poland and Lithuania in 1385.[34] In the 15th and 16th century, the Polish population in Lithuania was not large numerically, but the Poles enjoyed a privileged social status – they were found in highly regarded places and their culture was considered prestigious.[35] With time Polish people became part of the local landowning class.[36] Lithuanian nobles welcomed fugitive Polish peasants and settled them on uncultivated land, but they usually assimilated with Belarusians and Lithuanians peasants within few generations.[34] In the 16th century, the largest concentrations of Poles in the GDL were located in Podlachia,[b] the border areas of Samogitia, Lithuania and Belarus, and the cities of Vilnius, Brest, Kaunas, Grodno, Kėdainiai, and Nyasvizh.[43] During that period, the royal and grand ducal courts were nearly entirely composed of Polish speakers.[44] Polish quickly supplanted Ruthenian as the language of Lithuanian elite after the latter had switched to speaking Ruthenian and Polish at the beginning of the 16th century.[35] Reformation gave another impetus to the spread of Polish, as the Bible and other religious texts were translated from Latin to Polish. Since the second half of the 16th century, Poles predominated in Protestant schools and printing houses in the Grand Duchy, and the life of local protestant congregations.[45] There were also numerous Poles among the Jesuits residing in Lithuania.[46]

The influx of Poles to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania significantly increased after the Union of Lublin.[47] This population movement created a fertile ground for socio-cultural Polonization of Lithuanian territories. While Poles and foreigners were generally prohibited from holding public offices in the Grand Duchy, Polish people gradually gained this right through the acquisition of Lithuanian land.[48] Poor nobles from the Crown rented land from local magnates.[49] The number of Poles grew also in the towns, among others in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Grodno.[50] Vilnius became the most important center of the Polish intelligentsia in the Grand Duchy,[51] with Poles predominating in the city in the middle of the 17th century.[52]

Already at the beginning of the 16th century Polish became the first language of the Lithuanian magnates. In the following century it was adopted by the Lithuanian nobility in general. Even the nobility of Samogitia used the Polish language already in the 17th century.[53] The Polish language also penetrated other social strata: the clergy, the townspeople, and even the peasants.[54] During the Commonwealth's period, a Polish-dominated territory started to be slowly formed in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania,[34] such as Liauda, northeast of Kaunas (since the early 15th century). The Polish historian Władysław Wielhorski [pl] estimated that by the end of the 18th century, Polish and Polonized people constituted 25% of the Grand Duchy's inhabitants.[34]

Lithuania under Russian rule (1795–1918) edit

Until the 1830s, Polish was the administrative language in the so called Western Krai, which included the territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania that were annexed by the Russian Empire.[55] During the 19th century, Poles were the largest Christian population in Vilnius. They also predominated in the municipal government of the city in the earlier half of the 19th century.[56] The Polish-language university was re-established in Vilnius in 1803 and closed in 1832.[57] After the 1863 uprising, public use of the Polish language and teaching it to peasants, as well as possession of Polish books by the latter became illegal.[58][59] Notwithstanding their varied ethnic roots, the members of szlachta generally opted for Polish self-identification in the course of the 19th century.[60]

In the 19th century Polish culture was spreading among the lower classes of Lithuania,[61] mainly in Dzūkija and to a lesser degree in Aukštaitija. Linguists distinguish between official Polish language, used in the Church and cultural activities, and colloquial language, closer to the speech of the common people. Inhabitants of a significant part of the Vilnius region used a variant of the Belarusian language, which was influenced mainly by Polish, referred to as "simple speech" (Polish: mowa prosta). It was a kind of "mixed language" serving as an interdialect of the cultural borderland.[62] This language became a gateway to the progressive Slavization of the Lithuanian population. This led to the formation of a compact Polish language area between the Lithuanian and Belarusian language areas, with Vilnius as the center.[63] The position of Vilnius as an important Polish cultural center influenced the development of national identities among Roman Catholic peasants in the region.[64] The emergence of the Lithuanian national movement in the 1880s slowed down the process of Polonization of the ethnically Lithuanian population, but also cemented a sense of national identity among a significant portion of the Polish-speaking Lithuanian population. The feeling of a two-tier Lithuanian-Polish national identity, present throughout the period, had to give way to a clear national declaration.

Interwar period and Second World War (1918–1944) edit

 
Polish Interwar map of Polish minority in Lithuania (in brown) in 1923, interpolation, based on the election results in Lithuania
 
Poles in the interwar Lithuanian state, between 1923–1924

From 1918 to 1921 there were several conflicts, such as the activity of the Polish Military Organisation, Sejny uprising and a foiled attempt at a Polish coup of the Lithuanian government.[65][66] As a result of the Polish–Lithuanian War and Żeligowski's mutiny the border between independent Lithuania and Poland was drawn more or less according to the linguistic division of the region. Nevertheless, many Poles lived in the Lithuanian state and a significant Lithuanian minority found itself within the Polish borders. The loss of Vilnius was a painful blow to Lithuanian aspirations and identity. The irredentist demand for its recovery became one of the most important elements of socio-political life in interwar Lithuania and resulted in the emergence of hostility and resentment against the Poles.[67]

In interwar Lithuania, people declaring Polish ethnicity were officially described as Polonized Lithuanians who needed to be re-Lithuanized, Polish-owned land was confiscated, Polish religious services, schools, publications and voting rights were restricted.[68] According to the Lithuanian census of 1923 (not including Vilnius and Klaipėda regions), there were 65,600 Poles in Lithuania (3.2% of the total population).[69] Although according to Polish Election Committee in fact the number of Poles was 202,026, so about 10% of total population.[70] The Poles were concentrated in the districts of Kaunas, Kėdainiai, Kaišiadorys and Ukmergė, in each of which they constituted 20–30% of the population.[71] In 1919, Poles owned 90% of estates larger than 100 ha. By 1928, 2,997 large estates with a total area of 555,207 ha were parceled out, and 52,935 new farms were created in their place and given to Lithuanian peasants.[72]

Polish schools in the interwar Lithuania[73]
1925/1926 1926/1927 1927/1928 1928/1929
Number of Polish elementary schools 7 75 20 14
Number of employed Polish teachers 10 90 22 17
Number of pupils 365 4 089 554 450

Many Poles in Lithuania were signed in as Lithuanians in their passports, and as a result, they also were forced to attend Lithuanian schools. Polish education was organized by the "Pochodnia". After the establishment of Valdemaras regime in 1926, 58[74] Polish schools were closed, many Poles were incarcerated, and Polish newspapers were placed under strict censorship.[75] Poles also had difficult access to higher education.[76] Over time, the Polish language was also removed from the Church and seminaries. The most tragic episode in the history of Poles in interwar Lithuania was an anti-Polish demonstration organized by the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union on May 23, 1930 in Kaunas, which turned into a riot.[77]

A large portion of the Vilnius area was part of the Second Polish Republic during the interwar period, particularly the area of the Republic of Central Lithuania, which had a significant Polish speaking population.[78]

Soviet period (1944–1990) edit

Polish population in 1959 (≥ 20%)[79]
Raion %
City of Vilnius 20.00%
Vilnius 81.44%
Šalčininkai 83.87%
Nemenčinė 73.21%
Eišiškės 67.40%
Trakai 48.17%
Švenčionys 23.86%
Vievis 22.87%

During the World War II expulsions and shortly after the war, the Soviet Union, forcibly exchanged population between Poland and Lithuania. During 1945–1948, the Soviet Union allowed 197,000 Poles to leave to Poland; in 1956–1959, another 46,600 were able to leave.[80][81] Ethnic Poles made up 80-91% of Vilnius population in 1944.[82][83] All Poles in the city were required to register for resettlement.[84] In most cases, the Soviet authorities blocked the departure of Poles who were interwar Lithuanian citizens and only 8.3% (less than 8,000) of those who registered for repatriation in Kaunas Region in 1945–1946 managed to leave for Poland.[85]

In the 1950s the remaining Polish minority was a target of several attempted campaigns of Lithuanization by the Communist Party of Lithuania, which tried to stop any teaching in Polish; those attempts, however, were stopped by Moscow.[86] The Soviet census of 1959 showed 230,100 Poles concentrated in the Vilnius region (8.5% of the Lithuanian SSR's population).[87] The Polish minority increased in size, but more slowly than other ethnic groups in Lithuania; the last Soviet census of 1989 showed 258,000 Poles (7.0% of the Lithuanian SSR's population).[87] The Polish minority, subject in the past to massive, often voluntary[88] Russification and Sovietization, and recently to voluntary processes of Lithuanization, shows many and increasing signs of assimilation with Lithuanians.[87]

In independent Lithuania edit

 
Grey: Areas with majority Polish population in Lithuania as of early 2000s. Red: 1920–1939 Polish–Lithuanian border

1990–2000 edit

When Lithuania declared its independence from the Soviet Union in 1990 large part of the Polish minority, still remembering the 1950s attempts to ban Polish,[86] was afraid that the independent Lithuanian government might want to reintroduce the Lithuanization policies. Furthermore, some Lithuanian nationalists, notably the Vilnija organization which was founded in 1988, considered eastern Lithuania's inhabitants as Polonized Lithuanians.[89] Due to their view of ethnicity as primordial, they argued that the Lithuanian state should work to restore their "true" identity.[89] Although, many Poles in Lithuania do have Lithuanian ancestry, they considered themselves ethnically Polish.[90]

According to the historian Alfred E. Senn, the Polish minority was divided into three main groups: Vilnius' inhabitants supported Lithuanian independence, the residents of Vilnius' southeastern districts and Šalčininkai were pro-Soviet, while the third group scattered throughout the country did not have a clear position.[91] According to surveys from the spring of 1990, 47% of Poles in Lithuania supported the pro-Soviet Communist party (in contrast to 8% support among ethnic Lithuanians), while 35% supported Lithuanian independence.[86]

In November 1988, Yedinstvo (literally "Unity"), a pro-Soviet movement that was against Lithuanian independence, was formed.[92] Under local Polish leadership and with Soviet support, the regional authorities in Vilnius and Šalčininkai region declared an autonomous region, the Polish National Territorial Region.[93] The same Polish politicians later voiced support for the Soviet coup attempt of 1991 in Moscow.[93] Yedinstvo, which had never had the approval of the Polish government, collapsed after the failure of the GKChP in the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt, which doomed any prospect of a return to Soviet rule.[92] Simultaneously, after the August Coup's failure, the Polish autonomous region was immediately declared illegal by the Lithuanian government, which instituted direct rule in those areas.[94][93]

In April 1989, another more moderate organization of Lithuanian Poles, the Association of Poles in Lithuania (Polish: Związek Polaków na Litwie, ZPL), was established. Its first leader was Jan Sienkiewicz.[95] ZPL supported 1991 Lithuanian independence referendum. On 29 January 1991, Lithuanian government granted minorities right of schooling in their native language and use of it in official institutions.[96]

A new Citizenship Law was enacted in December 1991, that granted citizenship to every person that lived in eastern Lithuania before 1940, if they didn't have citizenship of another country, thus excluding some persons that emigrated to Lithuania after the war.[97]

Such a situation caused tension in Polish–Lithuanian relations.[96] Direct rule was lifted and local elections were organised in December 1992.[98] The ZPL also strengthened its attitude, demanding that the Polish minority be granted a number of rights, such as the establishment of a Polish university, increasing the rights of the Polish language, increasing subsidies from the central budget, and others.[99] ZPL took part in the 1992 parliamentary elections winning 2.07% of the votes and four seats in Seimas.

In 1994, Lithuanian parliament limited participation in local elections to political parties, accordingly ZPL established Electoral Action for Lithuanian Poles (Polish: Akcja Wyborcza Polaków na Litwie, AWPL). In January 1995 a new Language Law was enacted which required representatives of local institutions to know Lithuanian language, also all secondary schools were required to teach Lithuanian.

Polish–Lithuanian relations eased only in 1994, when both countries signed a treaty of good neighborhood.[100] The treaty protected rights of Polish minority in Lithuania and Lithuanian minority in Poland.[101] It also defined nationality as a matter of individual choice, which was contrary to the definition popular among Lithuanian nationalists, and even to the definition given in Lithuania's National Minorities Right Law of 1989, which defined nationality as something inherited. The Treaty defined that to the Polish ethinic minority belongs persons who have Lithuanian citizenship, are of Polish origin or consider themselves to belong to the Polish nationality, culture and traditions as well as viewing the Polish language as their native language.[102]

The situation of the Polish minority assumed international significance again in 1995 after the publication of a Council of Europe report prepared by a commission headed by György Frunda (the so-called "Frunda Report"), which criticized Lithuanian policy toward the Polish minority, particularly the lack of recognition of the Polish university.[103] However, this did not significantly affect Lithuanian politics. In 1996, the special provisions that made an entry of ethno-political parties parliament easier were removed, and from then on they had to meet the usual electoral threshold. The restoration of property lost during the communist period was also a burning issue, which was implemented very slowly in the lands inhabited by Poles. Poles protested against the expansion of Vilnius' borders.[104]

After 2000 edit

Tensions arose regarding Polish education and the spelling of names. The United States Department of State stated, in a report issued in 2001, that the Polish minority had issued complaints concerning its status in Lithuania, and that members of the Polish Parliament criticized the government of Lithuania over alleged discrimination against the Polish minority.[105] In 2006 Polish Foreign Minister Stefan Meller asserted that Polish educational institutions in Lithuania are severely underfunded.[106] Similar concerns were voiced in 2007 by a Polish parliamentary commission.[107] According to a report issued by the European Union Fundamental Rights Agency in 2004, Poles in Lithuania were the second least-educated minority group in Lithuania.[108] The branch of the University of Białystok in Vilnius educates mostly members of the Polish minority.

A report by the Council of Europe, issued in 2007, stated that on the whole, minorities were integrated quite well into the everyday life of Lithuania. The report expressed a concern with Lithuanian nationality law, which contains a right of return clause.[109] The citizenship law was under discussion during 2007; it was deemed unconstitutional on 13 November 2006.[110] A proposed constitutional amendment would allow the Polish minority in Lithuania to apply for Polish passports.[111]

Lithuanian constitutional law stipulated that everyone (not only Poles) who has Lithuanian citizenship and resides within the country has to write their name in the Lithuanian alphabet and according to the Lithuanian pronunciation; for example, the name Kleczkowski has to be spelled Klečkovski in official documents.[112][113][114][115] Poles who registered for Lithuanian citizenship after dissolution of the Soviet Union were forced to accept official documents with Lithuanian versions of their names.[116] On April 24, 2012 the European Parliament accepted for further consideration the petition (number 0358/2011) submitted by a Tomasz Snarski about the language rights of Polish minority, in particular about enforced Lithuanization of Polish surnames.[117][118]

Representatives of the Lithuanian government demanded removal of illegally placed Polish names of the streets in Maišiagala, Raudondvaris, Riešė and Sudervė as by a Lithuanian law, all the street name signs must be in a state language.[119][120] as by constitutional law all names have to be in Lithuanian. Tensions have been reported between the Lithuanian Roman Catholic clergy and its Polish parishioniers in Lithuania.[121][122][123] The Seimas voted against foreign surnames in Lithuanian passports.[124]

In late May 2008, the Association of Poles in Lithuania issued a letter, addressed to Lithuania's government, complaining about anti-minority (primarily, anti-Polish) rhetoric in media, citing upcoming parliamentary elections as a motive, and asking for better treatment of the ethnic minorities. The association also filed a complaint with the Lithuanian prosecutor, asking for investigation of the issue.[125][126][127]

The Law on Ethnic Minorities lapsed in 2010.[128] As of 2023 Lithuania has not ratified the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.[129]

Difficulties of the Polish minority edit

Discrimination edit

There are opinions[by whom?] in some Polish media that the Polish minority in Lithuania is facing discrimination. As mentioned above, Petition 0358/2011 on language rights of Poles living in Lithuania was filed with the European Parliament in 2011.[130] Polish Election Action in Lithuania claimed that the education legislation is discriminatory.[131] In 2011, former Polish President Lech Wałęsa criticized the government of Lithuania over its alleged discrimination against the Polish minority.[132]

Until 2022 Lithuania continued to enforce the Lithuanized[clarification needed] spelling of surnames of Poles in Lithuania, with some exceptions, in spite of the 1994 Polish–Lithuanian agreement,[133] Lithuanian legislative system and the Constitution, see section "Surnames" for details.

In 1989–2010, Lithuanian-Polish bilingual street signs were considered legal in Lithuania if placed in the areas with significant Polish populations. However, the Law on National Minorities, which guaranteed this, was discontinued. As a result, such signs are now prohibited and Lithuanian courts enforce their removal under the threat of fines.[134][135][136] The refusal of Lithuanian authorities to install or allow bilingual road signs (against the legislative base of Lithuania) in areas densely populated by Lithuanian Poles is at times described by the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania and some Polish media as linguistic discrimination.[131][135]

Name/surname spelling edit

The official spelling of the all non-Lithuanian (hence Polish) name in a person's passport is governed by the 31 January 1991 Resolution of the Supreme Council of Lithuania No. I-1031 "Concerning name and surname spelling in the passport of the citizen of the Republic of Lithuania". There are the following options. The law says, in part:[137]

2. In the passport of a citizen of the Republic of Lithuania, the first name and surname of persons of non-Lithuanian origin shall be spelt in Lithuanian. On the citizen's request in writing, the name and surname can be spelt in the order established as follows:

a) according to pronunciation and without grammatisation (i.e. without Lithuanian endings) or b) according to pronunciation alongside grammatisation (i.e. adding Lithuanian endings).

3. The names and surnames of the persons, who have already possessed citizenship of other State, shall be written according to the passport of the State or an equivalent document available in the passport of the Republic of Lithuania on its issue.

This resolution was challenged in 1999 in the Constitutional Court upon a civil case of a person of Polish ethnicity who requested his name to be entered in the passport in Polish. The Constitutional Court upheld the 1991 resolution. At the same time, it was stressed out citizen's rights to spell their name whatever they like in areas "not linked with the sphere of use of the state language pointed out in the law".[138]

In 2022, the Seimas passed a law allowing members of ethnic minorities to use the full Latin alphabet, including q, w and x, letters which are not considered part of the Lithuanian alphabet, but not characters with diacritics (such as ł and ä), in their legal name if they declare their status as an ethnic minority and prove that their ancestors used that name. In response, several ethnically Polish Lithuanian politicians changed their legal names to be closer to the Polish spelling, most notably Justice Minister Ewelina Dobrowolska (formerly spelled "Evelina Dobrovolska"), but requests for name changes from the general population were low.[139][140] From May 2022 when law came into action until the end of July 2023 only 337 people changed their names to include non-Lithuanian language symbols and only less than 5 of those declared to be of Polish descent.[141] By the end of August 2023 the number of people of Polish descent that changed their names to include non-Lithuanian symbols increased to 203 which was approximately 0.11% of all Poles in Lithuania.[142]

Organizations edit

 
Elderships where Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance had majority of votes during 2020 Lithuania's parliamentary election (AWPL in pink)

The Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance (Lithuanian: Lietuvos lenkų rinkimų akcija, Polish: Akcja Wyborcza Polaków na Litwie) is an ethnic minority-based political party formed in 1994, able to exert significant political influence in the administrative districts where Poles form a majority or significant minority. This party has held seats in the Seimas (Parliament of Lithuania) for the past decade. In the 2020 Lithuanian parliamentary election it received just below 5% of the national vote. The party is more active in local politics and controls several municipal councils.[143] It cooperates with other minorities, mainly the Lithuanian Russian Union.

The Association of Poles in Lithuania (Polish: Związek Polaków na Litwie) is an organization formed in 1989 to bring together Polish activists in Lithuania. It numbers between 6,000 and 11,000 members. Its work concerns the civil rights of the Polish minority and engages in educational, cultural, and economic activities.[144]

Prominent Poles edit

Prior to 1940 edit

Since 1990 edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The number is for Vilna Governorate (Polish: Gubernia wileńska in the source), which in 1825 included most of modern Lithuania, except the lands now in Suwałki Governorate
  2. ^ Podlachia was part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania between the late 13th century and 1569.[37][38] The region was a sphere of old Polish-Mazovian settlement[39] and was governed according to the Polish law since 1514.[40] In the mid-16th century, the Poles became the main group among the Podlachian gentry, which led to demands from the local deputies for the complete union of their lands with Poland.[41][39] With time, Mazovians also started to predominate in Podlachian towns.[40] The total number of Poles in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania decreased with the loss of Podlachia and lands in Ukraine.[42]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Tautinių mažumų departamentas prie Lietuvos Respublikos Vyriausybės".
  2. ^ "Population by religious community to which they attributed themselves and ethnicity". Department of Statistics (Lithuania). Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  3. ^ Weeks, Theodore R. (2015-12-04). Vilnius between Nations, 1795–2000. Cornell University Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-1-5017-5808-9.
  4. ^ Wade, Peter (2007). Race, Ethnicity and Nation: Perspectives from Kinship and Genetics. Berghahn Books. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-84545-355-8.
  5. ^ Stone, Daniel Z. (2014-07-01). The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386–1795. University of Washington Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-295-80362-3.
  6. ^ Evaldas Nekrasas. (PDF). Lithuanian Foreign Policy Review. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-25. Retrieved 2008-03-30. In a letter written to Vytautas Landsbergis in December of 1991, Polish President Lech Walesa described Lithuanian-Polish relations as "close to critical."
  7. ^ Antanas Valionis; Evaldas Ignatavičius; Izolda Bričkovskienė. (PDF). Lithuanian Foreign Policy Review, 1998, issue 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2009. Retrieved 2008-03-29. The interval between the restoration of diplomatic relations in September 1991 and the signing of the Treaty on Friendly Relations and Good Neighborly Cooperation on April 26, 1994 was probably the most difficult period for Lithuanian-Polish relations (there were even assertions that relations in this period were "in some ways even worse than before the war").
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  • Zinkevičius, Zigmas (2010-11-20). "Lietuviškos ir nelietuviškos pavardės". Gimtoji kalba (in Lithuanian). Vol. 9. pp. 7–11.
  • Zinkevičius, Zigmas (31 January 2014). "Lenkiškai kalbantys lietuviai" [Polish-speaking Lithuanians]. alkas.lt (in Lithuanian).
  • Zinkevičius, Zigmas (21 August 2018). "Suvalkų ir Augustavo krašto pavardės. Polonizacijos apybraiža (II)" [Surnames of Suvalkai and Augustavas region. Outline of Polonization (II)]. alkas.lt (in Lithuanian).

External links edit

  • Vitalija Stravinskienė, , The Lithuanian Institute of History, January 19, 2006
  • Discrimination in Lithuania
  • Observance of Polish minority rights in Lithuania Report by «Wspólnota Polska», Union of Poles in Lithuania and the Association of Teachers of Polish Schools in Lithuania, 2009
  • The Polish national minority in Lithuania : three reports later.
  • Organizacje Polonii na Litwie (Organizations of Polonia in Lithuania) (in Polish)
  • (Polonia worldwide) with section on Lithuania (in Polish)
  • (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2005-04-03. (Poles in Lithuania)
  • (Fate of Polish population in Lithuania) (in Polish)
  • Jan Sienkiewicz, Przestrzeganie praw polskiej grupy etnicznej w Republice Litewskiej (Respecting the rights of the Polish minority in Lithuania) (in Polish)
  • Polacy na Litwie w prawie (Lithuanian law on minorities) (in Polish)
  • Srebrakowski A., Rozwój polskojęzycznej prasy na terenie Litwy po 1944 r. 2019-04-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Srebrakowski A., Szkolnictwo polskojęzyczne na Litwie 1944–1991 2019-04-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Srebrakowski A., Polacy w Litewskiej SRR 2020-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Srebrakowski A., Statystyczny obraz Polaków z Litwy.

poles, lithuania, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, subheadings, please, discuss, this, issue, article, talk, page, april, 2022, polish, polacy, litwie, lithuanian, lietuvos, len. This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page April 2022 The Poles in Lithuania Polish Polacy na Litwie Lithuanian Lietuvos lenkai also called Lithuanian Poles 3 4 estimated at 183 000 people in the Lithuanian census of 2021 or 6 5 of Lithuania s total population are the country s largest ethnic minority Poles in LithuaniaPolish minority marching in Vilnius 2008 Total population183 000 2021 census 1 Regions with significant populationsVilnius CountyLanguagesPolish Lithuanian Russian BelarusianReligionPredominantly Roman Catholic 2 Related ethnic groupsPoles Lithuanians Belarusians During the Polish Lithuanian union there was an influx of Poles into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the gradual Polonization of its elite and upper classes At the end of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795 almost all of Lithuania s nobility clergy and townspeople spoke Polish and adopted Polish culture while still maintaining a Lithuanian identity 5 In the 19th century the processes of Polonization also affected Lithuanian and Belarusian peasants and led to the formation of a long strip of land with a predominantly Polish population stretching to Daugavpils and including Vilnius The rise of the Lithuanian national movement led to conflicts between both groups Following World War I and the rebirth of both states there was the Polish Lithuanian War whose main focus was Vilnius and the nearby region In its aftermath the majority of the Polish population living in the Lithuanian lands found themselves within the Polish borders However interwar Lithuania still retained a large Polish minority During World War II the Polish population was persecuted by the USSR and Nazi Germany Post World War II the borders were changed territorial disputes were suppressed as the Soviet Union exercised power over both countries and a significant part of the Polish population especially the best educated was forcefully transferred from the Lithuanian SSR to the Polish People s Republic At the same time a significant number of Poles relocated from nearby regions of Byelorussian SSR to Vilnius and Vilnius region After Lithuania regained independence Lithuania Poland relations were tense in the 1990s due to alleged discrimination of the Polish minority in Lithuania 6 7 8 9 10 Currently the Polish population is grouped in the Vilnius region primarily the Vilnius and Salcininkai districts In the city of Vilnius alone there are more than 85 000 Poles who make up about 15 of the Lithuanian capital s population Most Poles in Lithuania are Roman Catholic and speak Polish although a minority of them speak Russian or Lithuanian as their first language Together with Vilnius City Poles inhabit an area of approximately 4000 km2 Contents 1 Statistics 1 1 Languages 2 Education 3 History until 1990 3 1 Grand Duchy of Lithuania before 1795 3 2 Lithuania under Russian rule 1795 1918 3 3 Interwar period and Second World War 1918 1944 3 4 Soviet period 1944 1990 4 In independent Lithuania 4 1 1990 2000 4 2 After 2000 5 Difficulties of the Polish minority 5 1 Discrimination 5 2 Name surname spelling 6 Organizations 7 Prominent Poles 7 1 Prior to 1940 7 2 Since 1990 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksStatistics editAccording to the Lithuanian census of 2021 the Polish minority in Lithuania numbered 183 421 persons or 6 5 of the population of Lithuania It is the largest ethnic minority in modern Lithuania the second largest being the Russian minority Poles are concentrated in the Vilnius Region Most Poles live in Vilnius County 170 919 people or 21 of the county s population Vilnius the capital of Lithuania has 85 438 Poles or 15 4 of the city s population Especially large Polish communities are found in Vilnius District Municipality 46 of the population and Salcininkai District Municipality 76 Historical populationYearPop 1825 11 100 000 a 1897 12 260 000 160 0 1942 13 356 000 36 9 1944 14 380 000 6 7 1947 14 208 000 45 3 1959 15 230 000 10 6 1979247 000 7 4 1989258 000 4 5 2001235 000 8 9 2011 16 200 000 14 9 2021 1 183 000 8 5 Lithuanian municipalities with a Polish minority exceeding 15 of the total population according to the 2021 census are listed in the table below Poles in Lithuania according to the 2021 Lithuanian census 1 17 Municipality name Area Total population Number of Poles Percentage Vilnius city 401 km2 556 490 85 438 15 4 Vilnius district 2 129 km2 96 295 45 020 46 8 Salcininkai district 1 491 km2 30 052 22 934 76 3 Trakai district 1 208 km2 32 042 8 823 27 5 Svencionys district 1 692 km2 22 966 5 585 24 3 Top 10 cities by number of Poles 18 Vilnius 85 438 Salcininkai 4 930 Lentvaris 2 859 Nemencine 2 858 Eisiskes 2 844 Pabrade 2 681 Grigiskes 2 518 Visaginas 2 084 Trakai 938 Svencionys 860 Languages edit The adoption of Polish cultural features by the nobles townspeople and clergy in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania combined with an influx of migrants from Poland created a Lithuanian variant of the Polish language 19 The local variety of Polish called Polszczyzna Litewska became the native tongue of the Lithuanian nobility in the 18th century 20 According to Polish professor Jan Otrebski s article published in 1931 the Polish dialect in the Vilnius Region and in the northeastern areas in general are very interesting variant of Polishness as this dialect developed in a foreign territory which was mostly inhabited by the Lithuanians who were Belarusized mostly or Polonized and to prove this Otrebski provided examples of Lithuanianisms in the Tutejszy language 21 22 In 2015 Polish linguist Miroslaw Jankowiak pl attested that many of the Vilnius Region s inhabitants who declare Polish nationality speak a Belarusian dialect which they call mowa prosta simple speech 23 Out of the 234 989 Poles in Lithuania 187 918 80 0 consider Polish to be their first language 22 439 Poles 9 5 speak Russian as their first language while 17 233 7 3 speak Lithuanian 6 279 Poles 2 7 did not indicate their first language The remaining 0 5 speak various other languages 24 The Polish regiolect spoken by Lithuanian Poles is classified under Northern Borderlands dialect 25 Most of Poles who live southwards of Vilnius speak a form of Belarusian vernacular called there simple speech 26 that contains many substratical relics from Lithuanian and Polish 27 Education editAbsolute numbers with Polish language education at Lithuanian rural schools 1980 28 District municipality Lithuanian Russian Polish Vilnius Wilno 1 250 4 150 6 400 Salcininkai Soleczniki 500 2 050 3 200 Trakai Troki 2 900 50 950 Sirvintos Szyrwinty 2 400 100 100 Svencionys Swieciany 1 350 600 100 Varena Orany 6 000 0 50 Absolute number with Polish language education at Lithuanian urban schools was 5 600 As of 1980 about 20 of Polish Lithuanian students chose Polish as the language of instruction at school 28 In the same year about 60 70 of rural Polish communities chose Polish However even in towns with a predominantly Polish population the share of Polish language education was less than the percentage of Poles Even though historically Poles tended to strongly oppose Russification one of the most important reasons to choose Russian language education was the absence of a Polish language college and university learning in the USSR and during Soviet times Polish minority students in Lithuania were not allowed to get college university education across the border in Poland Only in 2007 the first small branch of the Polish University of Bialystok opened in Vilnius In 1980 there were 16 400 school students instructed in Polish Their number declined to 11 400 in 1990 In independent Lithuania between 1990 and 2001 the number of Polish mother tongue children attending schools with Polish as the language of instruction doubled to over 22 300 then gradually decreased to 18 392 in 2005 29 In September 2003 there were 75 Polish language general education schools and 52 which provided education in Polish in a combination of languages for example Lithuanian Polish Lithuanian Russian Polish These numbers fell to 49 and 41 in 2011 reflecting a general decline in the number of schools in Lithuania 30 Polish government was concerned in 2015 about the education in Polish 31 History until 1990 editSee also History of Poles in Lithuania Grand Duchy of Lithuania before 1795 edit nbsp Andrzej Jastrzebiec was the first Bishop of Vilnius 32 He is depicted in the fresco Baptism of Lithuania by Wlodzimierz Tetmajer First Polish people in Lithuania were mainly enslaved war captives 33 Poles started to migrate to the Grand Duchy in more noticeable numbers after Christianization of the country and establishment of the union between Poland and Lithuania in 1385 34 In the 15th and 16th century the Polish population in Lithuania was not large numerically but the Poles enjoyed a privileged social status they were found in highly regarded places and their culture was considered prestigious 35 With time Polish people became part of the local landowning class 36 Lithuanian nobles welcomed fugitive Polish peasants and settled them on uncultivated land but they usually assimilated with Belarusians and Lithuanians peasants within few generations 34 In the 16th century the largest concentrations of Poles in the GDL were located in Podlachia b the border areas of Samogitia Lithuania and Belarus and the cities of Vilnius Brest Kaunas Grodno Kedainiai and Nyasvizh 43 During that period the royal and grand ducal courts were nearly entirely composed of Polish speakers 44 Polish quickly supplanted Ruthenian as the language of Lithuanian elite after the latter had switched to speaking Ruthenian and Polish at the beginning of the 16th century 35 Reformation gave another impetus to the spread of Polish as the Bible and other religious texts were translated from Latin to Polish Since the second half of the 16th century Poles predominated in Protestant schools and printing houses in the Grand Duchy and the life of local protestant congregations 45 There were also numerous Poles among the Jesuits residing in Lithuania 46 The influx of Poles to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania significantly increased after the Union of Lublin 47 This population movement created a fertile ground for socio cultural Polonization of Lithuanian territories While Poles and foreigners were generally prohibited from holding public offices in the Grand Duchy Polish people gradually gained this right through the acquisition of Lithuanian land 48 Poor nobles from the Crown rented land from local magnates 49 The number of Poles grew also in the towns among others in Vilnius Kaunas and Grodno 50 Vilnius became the most important center of the Polish intelligentsia in the Grand Duchy 51 with Poles predominating in the city in the middle of the 17th century 52 Already at the beginning of the 16th century Polish became the first language of the Lithuanian magnates In the following century it was adopted by the Lithuanian nobility in general Even the nobility of Samogitia used the Polish language already in the 17th century 53 The Polish language also penetrated other social strata the clergy the townspeople and even the peasants 54 During the Commonwealth s period a Polish dominated territory started to be slowly formed in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 34 such as Liauda northeast of Kaunas since the early 15th century The Polish historian Wladyslaw Wielhorski pl estimated that by the end of the 18th century Polish and Polonized people constituted 25 of the Grand Duchy s inhabitants 34 Lithuania under Russian rule 1795 1918 edit Until the 1830s Polish was the administrative language in the so called Western Krai which included the territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania that were annexed by the Russian Empire 55 During the 19th century Poles were the largest Christian population in Vilnius They also predominated in the municipal government of the city in the earlier half of the 19th century 56 The Polish language university was re established in Vilnius in 1803 and closed in 1832 57 After the 1863 uprising public use of the Polish language and teaching it to peasants as well as possession of Polish books by the latter became illegal 58 59 Notwithstanding their varied ethnic roots the members of szlachta generally opted for Polish self identification in the course of the 19th century 60 In the 19th century Polish culture was spreading among the lower classes of Lithuania 61 mainly in Dzukija and to a lesser degree in Aukstaitija Linguists distinguish between official Polish language used in the Church and cultural activities and colloquial language closer to the speech of the common people Inhabitants of a significant part of the Vilnius region used a variant of the Belarusian language which was influenced mainly by Polish referred to as simple speech Polish mowa prosta It was a kind of mixed language serving as an interdialect of the cultural borderland 62 This language became a gateway to the progressive Slavization of the Lithuanian population This led to the formation of a compact Polish language area between the Lithuanian and Belarusian language areas with Vilnius as the center 63 The position of Vilnius as an important Polish cultural center influenced the development of national identities among Roman Catholic peasants in the region 64 The emergence of the Lithuanian national movement in the 1880s slowed down the process of Polonization of the ethnically Lithuanian population but also cemented a sense of national identity among a significant portion of the Polish speaking Lithuanian population The feeling of a two tier Lithuanian Polish national identity present throughout the period had to give way to a clear national declaration Interwar period and Second World War 1918 1944 edit nbsp Polish Interwar map of Polish minority in Lithuania in brown in 1923 interpolation based on the election results in Lithuania nbsp Poles in the interwar Lithuanian state between 1923 1924From 1918 to 1921 there were several conflicts such as the activity of the Polish Military Organisation Sejny uprising and a foiled attempt at a Polish coup of the Lithuanian government 65 66 As a result of the Polish Lithuanian War and Zeligowski s mutiny the border between independent Lithuania and Poland was drawn more or less according to the linguistic division of the region Nevertheless many Poles lived in the Lithuanian state and a significant Lithuanian minority found itself within the Polish borders The loss of Vilnius was a painful blow to Lithuanian aspirations and identity The irredentist demand for its recovery became one of the most important elements of socio political life in interwar Lithuania and resulted in the emergence of hostility and resentment against the Poles 67 In interwar Lithuania people declaring Polish ethnicity were officially described as Polonized Lithuanians who needed to be re Lithuanized Polish owned land was confiscated Polish religious services schools publications and voting rights were restricted 68 According to the Lithuanian census of 1923 not including Vilnius and Klaipeda regions there were 65 600 Poles in Lithuania 3 2 of the total population 69 Although according to Polish Election Committee in fact the number of Poles was 202 026 so about 10 of total population 70 The Poles were concentrated in the districts of Kaunas Kedainiai Kaisiadorys and Ukmerge in each of which they constituted 20 30 of the population 71 In 1919 Poles owned 90 of estates larger than 100 ha By 1928 2 997 large estates with a total area of 555 207 ha were parceled out and 52 935 new farms were created in their place and given to Lithuanian peasants 72 Polish schools in the interwar Lithuania 73 1925 1926 1926 1927 1927 1928 1928 1929 Number of Polish elementary schools 7 75 20 14 Number of employed Polish teachers 10 90 22 17 Number of pupils 365 4 089 554 450 Many Poles in Lithuania were signed in as Lithuanians in their passports and as a result they also were forced to attend Lithuanian schools Polish education was organized by the Pochodnia After the establishment of Valdemaras regime in 1926 58 74 Polish schools were closed many Poles were incarcerated and Polish newspapers were placed under strict censorship 75 Poles also had difficult access to higher education 76 Over time the Polish language was also removed from the Church and seminaries The most tragic episode in the history of Poles in interwar Lithuania was an anti Polish demonstration organized by the Lithuanian Riflemen s Union on May 23 1930 in Kaunas which turned into a riot 77 A large portion of the Vilnius area was part of the Second Polish Republic during the interwar period particularly the area of the Republic of Central Lithuania which had a significant Polish speaking population 78 Soviet period 1944 1990 edit Polish population in 1959 20 79 Raion City of Vilnius 20 00 Vilnius 81 44 Salcininkai 83 87 Nemencine 73 21 Eisiskes 67 40 Trakai 48 17 Svencionys 23 86 Vievis 22 87 During the World War II expulsions and shortly after the war the Soviet Union forcibly exchanged population between Poland and Lithuania During 1945 1948 the Soviet Union allowed 197 000 Poles to leave to Poland in 1956 1959 another 46 600 were able to leave 80 81 Ethnic Poles made up 80 91 of Vilnius population in 1944 82 83 All Poles in the city were required to register for resettlement 84 In most cases the Soviet authorities blocked the departure of Poles who were interwar Lithuanian citizens and only 8 3 less than 8 000 of those who registered for repatriation in Kaunas Region in 1945 1946 managed to leave for Poland 85 In the 1950s the remaining Polish minority was a target of several attempted campaigns of Lithuanization by the Communist Party of Lithuania which tried to stop any teaching in Polish those attempts however were stopped by Moscow 86 The Soviet census of 1959 showed 230 100 Poles concentrated in the Vilnius region 8 5 of the Lithuanian SSR s population 87 The Polish minority increased in size but more slowly than other ethnic groups in Lithuania the last Soviet census of 1989 showed 258 000 Poles 7 0 of the Lithuanian SSR s population 87 The Polish minority subject in the past to massive often voluntary 88 Russification and Sovietization and recently to voluntary processes of Lithuanization shows many and increasing signs of assimilation with Lithuanians 87 In independent Lithuania edit nbsp Grey Areas with majority Polish population in Lithuania as of early 2000s Red 1920 1939 Polish Lithuanian border 1990 2000 edit When Lithuania declared its independence from the Soviet Union in 1990 large part of the Polish minority still remembering the 1950s attempts to ban Polish 86 was afraid that the independent Lithuanian government might want to reintroduce the Lithuanization policies Furthermore some Lithuanian nationalists notably the Vilnija organization which was founded in 1988 considered eastern Lithuania s inhabitants as Polonized Lithuanians 89 Due to their view of ethnicity as primordial they argued that the Lithuanian state should work to restore their true identity 89 Although many Poles in Lithuania do have Lithuanian ancestry they considered themselves ethnically Polish 90 According to the historian Alfred E Senn the Polish minority was divided into three main groups Vilnius inhabitants supported Lithuanian independence the residents of Vilnius southeastern districts and Salcininkai were pro Soviet while the third group scattered throughout the country did not have a clear position 91 According to surveys from the spring of 1990 47 of Poles in Lithuania supported the pro Soviet Communist party in contrast to 8 support among ethnic Lithuanians while 35 supported Lithuanian independence 86 In November 1988 Yedinstvo literally Unity a pro Soviet movement that was against Lithuanian independence was formed 92 Under local Polish leadership and with Soviet support the regional authorities in Vilnius and Salcininkai region declared an autonomous region the Polish National Territorial Region 93 The same Polish politicians later voiced support for the Soviet coup attempt of 1991 in Moscow 93 Yedinstvo which had never had the approval of the Polish government collapsed after the failure of the GKChP in the 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt which doomed any prospect of a return to Soviet rule 92 Simultaneously after the August Coup s failure the Polish autonomous region was immediately declared illegal by the Lithuanian government which instituted direct rule in those areas 94 93 In April 1989 another more moderate organization of Lithuanian Poles the Association of Poles in Lithuania Polish Zwiazek Polakow na Litwie ZPL was established Its first leader was Jan Sienkiewicz 95 ZPL supported 1991 Lithuanian independence referendum On 29 January 1991 Lithuanian government granted minorities right of schooling in their native language and use of it in official institutions 96 A new Citizenship Law was enacted in December 1991 that granted citizenship to every person that lived in eastern Lithuania before 1940 if they didn t have citizenship of another country thus excluding some persons that emigrated to Lithuania after the war 97 Such a situation caused tension in Polish Lithuanian relations 96 Direct rule was lifted and local elections were organised in December 1992 98 The ZPL also strengthened its attitude demanding that the Polish minority be granted a number of rights such as the establishment of a Polish university increasing the rights of the Polish language increasing subsidies from the central budget and others 99 ZPL took part in the 1992 parliamentary elections winning 2 07 of the votes and four seats in Seimas In 1994 Lithuanian parliament limited participation in local elections to political parties accordingly ZPL established Electoral Action for Lithuanian Poles Polish Akcja Wyborcza Polakow na Litwie AWPL In January 1995 a new Language Law was enacted which required representatives of local institutions to know Lithuanian language also all secondary schools were required to teach Lithuanian Polish Lithuanian relations eased only in 1994 when both countries signed a treaty of good neighborhood 100 The treaty protected rights of Polish minority in Lithuania and Lithuanian minority in Poland 101 It also defined nationality as a matter of individual choice which was contrary to the definition popular among Lithuanian nationalists and even to the definition given in Lithuania s National Minorities Right Law of 1989 which defined nationality as something inherited The Treaty defined that to the Polish ethinic minority belongs persons who have Lithuanian citizenship are of Polish origin or consider themselves to belong to the Polish nationality culture and traditions as well as viewing the Polish language as their native language 102 The situation of the Polish minority assumed international significance again in 1995 after the publication of a Council of Europe report prepared by a commission headed by Gyorgy Frunda the so called Frunda Report which criticized Lithuanian policy toward the Polish minority particularly the lack of recognition of the Polish university 103 However this did not significantly affect Lithuanian politics In 1996 the special provisions that made an entry of ethno political parties parliament easier were removed and from then on they had to meet the usual electoral threshold The restoration of property lost during the communist period was also a burning issue which was implemented very slowly in the lands inhabited by Poles Poles protested against the expansion of Vilnius borders 104 After 2000 edit Tensions arose regarding Polish education and the spelling of names The United States Department of State stated in a report issued in 2001 that the Polish minority had issued complaints concerning its status in Lithuania and that members of the Polish Parliament criticized the government of Lithuania over alleged discrimination against the Polish minority 105 In 2006 Polish Foreign Minister Stefan Meller asserted that Polish educational institutions in Lithuania are severely underfunded 106 Similar concerns were voiced in 2007 by a Polish parliamentary commission 107 According to a report issued by the European Union Fundamental Rights Agency in 2004 Poles in Lithuania were the second least educated minority group in Lithuania 108 The branch of the University of Bialystok in Vilnius educates mostly members of the Polish minority A report by the Council of Europe issued in 2007 stated that on the whole minorities were integrated quite well into the everyday life of Lithuania The report expressed a concern with Lithuanian nationality law which contains a right of return clause 109 The citizenship law was under discussion during 2007 it was deemed unconstitutional on 13 November 2006 110 A proposed constitutional amendment would allow the Polish minority in Lithuania to apply for Polish passports 111 Lithuanian constitutional law stipulated that everyone not only Poles who has Lithuanian citizenship and resides within the country has to write their name in the Lithuanian alphabet and according to the Lithuanian pronunciation for example the name Kleczkowski has to be spelled Kleckovski in official documents 112 113 114 115 Poles who registered for Lithuanian citizenship after dissolution of the Soviet Union were forced to accept official documents with Lithuanian versions of their names 116 On April 24 2012 the European Parliament accepted for further consideration the petition number 0358 2011 submitted by a Tomasz Snarski about the language rights of Polish minority in particular about enforced Lithuanization of Polish surnames 117 118 Representatives of the Lithuanian government demanded removal of illegally placed Polish names of the streets in Maisiagala Raudondvaris Riese and Suderve as by a Lithuanian law all the street name signs must be in a state language 119 120 as by constitutional law all names have to be in Lithuanian Tensions have been reported between the Lithuanian Roman Catholic clergy and its Polish parishioniers in Lithuania 121 122 123 The Seimas voted against foreign surnames in Lithuanian passports 124 In late May 2008 the Association of Poles in Lithuania issued a letter addressed to Lithuania s government complaining about anti minority primarily anti Polish rhetoric in media citing upcoming parliamentary elections as a motive and asking for better treatment of the ethnic minorities The association also filed a complaint with the Lithuanian prosecutor asking for investigation of the issue 125 126 127 The Law on Ethnic Minorities lapsed in 2010 128 As of 2023 Lithuania has not ratified the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages 129 Difficulties of the Polish minority editDiscrimination edit See also Lithuanization There are opinions by whom in some Polish media that the Polish minority in Lithuania is facing discrimination As mentioned above Petition 0358 2011 on language rights of Poles living in Lithuania was filed with the European Parliament in 2011 130 Polish Election Action in Lithuania claimed that the education legislation is discriminatory 131 In 2011 former Polish President Lech Walesa criticized the government of Lithuania over its alleged discrimination against the Polish minority 132 Until 2022 Lithuania continued to enforce the Lithuanized clarification needed spelling of surnames of Poles in Lithuania with some exceptions in spite of the 1994 Polish Lithuanian agreement 133 Lithuanian legislative system and the Constitution see section Surnames for details In 1989 2010 Lithuanian Polish bilingual street signs were considered legal in Lithuania if placed in the areas with significant Polish populations However the Law on National Minorities which guaranteed this was discontinued As a result such signs are now prohibited and Lithuanian courts enforce their removal under the threat of fines 134 135 136 The refusal of Lithuanian authorities to install or allow bilingual road signs against the legislative base of Lithuania in areas densely populated by Lithuanian Poles is at times described by the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania and some Polish media as linguistic discrimination 131 135 Name surname spelling edit The official spelling of the all non Lithuanian hence Polish name in a person s passport is governed by the 31 January 1991 Resolution of the Supreme Council of Lithuania No I 1031 Concerning name and surname spelling in the passport of the citizen of the Republic of Lithuania There are the following options The law says in part 137 2 In the passport of a citizen of the Republic of Lithuania the first name and surname of persons of non Lithuanian origin shall be spelt in Lithuanian On the citizen s request in writing the name and surname can be spelt in the order established as follows a according to pronunciation and without grammatisation i e without Lithuanian endings or b according to pronunciation alongside grammatisation i e adding Lithuanian endings 3 The names and surnames of the persons who have already possessed citizenship of other State shall be written according to the passport of the State or an equivalent document available in the passport of the Republic of Lithuania on its issue This resolution was challenged in 1999 in the Constitutional Court upon a civil case of a person of Polish ethnicity who requested his name to be entered in the passport in Polish The Constitutional Court upheld the 1991 resolution At the same time it was stressed out citizen s rights to spell their name whatever they like in areas not linked with the sphere of use of the state language pointed out in the law 138 In 2022 the Seimas passed a law allowing members of ethnic minorities to use the full Latin alphabet including q w and x letters which are not considered part of the Lithuanian alphabet but not characters with diacritics such as l and a in their legal name if they declare their status as an ethnic minority and prove that their ancestors used that name In response several ethnically Polish Lithuanian politicians changed their legal names to be closer to the Polish spelling most notably Justice Minister Ewelina Dobrowolska formerly spelled Evelina Dobrovolska but requests for name changes from the general population were low 139 140 From May 2022 when law came into action until the end of July 2023 only 337 people changed their names to include non Lithuanian language symbols and only less than 5 of those declared to be of Polish descent 141 By the end of August 2023 the number of people of Polish descent that changed their names to include non Lithuanian symbols increased to 203 which was approximately 0 11 of all Poles in Lithuania 142 Organizations edit nbsp Elderships where Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania Christian Families Alliance had majority of votes during 2020 Lithuania s parliamentary election AWPL in pink The Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania Christian Families Alliance Lithuanian Lietuvos lenku rinkimu akcija Polish Akcja Wyborcza Polakow na Litwie is an ethnic minority based political party formed in 1994 able to exert significant political influence in the administrative districts where Poles form a majority or significant minority This party has held seats in the Seimas Parliament of Lithuania for the past decade In the 2020 Lithuanian parliamentary election it received just below 5 of the national vote The party is more active in local politics and controls several municipal councils 143 It cooperates with other minorities mainly the Lithuanian Russian Union The Association of Poles in Lithuania Polish Zwiazek Polakow na Litwie is an organization formed in 1989 to bring together Polish activists in Lithuania It numbers between 6 000 and 11 000 members Its work concerns the civil rights of the Polish minority and engages in educational cultural and economic activities 144 Prominent Poles editPrior to 1940 edit Gabriel Narutowicz president of Poland Jozef Pilsudski Polish statesman Wiktor Budzynski politician Kanuty Rusiecki painter Michal Pius Romer lawyer Sofija Psibiliauskiene writer Polish Zofia Przybylewska Marija Lastauskiene writer Polish Maria Lastowska Medard Czobot politician Lithuanian Medardas Cobotas Since 1990 edit Anicet Brodawski a Polish autonomist leader during the late 1980s Darjus Lavrinovic Polish Dariusz Lawrynowicz basketball player Ksystof Lavrinovic Polish Krzysztof Lawrynowicz basketball player Artur Liudkovski Polish Artur Ludkowski former deputy mayor of Vilnius Jaroslaw Niewierowicz Lithuanian Jaroslav Neverovic former minister of energy former vice minister of foreign affairs Czeslaw Okinczyc Lithuanian Ceslav Okincic politician journalist Artur Plokszto Lithuanian Artur Ploksto secretary of Ministry of National Defence Leokadia Poczykowska Lithuanian Leokadija Pocikovska politician Ewelina Saszenko Lithuanian Evelina Sasenko singer Jan Sienkiewicz Lithuanian Jan Senkevic politician journalist Waldemar Tomaszewski Lithuanian Valdemar Tomasevski leader of Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania Christian Families Alliance Stanislaw Widtmann Stanislavas Vidtmannas as of 2011 vice minister of culture in ethnic minorities affairs 145 146 Jaroslaw Wolkonowski dean of branch of University of Bialystok in Vilnius Alina Orlowska singer Lithuanian Alina Orlova citation needed Michal Mackiewicz politician Lithuanian Michal Mackevic Irena Litwinowicz politician Lithuanian Irena Litvinovic Zbigniew Balcewicz politician Lithuanian Zbignev Balcevic See also editLithuania Poland relations Krajowcy Kresy Lithuanian minority in Poland Pochodnia Polish cultural association in the interwar Lithuania Polish National Territorial RegionNotes edit The number is for Vilna Governorate Polish Gubernia wilenska in the source which in 1825 included most of modern Lithuania except the lands now in Suwalki Governorate Podlachia was part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania between the late 13th century and 1569 37 38 The region was a sphere of old Polish Mazovian settlement 39 and was governed according to the Polish law since 1514 40 In the mid 16th century the Poles became the main group among the Podlachian gentry which led to demands from the local deputies for the complete union of their lands with Poland 41 39 With time Mazovians also started to predominate in Podlachian towns 40 The total number of Poles in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania decreased with the loss of Podlachia and lands in Ukraine 42 References edit a b c Tautiniu mazumu departamentas prie Lietuvos Respublikos Vyriausybes Population by religious community to which they attributed themselves and ethnicity Department of Statistics Lithuania Retrieved 2015 11 10 Weeks Theodore R 2015 12 04 Vilnius between Nations 1795 2000 Cornell University Press p 230 ISBN 978 1 5017 5808 9 Wade Peter 2007 Race Ethnicity and Nation Perspectives from Kinship and Genetics Berghahn Books p 152 ISBN 978 1 84545 355 8 Stone Daniel Z 2014 07 01 The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 University of Washington Press p 63 ISBN 978 0 295 80362 3 Evaldas Nekrasas Is Lithuania a Northern or Central European Country PDF Lithuanian Foreign Policy Review p 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 25 Retrieved 2008 03 30 In a letter written to Vytautas Landsbergis in December of 1991 Polish President Lech Walesa described Lithuanian Polish relations as close to critical Antanas Valionis Evaldas Ignatavicius Izolda Brickovskiene From Solidarity to Partnership Lithuanian Polish Relations 1988 1998 PDF Lithuanian Foreign Policy Review 1998 issue 2 Archived from the original PDF on February 25 2009 Retrieved 2008 03 29 The interval between the restoration of diplomatic relations in September 1991 and the signing of the Treaty on Friendly Relations and Good Neighborly Cooperation on April 26 1994 was probably the most difficult period for Lithuanian Polish relations there were even assertions that relations in this period were in some ways even worse than before the war Stephen R Burant and Voytek Zubek Eastern Europe s Old Memories and New Realities Resurrecting the Polish Lithuanian Union East European Politics and Societies 1993 7 370 online Archived 2020 05 24 at the Wayback Machine BEHIND A PAYWALL Sanford 1999 p 99 Lane 2001 p 209 Jeografia wschodniey czesci Europy czyli Opis krajow przez wielorakie narody slowianskie zamieszkanych obejmujacy Prussy Xsieztwo Poznanskie Szlask Pruski Gallicya Rzeczpospolite Krakowska Krolestwo Polskie i Litwe p 206 Atlas of Lithuanian SSR Moscow 1981 in Russian p 129 Srebrakowski 2001 p 71 a b Srebrakowski 2001 p 98 Data from Statistikos Departamentas Archived 2016 12 20 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2009 08 09 Lithuanian 2011 Population Census in Brief Lietuvos statistikos departamentas 2012 p 20 ISBN 978 9955 797 16 6 Retrieved 5 August 2018 Census 2021 Largest ethnic groups in Vilnius county predefined tables osp stat gov lt Retrieved 6 February 2024 Rodikliu duomenu baze Oficialiosios statistikos portalas Osp stat gov lt Retrieved 28 February 2022 Bednarczuk Leszek 2013 Languages in Contact and Conflict on the Territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania GDL Acta Baltico Slavica 37 PAN 26 ISSN 0065 1044 Saulius Kaubrys 2002 National minorities in Lithuania an outline Vaga p 14 ISBN 978 5 415 01651 8 In the 18th century the Lithuanian nobility accepted Polish as their native language to be more exact they adopted the Lithuanian variant of the Polish language the so called polszczyzna litewska Nitsch Kazimierz Otrebski Jan 1931 Jezyk Polski 1931 nr 3 maj czerwiec in Polish Polska Akademia Umiejetnosci Komisja Jezyka Polskiego 80 85 Retrieved 3 November 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Martinkenas Vincas 19 December 2016 Vilniaus ir jo apylinkiu ciabuviai Alkas lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 3 November 2023 Jankowiak Miroslaw 26 August 2015 Mowa prosta jest dla mnie synonimem gwary bialoruskiej in Polish Population by ethnicity and mother tongue Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Data from Statistikos Departamentas 2001 Population and Housing Census Grek Pabisowa Iryda Biesiadowska Magdziarz Beata Jankowiak Miroslaw Ostrowka Malgorzata 2014 Czym jest i co zawiera Slownik mowionej polszczyzny polnocnokresowej What is A Dictionary of oral Polish language of the north eastern borderland and what does it include Studia z Filologii Polskiej i Slowianskiej in Polish 49 49 Institute of Slavic Studies Polish Academy of Sciences 278 298 301 doi 10 11649 sfps 2014 024 ISSN 2392 2435 Jankowiak Polacy na Wilenszczyznie mowia gwara bialoruska Miroslaw Jankowiak linguist specialist in Polish and Belarusian Poles in Vilnius region do speak Belarusian dialect Valerijus Cekmonas Laima Grumadaite Kalbu paplitimas rytu Lietuvoje The distribution of the languages in the east of Lithuania in Lietuvos rytai straipsniu rinkinys The east of Lithuania the collection of the articles Vilnius 1993 p 132 ISBN 9986 09 002 4 a b Atlas Litovskoj SSR 1981 Gosudarstvennyj planovyj komitet Litovskoj SSR Ministerstvo vysshego i srednego specialnogo obrazovaniya Litovskoj SSR Glavnoe upravlenie geodezii i kartografii pri Sovete Ministrov SSSR Moskva 1981 Mercator Education information documentation research The Polish language education in Lithuania see graph on p 16 PDF file 2 2 MB Accessed 2008 01 14 Arvydas Matulionis et al The Polish Minority in Lithuania Archived 2014 03 09 at the Wayback Machine ENRI East Research Report 8 2011 p 18 The meeting of deputy ministers of education Poland Lithuania www msz gov pl Butterwick Richard Pawlikowska Wioletta eds 2019 Social and Cultural Relations in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Microhistories Routledge p 25 ISBN 9781032093055 Blaszczyk Grzegorz 1992 Litwa wspolczesna PWN p 317 ISBN 8301106670 a b c d Srebrakowski 2001 pp 23 25 a b Gudavicius Edvardas 1997 Lithuania s Road to Europe Lithuanian Historical Studies 2 1 20 21 25 doi 10 30965 25386565 00201002 ISSN 2538 6565 S2CID 221629792 Potasenko Grigorijus 2008 Multinational Lithuania History of Ethnic Minorities Sviesa pp 23 25 ISBN 978 5430052508 Potasenko 2008 pp 28 118 Marples David R History of Belarus Lithuanian and Polish rule britannica com Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 10 September 2021 The Union of Lublin 1569 made Poland and Lithuania a single federated state Although Lithuania retained the title of grand duchy and its code of laws its western province Podlasia which had been heavily settled by Polish colonists was ceded to Poland a b Reddaway he W F ed 1950 The Cambridge History of Poland From Augustus II to Pilsudski 1697 1935 Cambridge University Press p 437 a b Potasenko 2008 p 28 Harry E Dembkowski 1982 The Union of Lublin Polish Federalism in the Golden Age East European Monographs p 62 ISBN 978 0 88033 009 1 Potasenko 2008 p 118 Topolska 1987 p 160 sfn error no target CITEREFTopolska1987 help Davies Norman 2012 Vanished Kingdoms The Rise and Fall of States and Nations Viking Penguin p 261 ISBN 9780143122951 Topolska 2002 p 192 sfn error no target CITEREFTopolska2002 help Potasenko 2008 p 76 Lesniewska Napierala Katarzyna 2015 Geograficzno polityczne uwarunkowania sytuacji mniejszosci polskiej na Litwie i Lotwie po 1990 r in Polish University of Lodz pp 37 38 ISBN 978 83 7969 952 0 Potasenko 2008 pp 73 74 Sikorska Kulesza Joanna 1995 Deklasacja drobnej szlachty na Litwie i Bialorusi w XIX wieku PDF Oficyna Wydawnicza Ajaks pp 10 11 ISBN 83 85621 37 7 Potasenko 2008 p 73 Topolska 1987 p 155 sfn error no target CITEREFTopolska1987 help Weeks Theodore R 2015 Vilnius between Nations 1795 2000 Northern Illinois University Press p 16 ISBN 978 0875807300 Vilnius in the mid 17th century was an impressive and wealthy city While Poles and Roman Catholicism predominated Vilnius diverse religious and ethno linguistic groups managed to live together in the fairly tight urban space Trimoniene 2006 p 554 Rachuba 2010 p 34 Kamusella Tomasz 2008 The Politics of Language and Nationalism in Modern Central Europe Palgrave Macmillan p 137 ISBN 9780230550704 Weeks Theodore R 2013 Jews and others in Vilna Wilno Vilnius Invisible neighbors 1831 1948 In Bartov Omer Weitz Eric D eds Shatterzone of Empires Coexistence and Violence in the German Habsburg Russian and Ottoman Borderlands Indiana University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0253006356 Andreas Kasekamp 2018 A History of the Baltic States Palgrave pp 62 66 ISBN 9781137573643 Miller Alekseĭ I 2008 Identity and loyalty in the language policy of the Romanov Empire at her Western Borderland Romanov Empire and Nationalism Essays in the Methodology of Historical Research Central European University Press p 70 ISBN 978 9639776197 Borzecki Jerzy 2008 The Soviet Polish Peace of 1921 and the Creation of Interwar Europe Yale University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0300121216 Friedrich Karin Pendzich Barbara eds 2009 Citizenship and Identity in a Multinational Commonwealth Poland Lithuania in Context 1550 1772 Brill p 275 ISBN 9789004169838 Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia Vol 11 2007 Januszewska Jurkiewicz 2010 p 43 Januszewska Jurkiewicz 2010 p 45 Eberhardt Piotr 1996 Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth Century Eastern Europe History Data and Analysis M E Sharpe p 179 ISBN 978 0 7656 1833 7 Juozas Rainys 1936 P O W Polska Organizacja Wojskowa Lietuvoje Kaunas Spaudos fondas p 184 Julius Butenas Mecys Mackevicius 1995 Mykolas Slezevicius advokatas ir politikas Vilnius Lietuvos rasytoju sajungos leidykla p 263 ISBN 9986 413 31 1 MacQueen Michael 1998 The Context of Mass Destruction Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocaust in Lithuania Holocaust and Genocide Studies 12 1 22 48 doi 10 1093 hgs 12 1 27 The irredentist campaign tainted Lithuanian society with currents of hatred and revenge directed against the Poles In fact the largest social organization in interwar Lithuania was the League for the Liberation of Vilnius Vilniaus Vadavimo Safunga or WS which trumpeted the irredentist line in its magazine Our Vilnius Musu Vilnius Fearon James D Laitin David D 2006 Lithuania PDF Stanford University p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 15 Retrieved 2008 06 02 Lithuanian nationalists resented demands by Poles for greater cultural autonomy similar to that granted to the Jewish minority holding that most of Lithuania s Poles were really deracinated Lithuanians who merely needed to be re Lithuanianized Resentments were exacerbated when Lithuanian Poles expressed a desire to re unite the country with Poland As a result the nationalizing Lithuanian state took measures to confiscate Polish owned land It also restricted Polish religious services schools Polish publications Polish voting rights Poles were often referred to in the press in this period as the lice of the nation It was the only census carried out in Lithuania during the interwar period Vaitiekunas Stasys 2006 Lietuvos gyventojai Per du tukstantmecius in Lithuanian Vilnius Mokslo ir enciklopediju leidybos institutas p 189 ISBN 5 420 01585 4 Srebrakowski 2001 p 37 Srebrakowski 2001 p 38 Srebrakowski 2001 p 36 Srebrakowski 2001 p 40 Lossowski Piotr 1972 National minorities in the Baltic states 1919 1940 PDF Acta Poloniae Historica 25 98 Richard M Watt 1998 Bitter glory Poland and its fate 1918 1939 Hippocrene Books p 255 Srebrakowski 2001 p 41 Srebrakowski 2001 p 50 51 Drugi Powszechny Spis Ludnosci z dnia 9 XII 1931 r Statystyka Polski in Polish D 34 1939 Srebrakowski Aleksander 2000 Brazis Romuald Wolkonowski Jaroslaw eds Historyczne podloze wspolczesnych postaw Polakow na Litwie Studium Vilnense in Polish 9 2 6 ISSN 1648 7907 Eberhardt Piotr Liczebnosc i rozmieszczenie ludnosci polskiej na Litwie Numbers and distribution of Polish population in Lithuania in Polish Retrieved 2008 06 02 Bylo to juz po masowej repatriacji Polakow z Wilenszczyzny ktora w latach 1945 1948 objela 197 tys Polakow w tym z Wilna 107 6 tys oraz kolejnej z lat 1956 1959 ktora umozliwila wyjazd do Polski 46 6 tys osob narodowosci polskiej Stravinskiene Vitalija 2004 Poles In Lithuania From The Second Half Of 1944 Until 1946 Choosing Between Staying Or Emigrating To Poland English Summary Lietuvos istorijos metrastis 2 Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2008 06 02 Service Hugo 2013 Germans to Poles Communism Nationalism and Ethnic Cleansing after the Second World War Cambridge University Press p 312 ISBN 978 1 107 67148 5 Streikus Arunas 2016 Religious Life in a Displaced Society The Case of Post war Lithuania 1945 1960 In Balkelis Tomas Davoliute Violeta eds Population Displacement in Lithuania in the Twentieth Century Experiences Identities and Legacies Brill p 223 ISBN 9789004314092 Snyder Timothy 2003 The Reconstruction of Nations Poland Ukraine Lithuania Belarus 1569 1999 Yale University Press pp 91 92 ISBN 978 0300105865 Buchowski Krzysztof 1999 Polacy w niepodleglym panstwie litewskim 1918 1940 University of Bialystok p 293 ISBN 8387881066 a b c Dovile Budryte 2005 Taming Nationalism Political Community Building in the Post Soviet Baltic States Aldershot Ashgate Publishing pp 147 148 ISBN 0 7546 3757 3 a b c Eberhardt Piotr Liczebnosc i rozmieszczenie ludnosci polskiej na Litwie Numbers and distribution of Polish population in Lithuania in Polish Retrieved 2008 06 02 Fearon James D Laitin David D 2006 Lithuania PDF Stanford University p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 15 Retrieved 2008 06 02 For example in Vilnius where in the Soviet years education in Polish was offered by some 13 14 schools only 25 percent of the children born to monoethnic Polish families attended Polish schools About 50 of them chose Russian schools and only 10 Lithuanian schools a b Budryte 2005 p 148 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Clemens 1991 p 150 In reality many Poles in Lithuania were the offspring of Polonized Lithuanians or Belarussians Senn 1997 p 252 a b Grunskis Eugenijus Jedinstvo vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 2022 08 20 a b c Robert G Moser 2005 Ethnic Politics After Communism Aldershot Cornell University Press p 130 ISBN 0 8014 7276 8 Petersen Roger D 2002 09 02 Understanding Ethnic Violence Fear Hatred and Resentment in Twentieth Century Eastern Europe Cambridge University Press p 153 ISBN 978 0 521 00774 0 Senn 1997 p 253 a b Budryte 2005 p 153 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Budryte 2005 p 154 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Budryte 2005 p 155 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Senn 1997 p 255 Senn 1997 p 254 255 Budryte 2005 p 158 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Budryte 2005 p 160 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Budryte 2005 p 162 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Budryte 2005 p 161 162 sfn error no target CITEREFBudryte2005 help Lithuania Country Reports on Human Rights Practices US Department of State February 23 2001 Accessed September 14 2007 in Polish 5 kadencja 10 posiedzenie 1 dzien 15 02 2006 2 punkt porzadku dziennego Informacja Ministra Spraw Zagranicznych o zadaniach polskiej polityki zagranicznej w 2006 r permanent dead link in Polish Posiedzenie Komisji w dniu 11 kwietnia 2007 roku Archived 2007 12 21 at the Wayback Machine Komisja Spraw Emigracji i Lacznosci z Polakami za Granica RAXEN CC National Focal Point Lithuania PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 10 Retrieved 2007 08 16 Memorandum to the Lithuanian Government Assessment of the progress made in implementing the 2004 recommendations of the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Council of Europe 16 May 2007 Lietuvos Respublikos Konstitucinis Teismas Retrieved 25 April 2015 Polish press review Government amp Economy Wirtualna Polska 10 08 2007 in Polish Mickiewicz czy Mickevicius WALKA O POLSKIE NAZWISKA NA LITWIE TVN24 22 10 2008 in Polish Polak z Wilna walczy o polska pisownie swego nazwiska Gazeta Wyborcza 2005 07 25 in Polish Michal Kleckovskis walczy o rodowe nazwisko Kleczkowski in Polish Kleczkowski czy Kleckovski Tygodnik Wilenszczyzny no 31 2005 Snyder Tim 1995 National Myths and International Relations Poland and Lithuania 1989 1994 East European Politics and Societies and Cultures 9 2 SAGE Publications 322 doi 10 1177 0888325495009002007 ISSN 0888 3254 S2CID 143672062 The European Parliament considers the rights of the Polish minority in Lithuania to be very important matter Below is Mr Tomasz Snarski s account of the Committee on Petitions meeting European Foundation of Human Rights Archived from the original on August 2 2012 Retrieved May 8 2012 Przeciez jestem Snarski a nie Snarskis in Polish Wyborcza pl 2002 02 03 Retrieved 2013 10 25 Przedstawiciel rzadu na powiat wilenski narusza Konwencje Ramowa RE Archived from the original on 2008 01 04 Retrieved 2007 12 28 Strona nie zostala znaleziona EUROPEJSKA FUNDACJA PRAW CZLOWIEKA Archived from the original on 2013 02 17 New Page 1 Archived from the original on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 25 April 2015 The Divine Painting Archived from the original on 2006 10 06 News Retrieved 25 April 2015 Seimas votes against original foreign surnames in passports again Lithuaniatribune com Archived from the original on 2012 03 01 Retrieved 2013 10 25 in Polish Polacy atakowani w mediach rp pl 21 05 2008 in Polish Litwa Polacy zwracaja sie do wladz o pomoc interia pl 21 05 2008 dead link in Polish Zwiazek Polakow na Litwie apeluje o zaprzestanie kampanii przeciwko mniejszosciom narodowym 21 05 2008 Statement by Knut Vollebaek OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities Liste complete Situation of Polish minorities in Lithuania is a discrimination of EU citizens European Foundation of Human Rights 9 May 2017 a b Lithuanian education act is discrimination say Polish minority Radio Poland Walesa declines Lithuanian honour Archived 2017 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Radio Poland 7 September 2011 Polacy na Litwie zapisza nazwisko w oryginalnej wersji Jesli pracuja w MSZ www tvp info in Polish 2018 08 12 Moore Irina 2019 Linguistic landscape as an arena of conflict Language removal exclusion and ethnic idenitity construction in Lithuania Vilnius In Evans Matthew Jeffries Lesley O Driscoll Jim eds The Routledge Handbook of Language in Conflict 1st ed Routledge p 387 ISBN 978 1138643840 a b Dyskryminacja Polakow na Litwie Zbieraja pieniadze na grzywne Polskie Radio 20 January 2014 Ethnic street signs raise old tensions over identity in Lithuania Reuters 21 September 2016 MINELRES Minority related national legislation Lithuania Personal Names www minelres lv MINELRES Minority related national legislation Lithuania Constitutional Court ruling on personal names www minelres lv Dobrowolska Tomaszewski and Pietkiewicz Poles in Lithuania gear up for name change DELFI Retrieved 2022 05 26 Lithuania s justice minister changes her name under new law allowing Polish spelling lrt lt 25 May 2022 Retrieved 2022 05 26 Daug triuksmo bet vangi realybe is viso dokumentuose raides w x ar q įsirase 337 asmenys is ju lenku tautybes maziau nei 5 A lot of noise but sluggish reality in total letters w x or q adapted 337 individuals out of which Polish less than 5 lrt lt in Lithuanian 4 August 2023 Retrieved 2023 08 05 Asmenvardzius Lietuvoje pasikeite jau 752 asmenys Names already changed by 752 people lrt lt in Lithuanian 21 August 2023 Retrieved 2023 08 21 in Polish AKCJA WYBORCZA POLAKoW NA LITWIE Encyklopedia Interia Last accessed 20 January 2007 in Polish ZWIAZEK POLAKoW NA LITWIE Encyklopedia Interia Last accessed 20 January 2007 Kulturos ministerijoje pradejo dirbti treciasis viceministras Archived from the original on 2012 08 04 Retrieved 2012 08 13 Litewski rzad powolal wiceministra ds mniejszosci narodowych polityka Kresy pl Retrieved 25 April 2015 Bibliography editBudreckis Algirdas 1967 Etnografines Lietuvos Rytines ir Pietines Sienos Karys Butkus A 16 December 2015 Lietuvos gyventojai tautybes poziuriu Dovile Budryte 2005 Taming Nationalism Political Community Building in the Post Soviet Baltic States Aldershot Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 7546 3757 3 Clemens Walter C 1991 Baltic Independence and Russian Empire St Martin s Press p 150 ISBN 0 312 04806 8 Sanford George 1999 Poland the conquest of history Taylor amp Francis Sapoka Adolfas 2013 Rastai Vol I Vilniaus Istorija in Lithuanian Vilnius Edukologija Januszewska Jurkiewicz Joanna 2010 Stosunki narodowosciowe na Wilenszczyznie w latach 1920 1939 National Relations in the Vilnius Region in the Years 1920 1939 Katowice a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jundo Kaliszewska Barbara 2019 Zakladnicy historii Mniejszosc polska w postradzieckiej Litwie Hostages of history The Polish minority in post Soviet Lithuania in Polish Lodz a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kupczak Janusz M 1998 Z problematyki stosunkow narodowosciowych na Litwie wspolczesnej Politologia XXII Lane A T 2001 Lithuania Stepping Westward Routledge Lipscomb Glenard P Committee for a Free Lithuania 29 May 1958 Extension of Remarks Congressional Record Vol 104 Appendix Superintendent of Government Documents Lossowski Piotr Bronius Makauskas 2005 Andrzej Koryna ed Kraje baltyckie w latach przelomu 1934 1944 in Polish Warszawa Instytut Historii PAN Fundacja Pogranicze ISBN 83 88909 42 8 Rachuba Andrzej 2010 Litwini In Kopczynski Michal Tygielski Wojciech eds Pod wspolnym niebem Narody dawnej Rzeczypospolitej Under a Common Sky Peoples of the former Commonwealth in Polish Warsaw ISBN 978 83 11 11724 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Senn Alfred Erich 1997 Nationality Questions in the Baltic The Lithuanian Example In van Horne Winston A ed Global Convulsions Race Ethnicity and Nationalism at the End of the Twentieth Century Srebrakowski Aleksander 2001 Polacy w Litewskiej SSR in Polish Adam Marszalek ISBN 83 7174 857 4 Trimoniene Rita 2006 Polonizacja Kultura Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego Analizy i obrazy Krakow pp 544 560 Turska Halina 1930 Jezyk polski na Wilensczyzne Wilno i Ziemia Wilenska in Polish Vol I Veblaitis P 1956 Samokslas pries lietuviskas pavardes Karys Zbigniew Kurcz Mniejszosc polska na Wilenszczyznie Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego Wroclaw 2005 ISSN 0239 6661 ISBN 83 229 2601 4 Zinkevicius Zigmas 2010 11 20 Lietuviskos ir nelietuviskos pavardes Gimtoji kalba in Lithuanian Vol 9 pp 7 11 Zinkevicius Zigmas 31 January 2014 Lenkiskai kalbantys lietuviai Polish speaking Lithuanians alkas lt in Lithuanian Zinkevicius Zigmas 21 August 2018 Suvalku ir Augustavo krasto pavardes Polonizacijos apybraiza II Surnames of Suvalkai and Augustavas region Outline of Polonization II alkas lt in Lithuanian External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Polish minority in Lithuania Vitalija Stravinskiene Poles In Lithuania From The Second Half Of 1944 Until 1946 Choosing Between Staying Or Emigrating To Poland The Lithuanian Institute of History January 19 2006 Chronology for Poles in Lithuania The Polish language in education in Lithuania Discrimination in Lithuania Observance of Polish minority rights in Lithuania Report by Wspolnota Polska Union of Poles in Lithuania and the Association of Teachers of Polish Schools in Lithuania 2009 The Polish national minority in Lithuania three reports later Organizacje Polonii na Litwie Organizations of Polonia in Lithuania in Polish Polonia na swiecie Polonia worldwide with section on Lithuania in Polish Polacy na Litwie in Polish Archived from the original on 2005 04 03 Poles in Lithuania Losy ludnosci polskiej na Litwie Fate of Polish population in Lithuania in Polish Jan Sienkiewicz Przestrzeganie praw polskiej grupy etnicznej w Republice Litewskiej Respecting the rights of the Polish minority in Lithuania in Polish Polacy na Litwie w prawie Lithuanian law on minorities in Polish Srebrakowski A Rozwoj polskojezycznej prasy na terenie Litwy po 1944 r Archived 2019 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Srebrakowski A Szkolnictwo polskojezyczne na Litwie 1944 1991 Archived 2019 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Srebrakowski A Polacy w Litewskiej SRR Archived 2020 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Srebrakowski A Statystyczny obraz Polakow z Litwy Portals nbsp Lithuania nbsp Poland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poles in Lithuania amp oldid 1209769109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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