Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School

Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School (Polish: Polskie Gimnazjum im. Juliusza Słowackiego) is a Polish grammar school (gymnasium) in the town of Czeski Cieszyn (Český Těšín), in the Zaolzie region of the Czech Republic. It is the only Polish secondary school in the country, serving the educational purposes of the Polish minority in the Czech Republic.

The building of the Polish Elementary School and Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School in Czeski Cieszyn

The school was founded in 1909 in the town of Orłowa (Orlová) as the second (and up to 1938 the only) Polish secondary school on the territory of Zaolzie.

Reasons for founding

Cieszyn Silesia changed from an agricultural to an industrial area on the turn of the 19th century. This happened on account of rapid development and expansion of the Ostrawa-Karwina Coal Basin. A great number of workers and professionals arrived to a rather small territory. They were of Polish, Czech and German origin, with a majority of the Polish, who formed 60.6% of the population. The coal mining region thus became a typical multilingual society. Polish intelligentsia soon started to express the need of founding a secondary school, which would prepare future Polish speaking mining and metallurgical engineers.

History

1909-1920

On December 8, 1908 the meeting of „Macierz Szkolna“ (Polish educational society) made a decision to establish a private secondary school, expecting it would become government-funded in the near future.

On September 7, 1909 the decree of the new school opening was issued by Austrian Ministry of Education and Religion in Vienna. The inauguration took place on September 23, 1909. The school accepted the name of Juliusz Słowacki, a great Polish romantic poet, whose 100th birth anniversary fell in that particular year. The school has been successful and popular among students since the beginning and undoubtedly reached a very high level of education soon.

During the World War I the school was closed for about 2 months due to teachers´ draft. By November 1914 only two teachers were available for work. A lot of students enlisted in newly formed Polish armed forces voluntarily. There appeared some casualties, too, in the front lines in Italy or Russia. The first graduating exams took place in July 1917.

1920-1939

Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School in Orłowa - Obroki in 1920-1929

The period after World War I seemed to be very turbulent. The independent Czechoslovak Republic was proclaimed on October 28, 1918; the Polish Republic on November 11. Silesia, mainly Cieszyn Silesia, became the eye of conflict between the two.

On May 15, 1920 Polish grammar school was closed for the second time owing to the ethnic riots in Orłowa.

The final partition of Cieszyn Silesia happened on July 28, 1920. Orłowa together with the school remained on the Czechoslovak territory. On September 17, 1920 the school was reopened as a private eight-year secondary school with Polish as the first language.

At the eve of the beginning of the World War II other important events took place. Czechoslovakia was forced to give Cieszyn Silesia to Poland on October 1, 1938. Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School continued its educational work, with mixed Czechoslovak-Polish curriculum.

1939-1945

However, the period of peaceful existence did not last long. On September 1, 1939 the World War II began. All Silesian Polish schools were closed immediately. The staff dispersed – a part remained in Orłowa, the rest, being afraid of possible Nazi repressive measures, left the region. The predictions of the oppressive Nazi Germany regime proved true. Most of the teachers were soon arrested and taken away to numerous concentration camps, including school principal Piotr Feliks. The pupils had to give up their secondary studies, the children up to the age of 14 were made to attend German schools, the older ones worked in mines and factories, some were sent to forced labour to Germany.

The school building was used as a German miners´ school, then as a teachers´ school and finally a military hospital as well as army barracks at the very end of World War II.

1945–1964

Former Polish Grammar School in Orłowa - Łazy

Orłowa was freed by the Soviet Red Army on May 1–2, 1945 and (because the borders were returned to their 1920 state) it belonged to Czechoslovakia again. The whole Polish population expected restarting of educational process in a short time. So already in May 1945 the School Committee was established. It immediately began to negotiate the reopening of all Polish schools. In the meantime the staff and the students together with their parents started to reconstruct the building of the school. After the testing registration of future number of pupils (when 350 of them signed up) the Czechoslovak Ministry of Education issued the permit for the opening of Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School in Orłowa on September 18, 1945.

However, a few limitations appeared – only Czechoslovak citizens were allowed to be students or teachers, „irreproachable with respect to nationality and political matters.“ On October 1, 1945 the inauguration of the beginning of the school year took place in the school hall after masses in both Catholic and Protestant churches. During the ceremony the attendees commemorated the victims of World War II.

In February 1948, after a bloodless coup, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia took over the power in the state. On February 24 the school joined a one-hour strike, organized by Communist Trade Unions Organisation. On February 27 during the first lesson class teachers discussed the changes of the political situation in the state with the pupils. Since then (till 1989) the communist ideology was present in both curriculum and everyday life of the school.

In April 1948 a meeting took place where the principal instructed all the students „in a great importance of a new school system in Czechoslovakia“. According to this reform secondary schools were changed to 4-year-schools, but only in 1953, after another transformation, there appeared so-called „11-year high school“ and in 1960 „general high school“ that lasted for 3 years.

Shortly before the 50th anniversary the school building underwent general repair of central heating and sewerage. Also a new grammar school building was erected in the autumn of the 1960. At the beginning of the 1960s the Ministry of Education ordered secondary schools to join into greater units. According to this resolution grammar school would unite with a Czech school. This decision was opposed by the county inspector of schools. So, eventually, in 1962 a decision was taken that Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School would be joined with a 9-year primary school in the nearby village of Łazy (Lazy). The seat of both schools was established in a new primary school Łazy building. The original grammar school building was deserted. There was („ temporarily“, as its statics was endangered by extensive mining damage in the vicinity) a school for children with special needs and a music-school. The old building was pulled down in 1988.

1964–1992

During the 1960s transport links in the area changed significantly so this way Orłowa left its importance as a point of junction. Fewer pupils wanted to study in Łazy school. So in 1964 the school was joined with a larger Polish Grammar School in Czeski Cieszyn (Český Těšín). Since September 1, 1969 the school has been working as a 4-year grammar school again. Its main purpose is to educate future students of Czech and Polish universities. However, because the mining damage in the surrounding area (there is Antonín Zápotocký (now Lazy) Mine close to the former school building) gradually developed, a decision was made that school would move to the district city of Karviná.

Since 1993

Former Polish Grammar School in Karwina

By the end of 1992 the Polish Grammar School was transferred to the former primary school building in Karwina, the district of Hranice. There is a private Business and Banking Secondary School as well on the premises. In 1997 school joined the Juliusz Słowacki Schools Association in the Polish city of Chorzów. It takes part in annual meetings held in associated schools in Poland and Ukraine. The 15th meeting was organised in school from April 30 to May 2, 1998 hosting 12 schools named after Juliusz Słowacki.

On June 6, 2009 the 100th anniversary of the school was celebrated in the Centre of Culture in Orłowa-Lutynia. Monument commemorating the school was unveiled at Orłowa-Obroki.

In 2009 the Polish Grammar School in Karwina has been closed, and the students were transferred to Polish Grammar School in Czeski Cieszyn. The grammar school in Czeski Cieszyn continues the tradition of the original school in Orłowa, adopting the official name of Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School as of 1 September 2014.

Subjects

  • Languages: Polish, Czech, German, French, Russian, English, Latin; philosophy, history, geography, mathematics, chemistry, physics, biology, mineralogy, singing, music, drawing, religious education (Catholic, Protestant), physical training – these subjects were taught as compulsory in the 1930s up to the schoolyear 1948/49. Voluntary subjects were: stenography, manual training, handiwork, cooking.
  • In the schoolyear 1922/23 calligraphy, psychology and descriptive geometry were also taught.
  • In the schoolyear 2008/2009 these subjects are taught: languages – Polish, Czech, English, German, Russian; civics, history, geography, mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, IT, musical or aesthetic education, physical training - as compulsory.
  • Voluntary subjects (3rd and 4th class): biological, chemical, mathematical, geographical, historical, civic and Polish language seminars.

Alumni

gollark: That doesn't seem particularly sensical, which I suppose you might expect for anything randomly pulled out of a long video.
gollark: You *really* like saying "boomer papers", don't you.
gollark: It's "not real" in the sense that numbers and differential equations and perfectly accurate triangles and such do not exist in reality, but do allow you to make really good models of it.
gollark: Spirit-grade insults aren't trivial either.
gollark: Becoming spirit is hard. You need lots of training/experience in engineering, physics, insults and criticism.

References

  • Almanac „Forty Years of Polish Grammar School in Orłowa“ 1949
  • „Memorial Book on the 1969 Jubilees“
  • Yearbooks of Juliusz Słowacki Polish Grammar School
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.