Retired Polish
Archbishop Ignacy Tokarczuk, who built churches in secret in defiance of
the communist authorities, becoming a folk hero for many, has died at
the age of 94, PAP news agency said on Saturday.
One of the Soviet bloc's more
colourful anti-communist clerics, Tokarczuk clandestinely built hundreds
of churches under the noses of the officially atheist government in the
1960s and 1970s.
"While Ignacy
Tokarczuk was bishop of Przemysl, more than 400 churches and chapels
were built in the diocese despite the lack of building permits from the
communist authorities," Episcopate Chairman Archbishop Jozef Michalik
said on the website of the Przemysl Archdiocese.
"He
will be remembered for his uncompromising stance in defence of the
institution of the Catholic Church despite frequent harassment by the
security service of the Polish People's Republic."
Retired Polish
Archbishop Ignacy Tokarczuk, who built churches in secret in defiance of
the communist authorities, becoming a folk hero for many, has died at
the age of 94, PAP news agency said on Saturday.
One of the Soviet bloc's more
colourful anti-communist clerics, Tokarczuk clandestinely built hundreds
of churches under the noses of the officially atheist government in the
1960s and 1970s.
"While Ignacy
Tokarczuk was bishop of Przemysl, more than 400 churches and chapels
were built in the diocese despite the lack of building permits from the
communist authorities," Episcopate Chairman Archbishop Jozef Michalik
said on the website of the Przemysl Archdiocese.
The
typical ruse was for a parishioner in the staunchly Catholic Przemysl
region, in south-eastern Poland, to get a building permit from the
authorities to build a farmhouse, whose interior was then secretly
fitted out as a house of worship.
When
volunteer builders from the parish had everything in place, they would
affix a small steeple to the roof under the cover of darkness, and a new
church was created.
Communist
security troops were routinely sent to the churches after they were
discovered but, faced with the embarrassing prospect of demolishing a
structure built by local volunteers, the authorities frequently gave in.
Despite
constant surveillance and harassment, including visa denials preventing
trips to Rome, Tokarczuk actively supported anti-communist dissident
groups in the 1970s and the Solidarity movement that emerged in 1980.
The
Soviet bloc's first independent trade union, Solidarity evolved into a
10-million-strong pro-democracy movement which the communists tried to
crush.
Tokarczuk died on Friday in Przemysl.