Polish mayor’s funeral draws tens of thousands

Published January 20, 2019
GDANSK (Poland): The urn with ashes of the late mayor of Gdansk Pawel Adamowicz is seen in St Mary’s Basilica during his funeral ceremony on Saturday.—AFP
GDANSK (Poland): The urn with ashes of the late mayor of Gdansk Pawel Adamowicz is seen in St Mary’s Basilica during his funeral ceremony on Saturday.—AFP

MURDERED Gdansk mayor Pawel Adamowicz’s funeral drew tens of thousands of people in the Polish Baltic coast city on Saturday amid outrage over his murder six days ago. Banners with black and white pictures of Adamowicz were draped over buildings as Polish politicians including former president Lech Walesa, who helped to overturn communism in Eastern Europe, joined a mass at St Mary’s Basilica. Council of Europe head Donald Tusk and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki also joined mourners who listened to the choir as they awaited the burial of Adamowicz’s ashes. Adamowicz, one of Poland’s longest-serving mayors, was attacked on stage during one of Poland’s biggest annual charity events and died the following day.

Broadcaster TVN24 said 3,500 mourners gathered inside the 500-year-old Gothic cathedral on Saturday, while others watched Gdansk archbishop Leszek Slawoj Glodz give family members rosaries and gifts sent by Pope Francis on huge screens. “What happened on Sunday evening ... was perceived as a violent constant sound of a alarming bell, call for saving the conscience and changing the way of our living, political style,” Glodz told mourners during the Mass.

The murder of a liberal critic of Poland’s ruling party’s anti-immigrant policies highlights the charged atmosphere in parts of eastern Europe where populist leaders have fanned nationalist sentiment. As well as encouraging migrants to seek refuge in Gdansk, Adamowicz was known for backing a campaign to defend the rule of law against what activists consider efforts by the ruling conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party to increase political control over the judiciary and other bodies. Police said some 45,000 people had attended the funeral. Polish authorities have arrested a 27-year-old former convict, named only as Stefan W., over the killing. The attacker accused the mayor’s former party of putting him in prison, where he said he was tortured, at the event.

Published in Dawn, January 20th, 2019

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