Apply for a scholarship from the PAC Charitable Foundation, FPA
The Polish American Congress Charitable Foundation invites all the students (members of the PAC) to apply for a scholarship from the Richard Gorecki Scholarship Fund of the PAC Charitable Foundation in Chicago. All the details can be found at PAC Charitable Foundation’s website:
http://paccf.org/Scholarship_1.htm
Friends of Polish Art (FPA) is inviting students to apply for scholarships through its two scholarship grants. More information on FPA’s website:
UWAGA – ATTENTION
Resolutions adopted at the Council of National Directors October 18, 2014 Chicago IL.
Resolution #1: The Security of the Republic of Poland
Whereas, the Russian aggression of Ukraine, annexation of Crimea and threats from Putin’s
 Kremlin against the Republic of Poland demonstrate that the current policies of Russian
 President Putin and the insurgent Russian imperialism become a real and imminent threat to
 world peace, stability in Eastern and Central Europe and particularly to the existence of the
 Republic of Poland as a free country, and
 Whereas, the Republic of Poland is a member of the NATO alliance, and
 Whereas, NATO alliance has no workable contingency plans to effectively aid Poland against
 an aggression from the East, and
 Whereas, Polish President Bronisław Komorowski appealed to the NATO members, particularly
 Germany, to assist Poland in the extreme necessity of possible Russian military aggression, and
 Whereas, Germany refused to participate in creating any NATO military bases on Polish
 territory, and
 Whereas, on September 30, 2014 the German press released information, according to which
 the German Armed Forces are disorganized and lacking the necessary equipment for sustaining
 efforts per President Komorowski’s request,
 Therefore, the National Directors of the Polish American Congress assembled in Chicago on
 October 17-18, 2014, express their deep concern about the security of Poland. In our opinion it
 is necessary to establish United States Armed Forces bases on Polish territory. National
 Directors of PAC appeal to United States Authorities to establish a strong bilateral treaty
 between the USA and Poland, similar to the accords between the USA and some other
 countries. We request U. S. President Barack Obama to act on this issue without delay.
 Therefore, the Conference of National Directors resolved to authorize the President of the
 Polish American congress to take immediate action to establish direct contacts with appropriate
 US Authorities to that end.
Resolution #2: Congressional Hearings on the Smolensk Disaster
Whereas, on April 10th, 2010, the Polish Air Force One, carrying the President of Poland Lech
 Kaczyński and 95 other distinguished high-ranking officials, including the entire Central
 Command of the Polish Armed Forces, members of the Sejm and state administration, clergy
 and families of the Katyń victims, crashed at the Severnyl Airfield in Smolensk, Russia, killing all
 96 people on board, and
 Whereas, the Polish Government led by Prime Minister Donald Tusk acted to the detriment of
 Poland’s vital national interest by allowing to conduct the investigation of the crash by the
 authorities of the Russian Federation, under Annex 13 to the Chicago Convention, improperly
 treating Polish Air Force One as a civilian aircraft, thereby depriving the Polish side of any
 enforcement, oversight and appeal mechanisms, and
 Whereas, the Russian investigation produced a report (“MAK Report”) that contains blatant
 inconsistencies and misrepresentations while demonstrating disregard for
 facts, data and laws of physics, from which it arrives at dubious conclusions, and
 Whereas, the lack of professionalism and poor quality of the Russian investigation has been
 proven by numerous mistakes in the identification of the victims’ bodies transferred to Poland
 for burial, and
 Whereas, the authorities of the Russian Federation endlessly delay, without good cause,
 transferring to Poland the wreckage of the aircraft and all pertinent evidence, such as flight data
 recorders and electronic equipment, while mishandling and even purposely destroying the direct
 evidence, and
 Whereas, the Polish authorities accepted the MAK Report without due care, and followed up
 with their own report (Miller Commission Report) which rubberstamps the MAK Report, and
 Whereas, the Polish Government continues to ignore scientific evidence produced by the
 Parliamentary Committee for the investigation of the Smolensk Crash led by Minister Antoni
 Macierewicz in cooperation with independent experts from all over the world and investigative
 journalists, while harassing and even defaming them instead,
 Therefore, the Polish American Congress Council of National Directors, assembled in Chicago,
 Illinois on October 17-18, 2014, resolved that:
1. After four years of investigations and implausible explanations of the causes of the
 crash, it becomes unlikely that the Governments of the Russian Federation and of the
 Republic of Poland will ever conduct a professional investigation based on
 contemporary international standards of aircraft crash investigation that would
 produce trustworthy and verifiable results;
 2. We are hereby requesting that the Congress of the United States of America convene
 an inquiry and Congressional Hearings to find the truth about the Smolensk Disaster;
 3. We are calling on all of North American Polonia to let their Congressional and
 Parliamentary Representatives in Washington and Ottawa know that their Polish
 constituents want them to find the truth about the Smolensk Disaster, and persuade
 them to convene Inquiry and Congressional Hearings in the Smolensk Disaster case;
 4. We hereby direct the PAC President to take the lead in this effort by writing to
 Senator Robert Menendez, Chairman of the United States Senate Foreign Relations
 Committee, to initiate the hearings.
 Resolutions Committee:
 Frances X. Gates, Chairman
 Theresa Bunk
 Camille Kopielski
An Open Letter to the U.S. Congress and President of the United States
The Polish American Congress expresses its deep concern over the recent military and political acts of aggression of the Russian Federation towards its European neighbors. We are alarmed by the violations of territorial integrity of its contiguous sovereign states and the blatant impudence of the information warfare conducted by the Russian Federation worldwide.
We object in strongest terms to the recent attempts by President Vladimir Putin to justify the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact of August 23, 1939 pursuant to which Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union secretly agreed to “a territorial and political rearrangement of the areas belonging to the Polish state” and left a decision as to “whether the interests of both parties make desirable the maintenance of an independent Polish state and how such a state should be bounded” to be determined by the two aggressors. The Nazi-Soviet Pact led to the joint Nazi-Soviet aggression on the sovereign Polish State in September 1939. The two aggressors divided Poland between themselves and closely cooperated in combating Polish resistance, in particular the extermination of Polish elites. Those treacherous pacts led to the unprecedented genocide committed on the Polish civilian population by both Nazi Germany’s Gestapo and the Soviet Union’s NKVD.
While crimes committed by the Nazi regime have been disclosed, adjudicated and condemned, the crimes committed by the Soviet regime have not been fully disclosed and were never properly adjudicated and condemned by the international community. To this day, no justice has been served for the Katyn Massacre crime, one of the most heinous crimes of WWII, when an estimated 22,000 Polish intellectuals and leaders were mass murdered by the Soviet NKVD secret police by a pistol shot to the back of each of their heads and buried in unmarked secret mass graves.
Today’s Russia uses historical propaganda as an effective weapon to regain the status of a world power once again at the expense her Central and Eastern European neighbors. Today’s Russia denies the historic reality of Soviet responsibility for its trademark crimes of WWII and attempts to justify the annexation of half of Poland, occupation of the Baltic States, and the Katyn Massacre, just to name some of the Soviet Union’s unaccounted for liabilities.
In light of the traumatic experience of the Polish people subjected to massive extermination by both Nazi and Soviet regimes in the aftermath of the Nazi-Soviet Pact of August 23, 1939, the recent statement by the Russian President that “there is nothing wrong with the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact” is not only offensive but also very dangerous to the peace and security of today’s world. Such a statement sends a message that criminal practices symbolized and viciously implemented by the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact are acceptable.
The people of Europe unequivocally condemned the criminal Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact by designating August 23 as the Black Ribbon Day commemorating the victims of Nazi and Soviet totalitarian regimes. The Black Ribbon Day was introduced in the European Parliament by a resolution on European Conscience and Totalitarianism on April 2, 2009. A similar resolution establishing August 23 as the Black Ribbon Day was adopted by the Parliament of Canada on November 30, 2009.
The Polish American Congress strongly condemns in unequivocal terms this 21st century Russian attempt to justify and rehabilitate the immoral Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact that led to the mass extermination of millions of people in Europe. The lessons of Poland’s tragic past must not be forgotten. We shall honor the victims of the Soviet oppression, condemn the perpetrators, and lay the foundation for reconciliation based on truth and remembrance.
Accordingly, we urge the United States Congress to designate August 23 as “Black Ribbon Day” so to never forget the Soviet terror experienced by millions of people of Central and Eastern Europe during the 20th century. We must remember, honor, and learn from the experience of the people subjected to the Soviet Union’s ruthless military, economic, and political repression through mass exterminations, arbitrary executions, mass arrests, deportations, the suppression of free speech, confiscation of property, and the destruction of cultural and moral identity and civil society, all of which deprived the vast majority of the peoples of Central and Eastern Europe of their basic human rights and dignity.
We must ensure that this cruel history never repeats itself and that the memory of these crimes is never forgotten.
Sincerely,
Frank J. Spula,
President
Polish American Congress
DYŻURY PRAWNICZE W BIURZE MICHIGAŃSKIEGO WYDZIAŁU KPA
HAMTRAMCK, MI – Michigański Wydział Kongresu Polonii Amerykańskiej (KPA) informuje, iż w soboty, w godzinach 10 am – 12:00 pm, w siedzibie KPA w Hamtramck organizowane są DYŻURY PRAWNICZE, w trakcie których współpracujący z KPA prawnicy oferują darmowe konsultacje.
W najbliższych tygodniach dyżurować będą:
Sobota, 18 października – Jakub Szlaga
Sobota, 25 października – Michael Lacey
Sobota, 1 listopada – Annette Raczkowski
Sobota, 8 listopada – Jolanta Urbaniak
Aby umówić się na spotkanie z prawnikiem należy wcześniej zarejestrować się dzwoniąc do biura KPA na numer telefonu 313-365-9400. Siedziba KPA mieści się przy 11333 Joseph Campau w Hamtramck, MI. Biuro otwarte jest w środy i piątki w godzinach 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm oraz w soboty w godzinach 9:00 am – 2:00 pm.
Komunikat – DARMOWE BADANIA
Kongres Polonii Amerykańskiej wydział na stan Michigan powiadamia, że w sobotę, 25 października, 2014 roku, będą przeprowadzone badania ciśnienia krwi, poziomu cholesterolu i cukru. Testy będą przeprowadzone przez Detroit Medical Center w godzinach 10:00 rano – 1:00 po południu w siedzibie KPA w Hamtramck przy ulicy 11333 Jos. Campau. Dobrowolne opłaty na pokrycie kosztów będą akceptowane. Po dalsze informacje prosimy dzwonić do Kongresu na numer telefonu: 313-365-9400.




 The Polish American Congress (PAC) is a U.S. umbrella organization of Polish-Americans and Polish-American organizations. Its membership is composed of fraternal, educational, veterans, religious, cultural, social, business, and political organizations, as well as individuals.
The Polish American Congress (PAC) is a U.S. umbrella organization of Polish-Americans and Polish-American organizations. Its membership is composed of fraternal, educational, veterans, religious, cultural, social, business, and political organizations, as well as individuals.