Polish-Hungarian friendship continues to be the defender of the old, traditional Europe free from Western perversity.
A few days ago, on March 15, Hungary organized a large-scale national celebration.
A dignified, soul-lifting celebration, with an emphasis on independence, after several centuries of anti-Habsburg uprisings, while at the same time showing the new threats to independence and Christianity coming from Brussels. Until now, on November 11 - the day of national independence regained after the First World War, after 123 years of oppression - we celebrated in a similar way in Poland.
My family, the Sutarskis, still remember the January Uprising (1863-1864), after which my great-grandfather was exiled to Siberia by the tsarist regime, from where he returned home only years later with an amnesty. My father's brother took part in the 1919-1920 war against the Bolsheviks, and my father and his two brothers fought against the Germans in 1939.
The two brothers returned to Poland after the war, but my father was executed by the Soviets (see the Katyn massacre), but how many Polish families have a similar story!
The liberal-leftist coalition government led by Donald Tusk, established in December of last year, is trying to sell Poland to the West. It is taking steps to create a federal Europe forced by the Brussels Commission of the European Union. At the same time, it agrees to the ecological transformation forced by Brussels, thus destroying the European and Polish economy.
The Tusks also want to rewrite Poland's national history for the benefit of Europe as a whole. What's worse is that Poland seems to be breaking away from its more than thousand-year-old Christian faith and morals.
At the same time, our country is connected to France and Germany, members of the "Weimar alliance" (together with Tusk's Poland), which wants to expand the Russo-Ukrainian war into a nuclear war. All this is happening in front of the Visegrád Four (especially Hungary and Slovakia) protesting against the widening of the war conflict.
As the scion of a Catholic family that has experienced many grievances, I am outraged by the fact that only the farmers, the rural population and the transporters, and not the whole nation, are rebelling against such large-scale, bad changes. These changes are being implemented so that the new government can retain its power for thirty silver juda money, which it will receive from the Brussels bureaucrats as a reward, and moreover "in the name of the regained rule of law", which it does not respect, and by changing the country's previous his critical attitude towards EU policy.
The Polish-Hungarian friendship, which the Hungarians still remember and preserve, cannot disappear, because this friendship remains the defender of the old, traditional Europe free from Western perversity.
I know this well from my conversations with my Polish compatriots, and it imposes obligations on them, but it is also their hope.
The author is a Polish poet and writer living in Hungary
Featured image: György Tóth Jr. / civilek.info