Polish prewar Catholic film: gathering, ceremony, celebration, speech

Identifier
irn1003272
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2003.473.1
  • RG-60.3870
Dates
1 Jan 1936 - 31 Dec 1936
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Polish
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Scope and Content

Polish titles, mainly music track. Opens with quote from Ignacy Moscicki. Church seen from various angles. Madonna and child superimposed in the sky above the town. Religious procession along a road and in boats down a river, to 00:24:23. Singing. Bells tolling 00:26:15. Townspeople stream along the streets towards the ceremony. Train coming down the tracks. Children in ethnic costume present flowers to honored guest. A plaque bearing the name of Jozef Pilsudski (who died in 1935) is unveiled, former head of the Polish government and Poland's representative at Versailles. Man gives a speech. More religious procession. Canopy carried through crowds to church. Religious figures speaking. Close-ups of individual women praying. 00:38:35 Man prostrate on ground in form of cross. Crucifix and Christ, closeup. Crowds. Priest leads and crowd responds. Music over scenes of people buying and selling at market. People praying, contemplating statues of Jesus and Mary, pilgrims walking and climbing steps on their knees 00:44:-- Stations of the Cross. 00:46:30 Women and men laboring outside. They appear to be quarrying stone, putting it in railroad carts and wheeling it up a hillside on tracks. Men marching with rifles, over which is superimposed a Polish coat of arms.

Note(s)

  • USHMM Betacam made from VHS copies provided by WFDiF.

  • Among Polish pre-war religious short films, Salve Regina remains the most spiritual and artistic. Released in 1936, it is a cross between religious reporting and patriotic documentation. The work of an aristocratic family, the Countess Teresa Lubienska produced the film while her brothers, Ireneusz Plater-Zyberk (known by some as the “armless wonder”) and Ludwik Plater-Zyberk, worked as director and technician, respectively. The film emphasizes the attachment of the people of Silesia to the Catholic church and the Polish nation while maintaining their own unique traditions. In it, the people of Silesia go on a pilgrimage to the historic church of Wielkie Piekary, where King Jan Sobieski had knelt before the Polish cavalry against the Ottoman siege of Vienna. This pilgrimage also coincides with the tenth anniversary of the coronation of an image of the Virgin Mary on August 15th, 1925, the holiday of the Assumption of Mary. The film’s patriotic score was composed by Wladyslaw Macura.

Subjects

Places

Genre

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.