Everything about Sanacja totally explained
Sanacja (Sanation) was a
coalition political movement in the
interbellum Second Polish Republic. It was created in
1926 by
Józef Piłsudski as a broad movement to support the "moral sanation" ("restoration to health") of the Polish
body politic before and after the
May 1926 Coup d'État that brought Piłsudski to virtually dictatorial power. From then until 1939, Sanation was the dominant political force in Poland, largely controlling the government.
History
Named after the
Latin word for "healing" ("
sanatio"), the Sanation movement mainly comprised former military officers who were disgusted with the corruption in Polish politics. Sanation was a coalition of rightists, leftists and centrists whose main focus was the elimination of
corruption and the minimization of
inflation.
Sanation appeared prior to the
May 1926 Coup d'État and lasted until
World War II but was never formalized. Since Piłsudski (as had
George Washington in the 18th century) disapproved of
political parties, which he saw as promoting their own interests rather than supporting the state and its people,
Sanacja never led to the creation of a political party. Instead, in 1928
Sanacja members created a
Bezpartyjny Blok Współpracy z Rządem ("
Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government"), a bizarre
coalition political party that denied being a political party.
Although Piłsudski never claimed personal power, he exercised extensive influence over Polish politics after
Sanacja took power in 1926. For the next decade, he dominated Polish affairs as
strongman of a generally popular centrist regime.
Kazimierz Bartel's government and all subsequent governments would first be unofficially approved by
Józef Piłsudski before they could be confirmed by the President.
Piłsudski mixed democratic and dictatorial elements while pursuing "sanation," or national healing. Poland's internal stability was enhanced, while
economic stagnation was ended by
Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski's reforms. At the same time, the Sanation regime prosecuted
communist parties (on the ostensible formal grounds that they'd failed to legally
register as political parties) and sought to limit the influence of
opposition parties by splitting their forces.
In April 1935, shortly before Piłsudski's death, a new
constitution (the "
April Constitution") was adopted, which supported all of Sanation's main ideas: a strong centralized state with a presidential system of government. Piłsudski died soon after, however, and Sanation faced several serious internal problems. Eventually it devolved into three separate movements:
- The Leftists (Lewica sanacyjna, formed around Walery Sławek), who sought a modus vivendi with the opposition;
- The Castle (Zamek, formed around President Ignacy Mościcki, who resided in the Warsaw Castle – hence the movement's name), which became the center; and
- The Rightists (Prawica sanacyjna, formed around Edward Rydz-Śmigły), who soon became virtually indistinguishable from the Camp of National Unity.
The first of these Sanation movements soon lost much of its importance, but the other two continued the ideological struggle over the shape of the country until the outbreak of war.
During the
1939 invasion of Poland, many Sanation members were taken
prisoner-of-war by the
Germans, while others evacuated to
Romania, where they remained to war's end or managed to reach
France and
Britain.
Although France insisted on excluding Sanationists from the
Polish Government in Exile, many remained highly influential. During the war, Sanation members created several resistance organizations, including
Obóz Polski Walczącej and
Konwent Organizacji Niepodległościowych in 1942, which in 1943 became subordinate to the
Home Army and in 1944 merged into
Zjednoczenie Organizacji Niepodległościowych.
After
World War II, the forced exile of many Sanationists was made permanent by the
communist regime, which branded them
enemies of the state.
Notables
Józef Beck
Tadeusz Hołówko
Janusz Jędrzejewicz
Adam Koc
Bogusław Miedziński
Aleksander Prystor
Walery Sławek
Kazimierz Świtalski
Today
The Confederation of Independent Poland, founded in 1979, is the principal sanacja political party in Poland today.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sanacja'.
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