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The Kosciuszko Chair of Polish Studies

Dr. Marek Jan Chodakiewicz is the current holder of the Kosciuszko Chair of Polish Studies, which is now here at IWP.  The Kosciuszko Chair of Polish Studies was formally inaugurated at The Institute of World Politics on November 7, 2008.  The Chair has been partially endowed through the generosity of The American Institute of Polish Culture, but your help is needed to ensure that IWP can reach the full potential of the Kosciuszko Chair.

To learn about ways you can support the work of the Kosciuszko Chair, please contact the Institute's development staff:

Tricia Lloyd
Vice President for Institutional Advancement
202-462-2101 ext. 304

Justin Stebbins
Development Officer
202-462-2101 ext. 320 



The Kościuszko Chair of Polish Studies has come to The Institute of World Politics (IWP).

Originally established at the University of Virginia in 1998 by the American Institute of Polish Culture (AIPC), the Chair was transferred back into AIPC's care after a period of inactivity until a suitable replacement could be found. Happily, following a nationwide competition among fourteen major academic institutions, AIPC decided that IWP was best suited to carry out the Chair's mission. AIPC and IWP reached an agreement whereby AIPC pledged a $1 million challenge grant to IWP for the purpose of establishing the new chair and IWP pledged to match that grant within three years.

The Kościuszko Chair will serve as a center for Polish Studies in the broadest sense, including learning, teaching, researching, and writing about Poland's culture, history, heritage, religion, government, economy, and successes in the arts, sciences, and letters, with special emphasis on the achievements of Polish civilization and its relation to other nations, particularly the United States.

The mission of the Chair is premised, in part, on the belief that over the last several centuries, the written record of Polish history has been shaped by political forces inimical to Polish independence and culture: including the imperial powers that partitioned Poland in the 18th century, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union.

There are also a significant number of contemporary pundits and academics who, compounding the errors of the past, are further distorting the Polish record today. In light of this situation, the work of the Kościuszko Chair will serve as a valuable corrective of the historical narrative.

The accurate study of Polish history and culture serves several valuable purposes. One, of course, is to teach important lessons for the defense of liberty, both in Poland and the United States. These concern the nature and strategies of imperialist powers, including aggressive totalitarian regimes such as Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.

The study of Poland's past, with its five century-old noble democracy, elective monarchy, habeas corpus, property rights, religious liberty, and political freedom also yields vital lessons for the political health of free societies, particularly the United States and her people. Finally, Poland remains an important country today given its strategic position in Europe, its role in the defense of Western Civilization, and its affinities and alliance with NATO and the United States. Thus, the Kościuszko Chair will also take an active interest in Polish current events.

 


This symbol, featuring the red/white/blue Kosciuszko scytheman's cap & crossed scythes, was chosen to represent the Kosciuszko Chair at IWP. It is adapted from the symbol of the American-founded Kosciuszko Air Squadron which assisted the Poles during the victorious war against the Soviets (1920).

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