• Poland celebrates Constitution Day
  • 03.05.2011

Copy of original 3 May Constitution

The 3rd of May - Constitution Day - is a state holiday in Poland and is a celebration of one of the most important events in the nation’s history – the adoption of Europe’s first, and the world’s second, modern codified constitution, after that of the United States.

 

President Bronisław Komorowski attended a morning mass for the homeland at St John’s Cathedral in Warsaw.

 

At noon, he will be joined by Prime Minister Donald Tusk for a ceremonial hoisting of the national flag at the Clock Tower of the Royal Castle.

 

In the afternoon, the President and the First Lady will attend a music performance ‘An Odyssey of Freedom’. Staged by recent graduates and students of the Warsaw Drama Academy, it looks at the ideas of the May the Third Constitution using the language of modern poetry and pop music.

 

The programme includes poems by Zbigniew Herbert, Czesław Miłosz and Kazimierz Wierzyński.


 

The Centre for Civic Education has invited schools students to get together for the painting of murals illustrating a selected fragment of the Constitution.

 

3 May 1791

 

In his Struggles for Poland, Neal Asherson writes that ‘the Constitution of the Third of May 1791 was a response to the increasingly perilous situation of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Only 150 years earlier a European power, in 1772 it had one-third of its territory annexed by Russia, Prussia and Austria in what was the First Partition.

 

Despite this, Poland’s last king, Stanislaw August Poniatowski, proceeded with cautious reforms.

 

The National Education Commission, which was Europe’s first ministry of education, was set up.

 

The army was reorganized and the Parliament, dominated by men of great intellectual calibre, adopted in 1791 the Constitution which is unanimously described by historians as one of the proudest achievements in Polish history.

 

The provisions of the 1791 Constitution – if applied – would have changed the course of the nation’s history. The institution of the ‘liberum’ veto or ‘free vote’ - which in principle permitted any parliamentary deputy to nullify all the legislation - was to be abolished.

 

The throne was to be made hereditary rather than elective.’ These were just some of the reforms which, as Neal Ascherson wrote, “”would have given the state real authority to last”.

 

The trouble was that the idea of reforms in Poland was viewed with growing suspicion in neighbouring countries.

In effect, the Constitution of May the Third remained in force for only a year before being overthrown. In 1793, the Second Partition of Poland – this time by Russia and Prussia - took place and what was left of the Commonwealth was a small buffer state with a puppet king and a Russian army.

 

The celebration of 3 May as a state holiday was banned during the period of the partitions. After Poland regained its independence, it was declared a holiday, to be banned again during World War Two.

 

During the communist period, in 1951, it lost its legal standing as a holiday in January 1951 but for the Polish nation it never ceased to be a source of hope and inspiration. During the communist period, especially the Solidarity revolution, the Third of May was a day of anti-government and anti-communist protests. After the collapse of communism in 1989, it was restored as a state holiday. (mk/pg)