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Erasing Violence: The Trouble with Decolonizing the Polish Past

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2024

Erica Lehrer
Affiliation:
Concordia University, Montréal
Roma Sendyka
Affiliation:
Jagiellonian University, Krakow
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Summary

In 1752—we do not know the exact date—a peasant named Jędrzej Skorupa from Gumniska, now a district of the city of Tarnów in southern Poland, sent a letter containing a heartbreaking plea for mercy to the owner of his village.

A few weeks earlier Skorupa had made a deal with trader Jakub Wróbel from Kraków, most probably of Jewish origin, but the deal quickly turned bad for the poor peasant. Skorupa sold a number of pigs—which were the property of the absentee village owner—but instead of money, he took from the trader only a note promising payment. Wróbel told him (over a beer) that Grotkowski—a manor official, almost certainly a landless nobleman, whose main job was to discipline the serfs and oversee their work—trusted him with credit.

The next chapters of this sad story are both easy and difficult to imagine today. When the money promised by Wróbel did not materialize, Grotkowski expected Skorupa to cover the owner's losses. Skorupa wrote:

Grotkowski sent a janitor for me to come to the manor. I came. I came and Sir Grotkowski hit me in the face, [and] took me to prison, ‘until he pays for the pigs’ [Grotkowski said].

However, a higher-ranking manor official intervened and sent both of them—scared Skorupa and furious Grotkowski—to Kraków to look for the dishonest trader and the money he owed. Predictably, Skorupa could not find Wróbel in Kraków.

Other traders promised to pay for the dishonest member of their guild, but said they needed time to collect the full amount. Grotkowski lost his patience. As the peasant told it:

Under such circumstances Sir Grotkowski hit me in the face so hard that blood flew out of my ear, and he started to beat me badly [in front of the traders]. Seeing this, the traders were surprised and told him, please Sir do not beat this man so badly, because you will regain your money, just do not take his health from him.

After returning to the village Grotkowski confiscated Skorupa's property—nine cows and oxen. When his wife asked for the animals’ return, she was also beaten by Grotkowski. The desperate serf then tried to commit suicide: he cut his stomach with a razor.

Type
Chapter
Information
My Museum, a Museum about Me
Curatorial Dreams for the Kraków Ethnographic Museum
, pp. 51 - 62
Publisher: Jagiellonian University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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