A transportation from Rzeszow from Mrs. Jolanta Czartoryska arrived at the Drafting. This is her latest book written with her boy Adam S. Czartoryski “My prosecution is nonsense?”
It's a book written against the current, against the imposed fashions, the expectations of the IPN and the tired schemes. The author without artificial pathos, highlighting flaws and emphasizing sensors shows what her work looked like during the period of People's Poland. This is, among another things, an excellent description of the behaviour of people during the period before and during the war. This can be determined by reading respective pages. Attention should besides be paid to the earlier excellent publications by Mr Jolanta Czartoryska “Go into the shadows” and “Everyone had his own PRL. Nostalgic stories".
I like to learn the past of my homeland through the relation of people surviving at a given time, due to the fact that they show us the destiny of Poles in the lens. The past of our nation at a peculiar time and place. I value the regional past told by the inhabitants – due to the fact that it seems to me more true. The large value is that we have people in the field that we want to perpetuate. Therefore, I am very happy to read the book, and I will share my observations with the readers of “Polish Thought”.
Łukasz Jastrzębski
Behind the website www.chartor.com
“My prosecutor's office is bullshit?!” #Everyone had his PRL
"The further from 1989, the more varied, but besides incorrect is the 45 years of PRL. In the officially presented news chaos, it is dominant to draw out absurdities and negative phenomena that undoubtedly occurred at that time. In the message that is seen in discussions on Facebook and among average people who remember that time, a different image emerges. There are elements of affirmative memories, and even nostalgia. This is simply a time that people remember as calm, safe, and even cheerful despite noticing many inconveniences. The further from 1989, the less witnesses and more pseudo-scientists.
The part of the PRL was besides the prosecutor's office. It has always been not the best fame among average people who shun this institution as far as possible.
And what did the territory attorney's office in the late 1970s and 1980s truly look like? How did people working there see it, who are afraid to admit at present that their feet were even within the limits of this institution? What did the martial law look like from the position of a young man doing a “care” in the prosecutor's office? This and many another interesting facts are in this hand-held book."
Book to be purchased in online bookstores. An audiobook is besides being prepared.