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Summary
The issue of otherness has accompanied our culture
since its very emergence - at the very least since the time when
ancient Greeks first began to pin the derisive name of "barbaros"
onto anyone unfortunate enough not to speak the tongue of Homer.
The obsession which led to the Crusades, the lengthy era of colonialism,
the 20th centurys unique tragedy of the Holocaust, topped with
the intractable problems of the Middle East - these are occurrences
which do not permit us to maintain a posture of detachment when
questions are asked about our own attitude towards things or people
different from ourselves.
In Znaks New Year issue we have chosen
to take a brief trip round the meanderings of otherness to explore
the various forms it takes, including proximity (when the other
becomes a neighbor), and that of when it assumes the shape of unmitigated
strangeness (as happens when the other turns into an enemy). In
a hitherto unpublished article by F. Józef Tischner, the beloved
pastor-philosopher treats the Other as being two-dimensional. Thereafter
our readers will find the text of the inaugural lecture given by
Ryszard Kapuściński at the official opening of the Tischner European
University in Krakow. In that lecture, the author accounts for such
phenomena of modern-day global civilization as cannot but cause
concern in terms of Tischners philosophy of drama. Jacek Filek
writes about our fear of strangers and what it springs from, about
our intolerance of any lifestyle different from our own, and the
reasons for our unwillingness to open ourselves up more. Krzysztof
Szwajca describes the set of self-identity problems faced by the
children of those murdered in the Holocaust.
This issue also brings the first part of Krzysztof Michalskis deliberations
on temporal issues, eternity, and the passage of time, as well as
Marek Gadzałas reflections woven around the Iraqi-American conflict
and based on Znaks July issue (The Christian Goes
to War). In his "Delicious Flavor of the Orient" Piotr Kłodkowski
tells about the uniqueness of Eastern tea houses, whereas Małgorzata
Łukasiewicz in the "rose column" relates Henry D. Thoreaus life
on Walden Pond. Małgorzata Kitowska-Łysiak analyzes the influence
Andrzej Wróblewski has had on modern Polish painting.
Our January Znak opens with a bright commentary
by F. Jan Kracik on the new interpretation of the Church Commandments
put forth by the Polish Episcopate.
POCZĄTEK
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