Poland marks centenary of its national rebirth at end of First World War

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Poland’s president and prime minister led an Independence Day march on Sunday which included members of nationalist organisations, the first time Polish state officials have marched with the far-right groups.

Some 200,000 people marched in Warsaw to mark the 100th anniversary of Poland’s rebirth as an independent state at the end of the First World War, according to an initial estimate by police.

Over the past decade, nationalist organisations have held Independence Day marches on November 11 which have included racist slogans, flares and in some years, acts of aggression.

Donald Tusk
Donald Tusk, former Polish prime minister and president of the European Council, lays flowers at a statue of Marshal Jozef Pilsudski, the Polish leader who led Poland in regaining its lost statehood (Czarek Sokolowski/AP)

An agreement on a joint march was reached in recent days.

President Andrzej Duda, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and the powerful leader of the conservative ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, marched in a group led by soldiers with a large flag bearing the words For You Poland.

Poland Independence Day
Polish Army soldiers salute during the official ceremony (Alik Keplicz/AP)

Many in that contingent carried national flags, but a handful of other emblems were observed.

Those included the flag of the National Radical Camp, a far-right group that was one of the main march organisers.

The camp’s flag has a falanga, a far-right symbol dating to the 1930s of a stylised hand with a sword.

Poland Independence Day
Andrzej Duda, left, and Jaroslaw Kaczynski, in front of the monument of the late Polish president Lech Kaczynski, who died in a 2010 plane crash (Alik Keplicz/AP)

As the Polish president spoke at the start of the march, he was at times obscured by the heavy smoke from the flares.

Throughout the day, solemn ceremonies and Masses were held in cities and small towns to commemorate the nation’s regained statehood after 123 years of foreign rule.

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