Abstract

The modern Polish–Ukrainian dialogue is the second interstate dialogue of the twentieth century, in the development of which the historical and political discourses have played an important role. The so-called Volhynia discourse poses the most serious challenge in this dialogue, while at the same time being its main component. The article claims the Volhynia discourse plays a major role in bringing about the asymmetry of historical memory between the two states. The events of Volhynia-43 have remained in Polish historical memory as an act of genocide perpetrated in 1941–1943 by Ukrainian nationalists, mainly from the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), on over 100,000 Poles and citizens of the Polish state inhabiting Galicia and Eastern Małopolska, including Volhynia. These territories, considered by the Ukrainian nationalist party OUN as indigenously Ukrainian, were to be included in the future independent Ukrainian state. The Ukrainian historiography, apart from sparse exceptions, avoids the term ‘massacre’ and ‘genocide’ in reference to the events in Volhynia, defining them as a conflict or a Polish–Ukrainian war with a comparable number of casualties on both sides. The article, analysing speeches and announcements by political leaders of Poland and Ukraine, focuses on explaining the causes and effects of this shift in accentuation in the Ukrainian discourse on Volhynia, and, broadly, in Ukraine working through its past.

Highlights

  • Insurgent Army (UIA) (1942–1956) was fighting for the independent Ukrainian state against the Soviet and Polish guerrilla troops and against the Nazis, with whom it entered local alliances, earning in this way the charge of collaboration

  • While the Polish side claims the scale and atrocity of massacres qualify them as genocide, the Ukrainian side tends to view these events as part of the ongoing war actions whose criminal acts against civilians were not on a large scale, not always perpetrated by Ukrainians and, retaliated by Poles

  • In order to show the difference in the way the topic of Volhynia-43 functions in Ukraine and Poland, I will analyse speech acts comprising the so-called Volhynia discourse

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Summary

Introduction

Insurgent Army (UIA) (1942–1956) was fighting for the independent Ukrainian state against the Soviet and Polish guerrilla troops and against the Nazis, with whom it entered local alliances, earning in this way the charge of collaboration. It is worth noting that in the history of relations between Poland and Ukraine, this has been the first dialogue between both states, but the second pertaining to relations between the Polish and Ukrainian nations and has been ongoing since the beginning of the twentieth century.

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