Chapter

Second Polish Republic & Wilno Voivodeship

For two decades between the wars, this region was part of Poland's Wilno Voivodeship — a period that consolidated Polish-language institutions and Catholic parish life but also saw the coexistence of Jewish and Catholic calendars in the same market towns. The 1931 census recorded 59.7% Polish, 22.7% Belarusian, 8.5% Jewish, and 5.2% Lithuanian in the voivodeship. In Eišiškės, Jews constituted 28.84% of the population (687 people) by 1921, though their share had declined from a peak of 80% in 1820; the town maintained separate Polish and Lithuanian high schools. The market square in Eišiškės operated on a rhythm shaped by both the Catholic liturgical calendar and the Jewish commercial calendar — Shabbat, market days, and High Holidays structured the week alongside Sunday Mass and patronal feasts. Dieveniškės was 75% Jewish in the 1897 census and still had a significant Jewish community with two synagogues. Nemenčinė's parish school (founded 1777) continued under Polish administration. The parish churches — now operating freely in Polish — celebrated Corpus Christi processions, May devotions, and patronal feasts as public, visible expressions of community identity. But the tutejszy population still spoke prostaya mova at home, and the gap between standard Polish liturgical language and local vernacular remained. This was the last era before the destruction of the Jewish communities and the Soviet suppression of public Catholic practice erased two of the three calendars that had structured town life.

1919 - 1939
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See current celebrations

Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

knowledge

Eišiškės Gymnasium

The Polish-language gymnasium at Vilniaus g. 81 is a living institutional expression of the Polish-speaking community's commitment to education in its own language — a continuity that stretches back to the parish school of 1524. The town maintains separate Polish and Lithuanian high schools, making visible the linguistic boundary that shapes community life. Anchor modes: custodian | signal | Search hooks: Eišiškės Gymnasium; Polish school Lithuania; lenkų kalba mokykla; Eišiškės gimnazija; Polish education Vilnius region

See the school building at Vilniaus g. 81; check the Facebook page or website for school-year cultural events and Polish-language celebrations.

trade

Eišiškės Market Square

Protected as urban heritage since 1969, this square is the material trace of a market rhythm that was once structured by both the Catholic and Jewish calendars. Before the Holocaust destroyed the Jewish community (4,000+ killed September 1941), the square pulsed with horse and cattle markets on days shaped by Shabbat and feast-day scheduling. Today the square operates on a solely Catholic-commercial rhythm — the absence of the Jewish calendar layer is itself a legible fact. Anchor modes: material_layer | network_route | Search hooks: Eišiškės Market Square; horse market; urban heritage 1969; shtetl market rhythm; Eishishok Yizkor market days

Walk the heritage-protected square and surrounding streets that preserve the pre-war town plan; note the spatial relationship between the market square, the Catholic church, and the former synagogue sites.

spiritual

Nemenčinė Church of the Assumption

One of the first churches founded in Lithuania by Jogaila in 1387, marking the moment Christianization reached this region. The parish school (from 1777) and continuous liturgical practice make this church the oldest ritual-continuity node in the region. The church's dedication to the Assumption ties it to one of the major feast days (August 15) that structures the local Catholic calendar. Anchor modes: living_ritual | material_layer | Search hooks: Nemenčinė Church of the Assumption; Assumption Day procession August 15; pamaldos lenkų kalba; Jogaila church 1387; Nemenčinė parish school

Attend Mass (check schedule for Polish or Lithuanian); see the church building that stands on the site of Jogaila's original 1387 foundation; walk the town whose parish boundaries have organized festival life for over six centuries.

Celebrations and traditions

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No reviewed festival relations are projectable for this chapter yet.

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Chapter

Post-Uprising Russification & Catholic Resistance

1864 - 1918

The January Uprising of 1863 triggered the Russian Empire's most aggressive assault on Catholic and Polish identity in the Vilnius region. Churches were forcibly converted to Orthodox worship: Rudamina's predecessor church was consecrated as an Orthodox church of the Transfiguration in 1866, after 603 Catholics were registered as Orthodox. A new brick Orthodox church was built there in 1876. The Tabariškės Carmelite monastery had already been closed in 1832, but the parish church survived — and it is in this period that the parish became the sole institutional vessel for Polish-language continuity. When Polish schools were banned and public use of Polish restricted, the church remained the only place where the community could hear and speak Polish in a liturgical setting. After the 1905 Edict of Toleration, Catholic communities could build new churches: the current wooden church at Rudamina was constructed between 1907 and 1909, replacing the lost one. Dieveniškės saw Lithuanian-language sermons introduced from 1886 and 1897–1898, revealing that the parish's linguistic identity was not monolithic — the same community could hear both Polish and Lithuanian from the pulpit. The Jašiūnai Manor, after Baliński's death and the 1863 suppression, lost its position as a cultural centre; its valuable library was transported to Poland or lost during the wars. The festival calendar survived — but it was now carried exclusively by the parish, without the parallel patronage of the noble estate.

Chapter

Soviet Occupation & Underground Catholic Practice

1940 - 1988

The Soviet occupation beginning in 1940 shattered the region's multi-calendar world. The Holocaust destroyed the Jewish communities: on September 21, 1941, SS Einsatzgruppen and Lithuanian auxiliaries killed over 4,000 Jews in Eišiškės, imprisoning them in three synagogues before executing them at the old Jewish cemetery. The Jewish community of Dieveniškės was deported to the Voranava ghetto and murdered on May 5, 1942. The market squares that had pulsed with both Jewish and Catholic rhythms fell silent on the Jewish side forever. Between 1944 and 1958, approximately 150,000 people identified as Polish left the Lithuanian SSR under a Soviet-organized 'repatriation' program — the degree of voluntariness is contested, with some departures driven by genuine preference and others by property confiscation, discrimination, and an impossible legal framework. 80% of Vilnius' Polish inhabitants were transferred. Those who remained found their parishes the only institutional space where Polish could still be spoken. The Chronicle of the Catholic Church in Lithuania (1972–1989), an underground samizdat, documented the systematic persecution of believers across Lithuania. Meanwhile, Soviet demographic engineering created new layers: Belarusian workers were settled at Grigiškės to work in the paper factory (founded 1923 by Polish industrialist Grzegorz Kurec), and returning Siberian deportees prohibited from living in Vilnius were settled in the Vilnius District. The Dieveniškės 'appendix' — a 207 km² Lithuanian salient projecting 30 km into Belarusian territory, created when Soviet border-drawing returned the town to Lithuania in November 1940 — accidentally preserved local traditions by isolating the community behind the Cold War frontier. The Poškonys ethno-cultural reserve, preserving Lithuanian folk traditions within the Polish-majority Šalčininkai district, maintained a Lithuanian-language counterpoint to the dominant Polish Catholic calendar. Parish churches held on — Dieveniškės was reconstructed 1986–1990, Rudamina's parish was active though its Soviet-era priest remains unidentified in available sources (the earlier erroneous claim placing Father Alfonsas Svarinskas there has been corrected: he served only in central Lithuanian parishes).

Chapter

Russian Imperial Rule & Noble Estate Culture

1795 - 1863

After the Commonwealth's partition in 1795, the region fell under the Russian Empire — but the Polish-speaking nobility remained the local power brokers. Ignacy Baliński purchased Jašiūnai Manor from the Radvilas in 1811 and built a neoclassical residence (1824–1828) that became the region's most brilliant cultural salon. Adam Mickiewicz, the poet associated with Polish, Lithuanian, and Belarusian literary traditions, was a frequent guest — in 1821 he watched Vėlinės (All Souls' Day) rituals at the Šalčininkai cemetery, an experience that later surfaced in his poetry. Jan Śniadecki and Juliusz Słowacki also visited. The manor's library and ceramics workshop spread Polish-language culture through the district. Meanwhile, the Tabariškės Carmelites continued maintaining Polish devotions, and parish churches kept their liturgical calendars intact. The rural population — many still speaking prostaya mova and identifying as tutejszy — participated in Catholic feasts whose language was Polish but whose folk elements carried older, unrecorded local layers. The estate system meant that festival life was shaped by two parallel institutions: the noble manor's cultural patronage and the parish's liturgical authority.

Chapter

Post-Soviet Independence & Minority Mobilization

1989 - 2003

The collapse of the Soviet Union opened a contested space for Polish minority identity. The Association of Poles in Lithuania (ZPL) was established in April 1989, and the short-lived Polish National Territorial Region was declared at a congress in Eišiškės on October 6, 1990 — an expression of community self-determination that the Lithuanian government dissolved as incompatible with state sovereignty on September 4, 1991, after the failed Soviet coup. The episode was heavily influenced by Soviet KGB operatives who encouraged ethnic subdivisions to destabilize Lithuanian secession, and the movement was divided between moderates (ZPL leader Jan Sienkiewicz) and radicals seeking Soviet protection. On January 29, 1991, the Lithuanian government granted rights to native-language schooling and official use, and a 1994 treaty with Poland pledged minority-rights protection. The Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania (AWPL) was founded on August 28, 1994, by Jan Sienkiewicz, and began its trajectory toward governing Šalčininkai and Vilnius District municipalities. The Mickiewicz monument in Šalčininkai's main square — created by Bronius Vyšniauskas and unveiled in December 1998 for the poet's 200th birthday — signaled the public reassertion of Polish cultural identity. A memorial stone at Sodų g. 5, unveiled in 2004, marked the spot where Mickiewicz watched Vėlinės (All Souls' Day) rituals in 1821, inscribed in both Polish and Lithuanian. Parish churches that had maintained Polish devotions through the Soviet period now celebrated openly: Rudamina's church offered bilingual services, Turgeliai held Mass exclusively in Polish, and the Tabariškės Sunday Mass at 1 p.m. continued in Polish (pamaldos lenkų kalba). Polish-language schools expanded rapidly, from 11,400 students in 1990 to over 22,300 by 2001.