Polish Museum, Rapperswil


The Polish Museum, Rapperswil, was founded in Rapperswil, Switzerland, on 23 October 1870, by Polish Count Władysław Broel-Plater, at the urging of Agaton Giller, as "a refuge for Poland's historic memorabilia dishonored and plundered in the occupied Polish homeland" and for the promotion of Polish interests.
Except for two hiatuses, the Museum has existed to the present day—an outpost of Polish culture in Switzerland, a country which, over the past two centuries, has given refuge to generations of Poles.

Founding

The Polish Museum is housed in the Rapperswil Castle, atop that town's Herrenberg. Erected in the 12th century by Count Rudolf of Rapperswil, the castle passed, together with the town, into the hands of the Habsburgs. Rapperswil became a free city in 1415, and eventually joined the Swiss Confederation. Over the course of time, the castle fell into disrepair.
In the second half of the 19th century, the castle was leased for 99 years from the local authorities by a post-November 1830 Uprising Polish émigré, Count Władysław Broel-Plater, who had been in Switzerland since 1844. At his own expense he restored the castle, and on 23 October 1870, opened there the Polish National Museum.

Żeromski and Prus

Beginning in 1892, the Museum employed one or more librarians. The second to be hired, who worked there four years, was future Polish novelist Stefan Żeromski, who had obtained the post thanks in part to a letter of recommendation from novelist Bolesław Prus. Prus had also stood as witness at Żeromski's 1892 wedding to Oktawia Rodkiewicz.
The Żeromskis and Oktawia's daughter by a previous marriage, Henryka, lived in Rapperswil, in the garret of a three-story house at Bahnhofstrasse 28, owned by a Frau Fäh. When Prus visited them for two months in July–August 1895, Oktawia Żeromska rented a room for him on the building's second floor. Thus, for a time, two of Poland's greatest novelists lived at this one address in Rapperswil, Switzerland.
On 2 July 1895, Prus wrote his wife, describing his first impression of the town:
"Rapperswil is a village, but built of brick like our cities, and has at nearly every house a little garden, like our Warsaw Botanical Garden in terms of the plants. Everything here is bathed in roses..."
Prus admired the honesty, industry and kindliness of the populace.
Standing just before the entrance to the castle is the Bar Column, designed by Zürich University Professor Julian Stadler. It had been erected by Count Plater, largely at his own expense, in 1868 on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Bar Confederation, to commemorate Poland's then-century-long struggle for independence. The column had originally been placed at the shore of Lake Zürich but Russian protests had led to its move up to the castle, where it would not be visible from the town. The column is topped by an eagle, while the base bears, among other things, the Latin inscription, "Magna res libertas" and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth coat-of-arms featuring the Polish Eagle and the Lithuanian Vytis.
Librarian Stefan Żeromski clashed with the Museum's curator at the time, Rużycki de Rozenwerth, a loner and eccentric whom the novelist would immortalize in his novel Homeless People as the administrator of Cisy, Krzywosąd.
Month after month, Żeromski had moved printed matter from storage onto the newly placed bookshelves in the chilly second-floor library in the castle. Zygmunt Wasilewski, the Museum's first-hired librarian, who worked there for a year or two with Żeromski, later recalled:
"We waded through memoirs, émigré brochures, ephemeral periodicals. And there was plenty of it all, sometimes in triplicate, for the collections had arisen from a pooling of libraries left by the more prosperous 1831 émigrés, neatly bound and collected."
The library and archives, however, soon acquired an importance greater than the rest of the Museum. The library was built on the collections of Leonard Chodźko, one-time aide-de-camp to General La Fayette, purchased by the Museum in 1874. After Chodźko's death, the library acquired the archives of émigré organisations and committees, the papers of institutions and associations from the period of the Great Emigration, as well as contemporary printed matter, engravings and maps.
In 1883 the library received Count Plater's archives, valuable sources relating to the January 1863 Uprising and Polish post-Uprising immigrants to Switzerland. The library also obtained Artur Wołyński's collections on the January 1863 Uprising. Henryk Bukowski augmented the collections of manuscripts pertaining to Tadeusz Kościuszko.
The library received bequests from individuals in Europe and America, as well as archives of families and organisations residing in various countries. Over the 57 years until 1927, the library also gathered Polish publications that appeared outside Poland, and non-Polish publications pertaining to Poland.
During World War I, the library's collections provided material for Polish propaganda published in French, German and English.
At the turn of the 20th century, the Polish Museum's library was the largest Polish library outside Poland.

Repatriation

The Museum's founder, Count Plater, had bequeathed the collections to the Polish people. In 1927, after Poland had regained independence following World War I, pursuant to Plater's wishes the Museum collections were transported to Poland in fourteen railroad cars: 3,000 works of art, 2,000 historic memorabilia, 20,000 engravings, 9,000 coins and medals, 92,000 books, and 27,000 manuscripts.
The greater part of these collections, especially the library and archives, were deliberately destroyed by the Germans in Warsaw during World War II.
A notable object that survived was Tadeusz Kościuszko's heart, which now reposes in a chapel at Warsaw's Royal Castle, rebuilt in the 1970s from its deliberate destruction in World War II.

Contemporary Poland

In 1936 a Museum of Contemporary Poland was established at the Rapperswil Castle, to popularize the art and achievements of independent Poland.
In 1940, after some 13,000 Polish Army soldiers who had fought in France were interned in Switzerland, the Museum supervised educational and cultural work at the internment camps.
In 1945, at the conclusion of World War II, the Museum was taken over by the Polish People's Republic. In 1952 Rapperswil's local government, fearing that the Castle would become a center for communist propaganda, closed the Museum.

Museum today

The Museum, reopened in 1975, now features permanent exhibits on:
Additionally, the Museum organizes periodic special exhibits on Polish history and art.
The Polish Museum also features a library, now housed in the Burghof house, down the hill from the castle and at the top of a flight of broad steps leading up from the town. The library holds some 20,000 volumes on Polish history and culture, including works in western-European languages. The library's book catalog is accessible on the internet.
The library's memorabilia cover several centuries and include items associated with Tadeusz Kościuszko, Henryk Sienkiewicz, Władysław Reymont and Jan Nowak-Jeziorański.
In 2008, some Rapperswil residents petitioned local authorities to evict the Polish Museum from its home in the Rapperswil Castle. The Museum is conducting a petition campaign to retain the Museum in the Castle.

Impending eviction

In late 2014 it was reported that, within two years, Swiss authorities will be evicting the Polish Museum from its 12th-century home, the Rapperswil Castle overlooking Lake Zürich.
The castle is to be modernized and privatized, and the part currently housing the Polish Museum is to be turned into a restaurant. The castle will also become home to a local museum.
It is not known where the Polish Museum's collections will be moved to.
The Polish Museum's director, Anna Buchmann, attributes its looming eviction to the anti-Polonism of local politicians, particularly the owner of a local newspaper.
The Polish government has been unable to prevent the Museum's eviction. According to Kazimierz Ujazdowski, a member of Poland's Sejm and former Polish Minister of Culture, the eviction could have been prevented. Ujazdowski told Poland's Radio Maryja: "The response of Poland's government was too late and too lackadaisical."

Librarians

The Museum's librarians up to 1927, when the Museum collections were repatriated to Poland—some, historically prominent men—included: