This article examines the post-war fate of the Roman Catholic parish of St. Martin in Nowe Miasto, which before World War II was located within the boundaries of the Przemyśl diocese and was one of the oldest (founded before 1419). Unfortunately, as a result of the new political situation, it found itself, like a significant part of the Przemyśl diocese, within the borders of the Soviet Union, where the communist authorities waged an aggressive war against religion. The repressions of the atheistic system also reached the Roman Catholic parish in Nowe Miasto. It owes its survival and ability to function in Soviet reality primarily to the stance of the indomitable shepherd – Fr. Jan Szetela, and a group of believers who, despite the oppressive policy of the state towards believers, took responsibility for maintaining one of the last pastoral centers in this area. It is precisely about these struggles and the heroic stance of people that this article tells. It is based primarily on source material from the State Archive of the Lviv Region in Lviv, and this is what makes it original, as in fact these documents have been used to a very small extent (some as copies stored in the parish chancery) to describe the parish in Nowe Miasto during the communist system, or the indomitable stance of its pastor – Fr. Jan Szetela.
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Studia Polonijne · ISSN 0137-5210 | eISSN 2544-526X | DOI: 10.18290/sp
© Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL & Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
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