ap

Skip to content

Breaking News

Late Polish President Lech Kaczynski's daughter Marta and granddaughter Ewa attend the burial of the president and his wife Sunday at Wawel cathedral.
Late Polish President Lech Kaczynski’s daughter Marta and granddaughter Ewa attend the burial of the president and his wife Sunday at Wawel cathedral.
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

KRAKOW, Poland, And Moscow — Polish President Lech Kaczynski was laid to rest in a centuries-old crypt Sunday alongside the remains of some of the most revered figures in this nation’s often tragic history.

The funeral Mass and procession to the nation’s most sacred cathedral put a somber end to a week of mourning in Poland. Kaczynski and his wife were killed the previous weekend when the presidential plane clipped a tree and crashed while landing at a fog-shrouded provincial Russian airport. Many of Poland’s top military officials, lawmakers and icons of recent Polish history also died in the crash.

The international presence at the state funeral in Krakow was reduced significantly because of the plume of volcanic ash that has engulfed European airspace since Thursday. President Ba rack Obama, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel were among the world leaders who canceled their plans to attend.

But Russian President Dmitry Medvedev managed to fly in from Moscow, underscoring the thaw in the nations’ historically strained relations since the deadly crash.

The tragedy has gripped Poland with particular power in part because the plane crashed near a site notorious in Polish history: the forests of Katyn, where Soviet secret police secretly slaughtered thousands of Polish officers and other prisoners and dumped the bodies in mass graves. Kaczynski and his delegation were to attend a Mass to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre.

The stark coincidence of the crash elevated Kaczynski’s death into an event regarded not only as the loss of a leader but as an echo of Poland’s most tortured moments.

“To be here is a historical duty,” said Pawel Staniszewski, a 22-year-old student milling in the streets outside the funeral Mass. “I feel that we are taking part in a very historic moment and that we needed to come to tell our grandchildren about it.”

An estimated 150,000 mourners jammed the streets around St. Mary’s cathedral, weeping softly and praying rosaries.

Controversy had erupted over the decision to bury Kaczynski in the Wawel, the ancient hilltop cathedral where kings, poets and other beloved Polish heroes have been buried over the centuries. Critics argued that Kaczynski, despite his tragic death, did not deserve the honor. But the complaints, in the end, were ignored.

RevContent Feed

More in News