
A film depicting Polish clerics as corrupt, drunken fornicators and paedophiles is smashing box office records in Poland, sparking controversy and encouraging hundreds of people to come forward with allegations of recent and historical abuse.
Based on real events, Kler (The Clergy), by the director Wojciech Smarzowski, which includes testimonies of survivors, features an alcoholic priest who encourages his lover to have an abortion, a priest accused of abusing a young boy, a senior cleric engaged in corruption and blackmail, and a grotesque, foul-mouthed archbishop cutting deals with politicians and mobsters, all operating with impunity against the backdrop of a passive and credulous society portrayed as complicit in the crimes being committed.
The film broke Polish box office records on its opening weekend , and has been seen by almost 3 million people since its release at the end of September.
The release came a few weeks after a landmark court decision in Poznań, north-west Poland, against a religious order. The judge ruled that the order bore responsibility for the fate of a girl, then 13, who was abducted and repeatedly raped over 10 months by one of its priests, and that it would have to pay hundreds of thousands of pounds in damages. The priest was arrested in 2008 and served four years in prison, but was removed from the order only last year.
This month, there was outrage when a conservative commentator said of the survivor “even whores don’t earn so well”, and that the priest had only “put his hand up her skirt”. She is taking legal action.
Some members of the Polish clergy and its supporters have reacted angrily to Kler and the growing pressure on the church, dismissing the film as “vulgar clergyphobia”. Gazeta Polska, a rightwing newspaper, reproduced the film poster on billboards across Poland with the images of national heroes including Fr Jerzy Popiełuszko, who was murdered by communist security services in the 1980s, and Fr Maximilian Kolbe, who volunteered to die in place of another inmate at Auschwitz. The poster reads: “The clergy: our treasure in the fight against Nazism, communism, LGBT and Islamists.”
My report for the Guardian can be found here.