Bronisław Laus


Bronisław Laus (Bronislovas Liausas, born January 1, 1872 in Subocz or Popielany near Rakiszek, November 1, 1941 in Kaunas) - Polish Roman Catholic priest, activist of the Polish minority in pre-war Lithuania, 1920-1923 to the Sejm of the Republic of Lithuania. Curriculum vitae He attended a German grammar school in Mitra, after graduating in 1888 he began studying at the Kaunas seminary, which he continued after 1892 at the St. Petersburg Academy of theology.

In 1895, he was ordained priest. A year later he returned to Lithuania and took up the post of teacher at the Kaunas seminar held until 1920.

In independent Lithuania he became the editor of the Polish-language "The Thatched Family" (after 1923 renamed the "Family Chat"), and after 1925 he was head of the editorial team of the "Christmas Bell". engaged in parliamentary activities. In 1920 he was elected to the Lithuanian Legislative Sejm of Kaunas. At the Lithuanian legislative session on July 6, 1921, he was publicly named by Father Krupavičius, a similar member of the Democratic Caucus, who endowed the entire Polish minority in Lithuania ( lice of our Lithuanian people). Having beaten Snielewski and throwing a chair in Fr. Laus by the pope Jonas Bildušas on the same day Polish deputies decided to withdraw from the Sejm until the end of the term in October 1922.

In the years 1930-1936 he worked as a teacher at the Kaunas Gymnasium in Gniezno. Adam Mickiewicz. Bibliography Bibliography

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