WARSAW - A leading Catholic priest in Poland, where the late Polish Pope John Paul II championed resistance under communism, said yesterday he had for 24 years spied on dissidents and clerics for communist secret services.
Allegations against Michal Czajkowski, a respected figure known for his work on Catholic-Jewish relations, were first published by a newspaper in May. But the priest had rejected them until now.
"I want to apologise and ask for forgiveness, especially for those whom I have hurt. There is no doubt about my guilt," Czajkowski wrote in a statement.
"I have already expressed my regret towards God. Now I am doing it towards people."
Czajkowski, an associate of John Paul who was succeeded last year by Pope Benedict, was a willing agent who reported about pro-democratic activities of his fellow clerics, according to the National Remembrance Institute, which oversees communist-era files.
Czajkowski's past is an embarrassment for a Polish church still coming to terms with the full role it played under communism.
The church supported the pro-democracy Solidarity movement, but up to 10 per cent of its members may have at the same time co-operated with communist authorities, historians say.
The church has refused to make public names of clerics who co-operated with communist services.
John Paul's first visit as Pope to then-communist Poland in 1979 drew millions onto the streets and inspired Poles to challenge their communist rulers.
He was widely seen as a major influence behind the rise a year later of Solidarity, which won power in 1989 and helped bring about the fall of communism in the entire Soviet bloc.
- REUTERS
Leading Polish priest admits spying for communists
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