Background
Tischner was born in Stary Sącz to a Góral family and grew up in the village Łopuszna in the south east of Poland.
philosopher priest university professor
Tischner was born in Stary Sącz to a Góral family and grew up in the village Łopuszna in the south east of Poland.
He studied at Jagiellonian University in KrakóWest
The first chaplain of the trade union, "Solidarity" (Polish Solidarność), he was an exceptional moral authority and one of the most admired figures in Poland, both during and after the anti-communist uprising. In the 1970s he became an important writer of the opposition movement against the communist dictatorship of the People"s Republic of Poland. In 1980s he was considered the semi-official chaplain of the Solidarity movement, and was praised by Pope John Paul World War II Tischner remains a controversial figure to the Polish right-wing and Catholic episcopacy.
He frequently criticized Polish religiousness by calling it as flat (shallow) as a pancake, he also accused the Polish clergy of being extremely conservative, engaged in politics and anti-Semitic.
Fellow of Collegium Invisibile as a professor of philosophy. He died in Krakow on June 28, 2000.
After the fall of communism in 1989, he continued preaching the importance of ethics in the new capitalist Poland.