Localized version for HindiSignificant community costअंग्रेजी देखें

Poland

Strongly Catholic by identification (~85%) but practicing rate has fallen rapidly especially in cities and among under-30s after the abuse revelations of the late 2010s and early 2020s.

Localized version for English

Poland is the country where the Catholic Church’s public role has been most intact in continental Europe, and where the cracks have started to widen visibly in the last decade. The 2019 documentary "Tylko nie mów nikomu" ("Tell No One") laid out the abuse-cover-up problem in stark detail, the youth movement of 2020 around the abortion ruling pushed the church into political opposition with much of the under-35 population, and weekly Mass attendance among young Polish Catholics has fallen further and faster than anywhere else in the EU.

The Polish family is still Catholic in a way that Western European Catholic families mostly are not. Sunday Mass with the parents. First communion as a major family event. The priest at funerals and weddings as a non-negotiable. For Polish people deconstructing now, the family pressure is significantly higher than in Italy or Spain, and the public political backdrop — with the Church openly involved in elections, schools, and law — makes the leaving feel charged in a way it does not in countries where the Church is just a personal practice.

The pillar page on Catholicism and the page on family shunning will fit many Polish readers. The page on holidays will be especially relevant given how much of Polish family life still organizes around the Catholic calendar.

Poland — Elder X | Rage 2 Rebuild