Tytuł pozycji:
Prawne aspekty położenia mniejszości narodowych na Górnym Śląsku w okresie międzywojennym
This paper discusses the legal situation of German and Polish ethnic minorities in Upper Silesia,
which was divided between Germany and Poland in the wake of uprisings (1919–1921) and the
plebiscite of march 1921. The discussion concentrates on the provisions of the Upper Silesia
Convention (known also as the Geneva Convention) concluded by the German Reich and the
Republic of Poland for fifteen years under the auspices of the League of nations in May 1922.
Emphasis is laid on the main provisions, including the so-called fundamental rights of minorities
(Art. 64–68), which were meant to ensure equal treatment and free development in the spheres
of language, education, religion, etc. to ethnic minorities. The discussion also touché upon other
issues – which were not fully regulated by the Convention – concerning the interpretation of the
term “ethnic minority” at the League of Nations and the other organizations and institutions (Inter-
-Allied Mixed Commission for Upper Silesia), as well as in the prevailing legal opinions in Germany
and Poland at the time. On the example of the views of such jurists as Bruns, Flachtbarth, Walz,
Cybichowski, Kierski and Kostanecki, arguments and controversies are shown which surrounded
the criteria for defining ethnic minorities. Over this matter two views clashed. The first and more
popular held a person to be member of an ethnic minority if he or she expressed their bona fide
will to be counted as one (subjective criterion). The second was based on the assumption of objective
membership in an ethnic minority (criteria of language, religion, culture and tradition). In the
author’s opinion, the Upper Silesia Convention contributed to the reduction of ethnic tensions in
the area where it was enforced.