Welcome to the home page of father Stanislaw

Stanislaw Barszczak, Poland—An interview—

Some bio-data: As for my personal qualifications, I am a magister of theology (1986) and a licentiate from the philosophy (1991). I’ve been studying contemporary philosophy. I earned the degree of Bachelor of Arts in philosophy. In the year 2006 as a graduate student I went to the University of Silesia in Katowice, Faculty of Social Sciences, (street Bankowa 12, Katowice 40-007), and I was accepted as a doctoral student. I’m going to do my PhD in philosophy in the future. Dissertation supervisor is Mr. Prof. Doctor Piotr Skudrzyk.  I am fluent in different languages also: English, French, Russian, Italian, German and Latin. I prefer to work, I am willingness to travel on whole world. I am a 50 year old. I am currently doing a priest on an Archdiocese House “Święta Puszcza” in Olsztyn near Częstochowa. I’m not afraid of challenges  of modernity and a meeting with the interesting people.  I would ask you to help distribute my books in the entire world. For a moment I wish all of my rejection/frustration writing stories had such a happy ending! Though I run missions by Web mail for aspiring writers. I would like to see you as soon as possible. Let us be of good cheer. I wish you good health and dreams come true. However, we are returning to an interview now. 8. Who would you say has influenced you most? Most has been influence in a negative direction, from human to gossip, the bad experiences of my life and so on.  But much I owe to Thomas Mann, Guy de Maupassant, Witold Gombrowicz, Joseph Conrad, who influenced me the most, in order my courage to write, and in the fact that I dared to write on my own. Then I’d rather fill my writing with people like ourselves. 9. How have your personal experiences influenced your writing? I like to think that my own experience shapes the stories more and more I tell without having myself intruding into them. Throughout my life I have never fitted easily into the societies and positions I found myself in, and rather than change to conform, I have looked with outsider’s eyes to see the cracks in the edifices. I like to think my texts take place within some of those cracks, and show readers something they might never have noticed. 10. When did you start writing? With all the better paying, less competitive professions in the world, why write? You could have started with an easier question. I ask myself this one often at the nadir of the night, usually when I hear of another publishing merger or I get a rejection for a book I thought was a real winner! Why write when everyone in publishing – the publisher, the editor, the printer and even the cleaner gets paid before you and better than you?  I’ve always written.  I wrote my first sickly sweet poem when I was about 13 and I just kept on going (and luckily improving) from there.  The more you write the more you want to write.  It’s an addiction really.  At a time I have watched more than 10 hours television a day for nearly a decade in a mother’s house. Though I’d rather write.  While my mum curls up by the fire to tell something a new, I’m pounding away at the computer keys, writing one.  Other men play tennis, do lunch, and actually have time to get on top of the housework.  I drop the friends off at chapel and have the computer turned on, even before the front door is properly closed. As I mentioned I started the next text in the late 70s and took the first draft to my Professor, then writer-in-residence at Częstochowa. I found out that I needed to learn better control of my imagination and prose when he laughed through all the dramatic bits. I completed my first tale around 1979, a huge historical scene about the arrival of a pope John-Paul II in his country. It only was published in English titled “The long-awaited day”. 11. How did you make the transition from wanting to write to becoming a published writer? After finding out I could plug away through several hundred thousand words and keep my spirits up to complete the tales, I decided to learn more of the craft with short stories and eventually produce a publishable book. I soon came to share the short stories I worked on. At the time I have attended other writing functions, the last with Orhan Pamuk. He taught me the importance of every detail, such as what would or would not be in the character’s sight in every scene of text. After that I joined the best of the writing groups, and have had every novel thoroughly critiqued until they were worthy of showing to the world. I’ve tried to give up.  Really I have.  Lots times in the last decade I’ve looked at the struggling publishing industry and my struggling bank account, and I’ve made a rational, solemn promise to stop writing and get a real job that pays properly and regularly.  And then, an idea comes and I quickly scribble it down just in case, the next day I take it out and just play with it a bit, flesh it out, create a little quirk in that character, tighten up the weak bit of the plot. Suddenly the first draft is all there in your head and it would be a shame not to write it down, then the second draft is really not that much more work and it’s nearly finished, just a bit more polishing.  12. How many books have you written so far? The twelve books published or contracted are “The scarred wound”(February 2004; “The fencer of God”(Mars 2004); “The corn-flowers of the freedom”(May 2005); “The Friend loves always”(January 2006); “The cross and its way”(September 2006); “The Wonderful Month of May”(October 2008); “Another and he. The philosophy of Paul Ricoeur and Emmanuel Levinas”(November 2008); “Petra and the Holy Land”(December 2008); “The view from my window”(May 2009); “Receipts for prosperity and hope”(Mars 2011); “Mission man”(in English, May 2010). They are all published by Regional Teacher Training Centre “WOM” in Czestochowa (www.womczest.edu.pl); Publishing House “Garmond” in Czestochowa (biuro@garmondgroup.com); Prograf Digital Printing Group Sp. Ltd.. (www.prograf-neovision.com.pl). They all feature my courageous and clever male Editor Mr Thomas Ginal , who works to protect the interests of a group of modern people.

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