Piotr Farfał

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Piotr Grzegorz Farfał (born 18 May 1978 in Głogów) is a Polish rightwing Politician of the League of Polish Families and former President of the Polish national TV network TVP.[1]

Biography

Farfał studied law at the University of Szczecin and at the College of Banking in Wrocław. He was active in the nationalist All-Polish Youth and the National Revival of Poland.[2][3] As a student he wrote for the right-wing newspapers "Front" and "Szczerbiec" (The Sword).[1] However, when the Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza described him as a "former neo-Nazi", Farfał sued, only to have his lawsuit thrown out by a local court.[4]

In May 2006 Farfał became a supervisory board member and vice-president of the state-run TV network TVP,[1] and was appointed president in January 2009. After assuming office he cancelled a contract financing the biopic The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler, on the life of Irena Sendler who had helped save thousands of Jewish children during the Holocaust.[3] In protest the French-German TV network Arte suspended cooperation with TVP,[3] considering Farfał's views "incompatible with Arte’s philosophy based on intercultural exchange",[5] and stating that "the party that TVP's chairman is presently connected with does not share European values."[6]

A number of Polish public media figures, including film directors Agnieszka Holland and Andrzej Wajda, subsequently appealed to the public to boycott TVP on Polish Constitution day, 3 May 2009.[3][7][8]

Works

  • Myśleć po polsku ("Thinking Polish")[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.