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Polish & Slavic Federal Credit Union (PSFCU) is a federally insured, federally-chartered, credit union with over 108,000 primary members, serving over 120,000 people. PSFCU has 21 branches in New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Pennsylvania. PSFCU is the largest ethnic credit union in the United States. [1] [2] [3]
Slavic Union (Polish: Związek Słowiański; ZS) is an ethnic nationalist political party in Poland founded on 3 August 2006 (derived from an association of the same name founded on 6 July 2004). Its chairman was Włodzimierz Rynkowski until 2018, becoming chairman again in 2022.
Edvard Beneš, leader of the Czechoslovak government in exile Władysław Sikorski, leader of the Polish government in exile. Czechoslovak politicians Hodža and Jan Masaryk both wanted a confederation, [6] Beneš was more lukewarm; his goal was to ensure that the disputed Trans-Olza territory that had passed to Poland in the aftermath of the Munich Agreement was regained by Czechoslovakia, [2 ...
Slavic Union may refer to: Slavic Union (Poland) , an ethnic nationalist Russophile Polish political party founded in 2006 Slavic Union (Russia) , a Russian neo-Nazi organization banned in 2010
Slavic Union Związek Słowiański: ZS Zbigniew Adamczyk: Economic nationalism Russophilia Anti-Americanism [47] Minor party founded in 2006 that wants to reorient Polish foreign policy - it advocates for leaving the EU and pursuing closer relations with Russia and Belarus instead. [47]
The Polish Union was a Christian-democratic and a centre-right party. It identified with Political Catholicism and argued that the Polish state should take a protective role towards the Catholic Church, protecting it from anti-clerical policies as well as unfair ideological attacks.
Polish people are the sixth-largest national group in the European Union (EU). [74] Estimates vary depending on source, though available data suggest a total number of around 60 million people worldwide (with roughly 18-20 million living outside of Poland, many of whom are not of Polish descent, but are Polish nationals). [ 75 ]
As Polish historian Andrzej Nowak wrote, while there were occasional contacts between Poles and Russians before that, it was the Polish union with Lithuania which brought pro-Western Catholic Poland and Orthodox Russia into a real, constant relation with both states engaged in "the contest for the political, strategic and civilizational ...