The Constitution of 3 May 1791 is considered one of the most important achievements in the history of Poland, despite being in effect for only a year, until the Russo-Polish War of 1792. Historian Norman Davies calls it "the first constitution of its type in Europe"; other scholars also refer to it as the world's second oldest constitution.[a][1][2][3][4]
The memory of the 3 May Constitution—recognised by political scientists as a very progressive document for its time—for generations helped keep alive Polish aspirations for an independent and just society, and continued to inform the efforts of its authors' descendants.[6] In Poland it is viewed as a national symbol, and the culmination of all that was good and enlightened in Polish history and culture.[6]
3 May was first declared a holiday on 5 May 1791, and celebrated a year later, on 3 May 1792.[9][10] Banned during the partitions of Poland, it was celebrated in the Duchy of Warsaw in 1807, and unofficially in Congress Poland by various pro-independence activists, more openly during the times of insurrections, such as the November Uprising.[9][10][11] It was again made an official Polish holiday in April 1919 under the Second Polish Republic—the first holiday officially introduced in the Second Polish Republic.[7] The 3 May holiday was banned once more during World War II by the Nazi and Soviet occupiers. It was celebrated in the Polish cities in May 1945, although in a mostly spontaneous manner.[7] The celebrations were officially canceled shortly before 3 May 1946, and the anti-communist demonstrations took place later that day.[7] This, along with competition with the communist-endorsed 1 May Labor Day celebrations, meant that the authorities of the Polish People's Republic disapproved of the Constitution Day and forbade celebrations thereof.[7][9][10] In 1947 it was officially rebranded Democratic Party Day and removed from the list of national holidays in 1951 . [9] Until 1989, 3 May was a common day for anti-government and anti-communist protests.[7] 3 May was restored as an official Polish holiday in April 1990, after the fall of communism.[9] In 2007, 3 May was also declared a Lithuanian national holiday; the first joint celebration by the Polish Sejm and the Lithuanian Seimas took place on 3 May 2007.[12]
The holiday has been a focal point of ethnic celebrations of Polish-American pride in the Chicago area, where it is known as Polish Constitution Day, since 1892.[15]Poles in Chicago have continued this tradition to the present day, marking it with festivities and the annual Polish Constitution Day Parade; guests of national stature, most notably Bobby Kennedy, have attended over the years as a way to ingratiate themselves with Chicago Polonia.[15][16] In Minnesota, first celebrations date to the 1870s.[17] In San Francisco, the anniversary of the May 3rd Constitution has been observed annually for decades in the Music Concourse at Golden Gate Park.[18] In Buffalo, NY there is a Polish Happy Hour Buffalo event held every 3 May at the Adam Mickiewicz Library. There is free admission, free Polish food, Polish music played, and a reading of the preamble of the Polish Constitution in English and in Polish.[19]
a^ The claims of "first" and "second constitution" have been disputed. Indeed, both documents in question (US and Polish constitutions) were preceded by earlier ones, including those also labelled as constitutions, e.g., the Corsican Constitution of 1755.*[20] See History of the constitution for more information.
^ abcdef(in Polish) Rafał Kowalczyk and Łukasz Kamiński, Zakazane święta PRLu, Polskie Radio Online, 3 May 2008. Retrieved on 4 July 2011 (from the Internet Archive)