1987: Jacek Lazar condemned

On this date in 1987, according to the sentence read to him in the climactic scene of The Decalogue no. 5,* Jacek Lazar was condemned to hang for the senseless murder of a taxi driver. (“Lazar” was fictional, but he had a real-life inspiration.)

The movie, plainly reflecting the director’s opposition to the death penalty, is the most overtly political of Krzysztof Kieslowski‘s ten-film cycle exploring the themes of the Ten Commandments. But it is far from tendentious.

The supposed date of the actual execution, depicted here, is not identified.

If one credits the dates, this hanging would be among the last performed in Poland. After April 1988, death sentences were no longer carried out, and Poland formally abolished the death penalty in the late 90’s — thanks in no small part to this film.

* Or Dekalog, per its Polish rendering. This particular installation of the series is also referred to as “A Short Film About Killing”.

On this day..

4 thoughts on “1987: Jacek Lazar condemned

  1. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 10 executions that defined the 1980s

  2. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1988: Stanislaw Czabanski, the last in Poland

  3. Thanks for highlighting one of the greatest achievements in film making – Kieslowski’s Decalogue. The interrelationship of all people – including people who have never met eachother – has never been better illustrated. The powerful clip you have chosen of the execution perfectly underlines the stated purpose of this blog: “arresting view of the human condition across time and circumstance from the parlous vantage of the scaffold.”

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