Kashubian Association

[7][8][9][10] KJ has been advocating for the recognition of Kashubians as an ethnic minority since 2012, but in Poland they officially remain a community using regional language.

[7] In 2012, a member of the Common Commission of the Government and National and Ethnic Minorities, Artur Jablonski, vice-president of KJ, was dismissed following controversy over his activities in the Kashubian Association.

[13] Many articles ideologically compatible with and supporting the aims of KJ are published by the magazine "Skra" ("Skra - pismiono ò kùlturze") - articles on Kashubian history and culture, material in Kashubian language, columns, and news from the region are posted there.

[24] Kaszëbskô Jednota is a partner of the private primary school and kindergarten DEJA CSB, where children are taught, among other things, the Kashubian language.

[27][28][29][30][31][32] The president of the Kashubian-Pomeranian Association, Łukasz Grzędzicki [pl], disagrees that ethnic minority status is necessary or desirable.

Among them were Los Angeles County Assessor Jeff Prang, whose great-grandfathers immigrated from Kashubia and David Shulist, the head of the Wilno Heritage Society and the author of two Kashubian-English-Polish multilingual dictionaries.