"Between Stores") broadcast from the Złote Tarasy shopping mall in Warsaw,[8] the program "Bóg w wielkim mieście" (pl.
[12] As part of the "Dobra Fabryka", aid organized by Hołownia reached, among others, residents of Bangladesh, Mauritania, Rwanda, Burkina Faso and Senegal.
[13] The "Kasisi" foundation focuses on running the largest orphanage in Zambia, where more than two hundred children live permanently.
[21] Hołownia announced his candidacy for in the 2020 Polish presidential election on 8 December 2019 from the Gdańsk Shakespeare Theatre.
[22] On 7 February 2020, he issued a manifesto focused on four aspects: national security, environmental protection, solidarity and activity of the local governments.
[24][25] He based his campaign almost entirely on volunteers operating at the local offices in 16 major Polish cities and on assets from a public fundraiser.
[32] Hołownia has expressed support for parliamentary democracy, sovereignty, rule of law, civil society, separation of powers and political pluralism.
[33] He regards the Constitution of Poland as the supreme and indisputable legal act on which the president's conduct is based.
He disapproves of the long-term impacts of the 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis and considers changes in the Judiciary of Poland carried out by Law and Justice to be unconstitutional.
He has suggested handing over hospitals with their revenues to the Voivodeship governments in order to improve the quality and availability of services, as elected councillors would be responsible for them.
[42] Hołownia is opposed to gay marriage, preferring the legalization of same-sex civil unions.
[43] Hołownia is married to Urszula Brzezińska-Hołownia, a Mikoyan MiG-29 jet fighter pilot and a first lieutenant in the Polish Air Force.
[47] In January 2020 he was denied communion by a priest of the Carmelite Church of Warsaw due to his political views; Hołownia denounced the event on Facebook, leading the Archdiocese of Warsaw to issue an official apology, stating that the priest had broken Church regulations.
[49] Hołownia has won the Grand Press award twice: 2006 in the Interview category for his conversation with the theologian, Rev.
Jerzy Szymik, titled "Heaven for pigeons"[50] and in 2007 in the Specialist Journalism category for an interview with the ethicist and philosopher Dr. Kazimierz Szałata.