Anti-communist resistance in Poland | |||||||
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Part of anti-communist resistance in Poland (1944–1989) and anti-communist insurgencies in Central and Eastern Europe | |||||||
"Cursed soldiers" of the anti-communist Polish underground (1947). Photograph from the Solidarność Walcząca archives. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Cursed soldiers | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Units involved | |||||||
...and others | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
20,000 partisans |
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
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10,000 civilians killed |
The anti-communist resistance in Poland, also referred to as the Polish anti-communist insurrection fought between 1944 and 1953, was an anti communist and anti-Soviet armed struggle by the Polish Underground against the Soviet domination of Poland by the Soviet-installed People's Republic of Poland, since the end of World War II in Europe. The guerrilla warfare conducted by the resistance movement formed during the war, included an array of military attacks launched against communist prisons, state security offices, detention facilities for political prisoners, and prison camps set up across the country by the Stalinist authorities.
In January 1945, the pro-Soviet government installed in Poland by the advancing Red Army declared as "illegal" the Polish anti-Nazi resistance movement, principally the Home Army, and ordered its surviving members to come out into the open while guaranteeing them freedom and safety. Many underground fighters decided to lay down their arms and register, but after doing so, most of them were arrested and thrown in prison. Thousands of them were tortured and later deported into the Soviet Gulag camp system, or tried by kangaroo courts and murdered out of sight after extreme beatings (see, the Uroczysko Baran killing fields among similar others). [1] [2] [3]
As a result of repression, Armia Krajowa (AK) members quickly stopped trusting the new government, and some of them regrouped clandestinely to oppose the new Soviet occupiers. They formed various post-AK resistance organisations, such as Wolność i Niezawisłość ("Freedom and Sovereignty"), and liberated hundreds of political prisoners. They became known as the "cursed soldiers" of the Polish underground, and most were eventually captured or killed by the security services and special assassination squads. [4]
On the night of 3–4 January 1944 the advancing Red Army crossed the former eastern border of the Second Polish Republic in the area of Volhynia (near the village of Rokitno). In several months, they pushed the Wehrmacht further west, reaching the line of the Vistula river on 24 July 1944. [5] The Soviet advance stopped short of Warsaw, while the Armia Krajowa attempted to liberate the Polish capital from the Nazis ahead of the Red Army's offensive. The Warsaw Uprising by forces loyal to the Polish government-in-exile in London was crushed after 63 days.
On 22 July 1944, acting upon orders from Moscow, the Polish communists who arrived in the eastern town of Chełm created a pro-Soviet Committee, which became the Provisional Government of the Republic of Poland after re-locating to Lublin. [6] [7]
After moving to Warsaw in January 1945, and with full political control by Stalin and Soviet sponsorship, the communists abandoned the parliamentary system of prewar Poland and ignored the wishes of the Polish people, [8] basing their new government's power solely on the Red Army's occupation of the country. [9]
Meanwhile, acting together under the command of Soviet General Ivan Serov, the forces of the NKVD, SMERSH and the Polish communist secret service (UB), which was modelled on the Soviet secret police, [9] began countrywide operations against the members of the Armia Krajowa and other Polish resistance units loyal to the government-in-exile. Approximately 25,000 underground soldiers, including 300 Home Army officers, were arrested, disarmed, and interned before October 1944. [10] On 15 October 1944, Lavrentiy Beria signed Order No. 0012266/44, which established NKVD Division 64, whose only task was to fight against the Polish resistance. Tens of thousands of Polish partisans were deported to Siberia. Many members of the Polish underground were given the choice between a lengthy prison sentence, and service in the Soviet-run Polish Armed Forces in the East. [11] Faced with an unacceptable choice, and knowing about the grave fate of their own leaders (see: Trial of the Sixteen), thousands of soldiers of the Home Army (which was officially disbanded on 19 January 1945) and other organizations decided to continue fighting for freedom after the end of World War II.
The situation in Poland in the immediate aftermath of World War II has been described as an all-out civil war, [12] or near civil war by many historians, [13] as members of the independence movement carried out numerous attacks on both Soviet and Polish communist offices and institutions. In return, the Stalinist authorities carried out brutal pacifications of partisans and civilians, mass arrests (see: Augustów chase 1945), deportations, as well as executions (see: Mokotów Prison murder, Public execution in Dębica) and many secret assassinations. [12]
The anti-communist movement responded with attacks on NKVD and UB camps, such as the Attack on the NKVD Camp in Rembertów. The underground units often engaged in regular battles with the Soviets and Polish communist forces (see: Battle of Kuryłówka). Resistance units loyal to the Polish government-in-exile did not hesitate to attack even large cities, to free their fellow soldiers kept in various prisons and detention camps across Poland.
In 2007, the Institute of National Remembrance Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation (IPN), published the Atlas of the Independence Underground in Poland 1944–1956, listing scores of armed attacks on communist prisons after World War II, in which hundreds of political prisoners were freed. The most daring assaults were conducted before October 1946.
For a chronological list of anti-Communist operations, please use table-sort buttons.
City or town | Month | Year | Resistance operation with number of prisoners liberated |
---|---|---|---|
Biala Krakowska | May 12 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Biała Podlaska | November 28 | 1944 | 2 political prisoners freed during an attack. |
Biała Podlaska | March 9 | 1945 | 103 political prisoners liberated after an attack. |
Biała Podlaska | May 21 | 1945 | 5 political prisoners were freed after an attack. |
Białystok | May 9 | 1945 | 100 (or so) members of Home Army, National Armed Forces and National Military Organization escaped after the local prison was taken over by them. |
Biłgoraj | February 28 | 1945 | 40 political prisoners liberated after an DSZ unit captured the whole town. |
Biłgoraj | May 27 | 1945 | A failed attempt by DSZ unit at destroying an SB prison. |
Bludek village in southern Lublin Voivodeship | 1945? | An attack on a local camp for political prisoners, by DSZ unit from Tomaszów Lubelski; the camp was captured and burned down, and the NKVD commandant of the camp executed. | |
Brzesko | May | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Brzeziny | September 6 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Brzeziny | May 15 | 1946 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Brzozów | December 13 | 1944 | 11 political prisoners freed after a local prison was captured by a Home Army unit. |
Dąbrowa Tarnowska | May 8–9 | 1945 | 80 (or so) political prisoners were freed after an independence unit took control of the town and the prison. |
Grajewo | May 8–9 (night of) | 1945 | 100 (or so) political prisoners were liberated after several independence resistance units seized the whole town, killing 2 NKVD agents and 2 UB agents. |
Grojec | November 21 | 1945 | A failed attack on a prison, in which 2 UB agents were killed. |
Hrubieszów | December 19 | 1944 | 12 Home Army soldiers kept in a local prison were freed by their own unit. |
Hrubieszów | May 27–28 | 1945 | Acting together, DSZ and Ukrainian UPA units captured the whole town, burning down local prison and killing 5 NKVD agents. |
Janów Lubelski | April 27 | 1945 | 15 political prisoners liberated after an DSZ unit seized the town. |
Jaworzno | October | 1945 | A failed attack on the Central Labour Camp Jaworzno. |
Kępno | November 22–23 | 1945 | A local prison was captured, 5 UB agents and a Red Army soldier killed. |
Kielce | August 4–5 | 1945 | 354 political prisoners liberated; 3 UB agents and a soldier of the Red Army killed after the unit under Antoni Heda took control of the city. |
Koźmin | September 1 | 1945 | A local prison was destroyed. |
Koźmin | October 10–11 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Kozienice | May 5–6 | 1945 | 8 political prisoners freed, and a Red Army soldier killed after an independence underground unit took control of the town. |
Kraków | August 18 | 1946 | 64 political prisoners freed after a local prison was captured. |
Krasnystaw | November 22 | 1944 | 5 Home Army soldiers kept in a local prison, liberated by their fellow companions. |
Krotoszyn | August 24 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Limanowa | April 17 | 1945 | 13 political prisoners were freed after a local prison was captured. |
Łomża | May 21 | 1945 | A local prison was destroyed, 2 UB agents were killed. |
Łowicz | March 8 | 1945 | 73 political prisoners were freed after a local prison was captured by the former Home Army unit. |
Łuków | January 24 | 1946 | 27 political prisoners liberated after a Freedom and Independence unit captured the town and the prison; 3 UB agents killed. |
Maków Mazowiecki | May 1 | 1945 | 42 political prisoners freed and 8 UB agents killed after an attack on a local prison. |
Miechów | April 25–2 | 1945 | A local prison was destroyed. |
Mława | June 3 | 1945 | An attack on a local prison in which unknown number of political prisoners was freed and 3 UB agents killed. |
Nowy Sącz | April | 1946 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Nowy Targ | April 17–18 | 1945 | A local prison destroyed by the unit under Józef Kuraś, 4 UB agents killed. |
Ostrów Wielkopolski | September 2 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Pabianice | June 10 | 1945 | 10 political prisoners were freed after a local prison was captured. |
Pińczów | June 3–4 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison, 1 UB agent killed. |
Piotrków Trybunalski | June 17 | 1945 | An attack on a detention camp for the Home Army soldiers; the camp was captured and destroyed and 5 UB agents killed. |
Przemyśl | May 14–15 | 1945 | 58 persons escaped after the arrested soldiers of the Home Army took control of the prison. |
Przeworsk | May 15 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Puławy | April 24 | 1945 | 117 political prisoners were freed, and 7 UB agents killed. |
Rabka | December 11 | 1945 | A local prison was captured, 1 UB agent killed. |
Radom | September 9 | 1945 | 300 (or so) political prisoners were liberated, 2 Red Army soldiers and one UB agent killed. |
Radomsko | April 19–20 | 1946 | 5 political prisoners were freed after the town was captured and a local prison destroyed. |
Radzyń | Dec. 31 – Jan. 1 | 1945–46 | A failed attack on the prison, carried out by the Freedom and Independence unit. |
Rembertów | May 20–21 | 1945 | 800–1400 men were liberated after an attack on NKVD prison camp (for more information, see: Attack on the NKVD Camp in Rembertów). |
Rozwadów | February 3 | 1946 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Rzeszów | October 7–8 | 1944 | A failed attack on a prison located in Rzeszów Castle made by a Home Army unit under Colonel Łukasz Ciepliński. Home Army lost 2 men, Red Army also 2, Milicja Obywatelska – 2 as well. |
Sandomierz | March 10 | 1945 | 100 (or so) political prisoners broke free from the local prison. |
Sokołów Podlaski | October | 1944 | A failed Home Army attack on a local prison. |
Szamotuły | June 7–8 | 1945 | 2 political prisoners were freed after a local prison was captured. |
Szczyrk | July 19 | 1945 | A failed attempt to capture a local prison. |
Tarnobrzeg | November 2 | 1944 | 15 Home Army soldiers freed from local prison by a Home Army unit. |
Tarnów | July 1 | 1945 | 35 political prisoners were liberated after a local prison was captured. |
Węgrów | May 17–18 | 1945 | 2 political prisoners freed after an attack on a local prison. |
Włodawa | October 22 | 1946 | 100 (or so) political prisoners were freed after a local prison was captured. |
Włoszczowa | April 22 | 1945 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Wyrzysk | May 24 | 1946 | 43 political prisoners were liberated, and 1 UB security agent killed after a local prison was captured. |
Zakopane | February 1 | 1946 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Zakopane | October 13 | 1946 | A failed attack on a local prison. |
Zamość | July 22 | 1944 | 18 Home Army soldiers kept in a local prison were freed by their fellow companions. |
Zamość | October 7 | 1944 | 34 Home Army soldiers kept in a local prison were freed by their own unit. |
Zamość | May 8 | 1946 | 301 political prisoners were freed after an attack carried out by the Freedom and Independence unit. |
City or town | Month | Year | Resistance operation with number of prisoners liberated |
In 2001 the Polish Parliament (Sejm) passed a resolution recognizing the merits of underground organizations and groups fighting for Poland's sovereignty after World War II. The resolution acknowledged their unequal struggle against the Soviet takeover of Poland and paid tribute to the fallen and murdered soldiers and the imprisoned members of all organizations that were persecuted by the postwar communist authorities. This was the first official recognition of such magnitude intended to honour the fighters of the armed anti-communist underground. [14] The bill was signed into law by President Bronisław Komorowski on 9 February 2011 and published in the Poland's Dziennik Ustaw Nr 32 / 160 on 15 February 2011. [15] The National Day of Remembrance of the "cursed soldiers" is now commemorated every year in Poland on 1 March.
The original request to establish the Day of Remembrance was submitted in 2009 by Polish war veterans' organizations, including the World Union of Home Army Soldiers (Światowy Związek Żołnierzy Armii Krajowej) and the Association of Soldiers of the National Armed Forces (Związek Żołnierzy Narodowych Sił Zbrojnych). The initiative was backed by local authorities and parliamentary groupings including Poland's two main political parties, Civic Platform and Law and Justice. The legislative initiative for the enactment of the new national holiday was taken in 2010 by the late President Lech Kaczyński. [16]
The novel Ashes and Diamonds by Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Wajda's dramatization of the book, are devoted to the bloody events in Poland in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, depicting an operation by anti-communist resistance fighters to assassinate a commissar. [17]
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)The Home Army was the dominant resistance movement in German-occupied Poland during World War II. The Home Army was formed in February 1942 from the earlier Związek Walki Zbrojnej established in the aftermath of the German and Soviet invasions in September 1939. Over the next two years, the Home Army absorbed most of the other Polish partisans and underground forces. Its allegiance was to the Polish government-in-exile in London, and it constituted the armed wing of what came to be known as the Polish Underground State. Estimates of the Home Army's 1944 strength range between 200,000 and 600,000. The latter number made the Home Army not only Poland's largest underground resistance movement but, along with Soviet and Yugoslav partisans, one of Europe's largest World War II underground movements.
Ostrów Mazowiecka is a town in eastern Poland with 23,486 inhabitants (2004). It is the capital of Ostrów Mazowiecka County in Masovian Voivodeship.
The Polish Underground State[a] was a single political and military entity formed by the union of resistance organizations in occupied Poland that were loyal to the Government of the Republic of Poland in exile in London. The first elements of the Underground State were established in the final days of the German and Soviet invasion of Poland, in late September 1939. The Underground State was perceived by supporters as a legal continuation of the pre-war Republic of Poland that waged an armed struggle against the country's occupying powers: Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. The Underground State encompassed not only military resistance, one of the largest in the world,[b] but also civilian structures, such as justice, education, culture and social services.
The People's Army was a communist partisan force of the Polish Workers' Party (PPR) active in Occupied Poland during World War II from January to July 1944. It was created on the order of the Soviet-backed State National Council to fight against Nazi Germany and support the Red Army against the German forces in Poland.
Peasant Battalions was a Polish resistance movement, guerrilla and partisan organisation, during World War II. The organisation was created in mid-1940 by the agrarian political party People's Party and by 1944 was partially integrated with the Armia Krajowa. At its height, in summer 1944 the organisation had 160,000 members.
Zygmunt Szendzielarz was the commander of the Polish 5th Wilno Brigade of the Home Army and after the Second World War fought against the Red Army. The unit also committed the Dubingiai massacre, murdering hundreds of Lithuanian civilians on 23 June 1944.
The Ministry of Public Security, was the secret police, intelligence and counter-espionage agency operating in the Polish People's Republic. From 1945 to 1954 it was known as the Security Office, and from 1956 to 1990 as the Security Service.
In Poland, the resistance movement during World War II was led by the Home Army. The Polish resistance is notable among others for disrupting German supply lines to the Eastern Front, and providing intelligence reports to the British intelligence agencies. It was a part of the Polish Underground State.
Freedom and Independence Association was a Polish underground anticommunist organisation founded on September 2, 1945, and active until 1952.
Aleksander Krzyżanowskinom de guerre "Wilk" was an artillery colonel of the Polish Army, officer of the Service for Poland's Victory, Union of Armed Struggle, commander of the Vilnius District of the Home Army, political prisoner of the Stalinist period. In 1994 he was posthumously promoted to the rank of brigade general.
The Augustów roundup was a military operation against the Polish World War II anti-communist partisans and sympathizers following the Soviet takeover of Poland. The operation was undertaken by Soviet forces with the assistance of Polish collaborationist units, and conducted from July 10 to July 25, 1945, in Suwałki and Augustów region of northern Polish People's Republic.
The "cursed soldiers" or "indomitable soldiers" were a heterogeneous array of anti-Soviet-imperialist and anti-communist Polish resistance movements formed in the later stages of World War II and in its aftermath by members of the Polish Underground State. The above terms, introduced in the early 1990s, reflect the stance of many of the diehard soldiers.
Anti-communist resistance in Poland can be divided into two types: the armed partisan struggle, mostly led by former Armia Krajowa and Narodowe Siły Zbrojne soldiers, which ended in the late 1950s, and the non-violent, civil resistance struggle that culminated in the creation and victory of the Solidarity trade union.
On May 21, 1945, a unit of the Polish Home Army, led by Colonel Edward Wasilewski, attacked a Soviet NKVD camp located in Rembertów in the eastern outskirts of Warsaw. Hundreds of Polish citizens had been imprisoned there, including members of the Home Army and other members of the underground resistance. Prisoners at the camp were being systematically deported to Siberia. As a result of the attack, all of the Polish political prisoners were freed from the camp by the pro-independence resistance.
Łukasz Ciepliński was a Polish soldier who fought in the Polish anti-Nazi and anti-communist resistance movements. He used various aliases: Pług, Ostrowski, Ludwik, Grzmot, and Bogdan. Ciepliński was executed at Mokotów Prison in Warsaw, with a shot to the back of the head by the Polish secret police, Urząd Bezpieczeństwa.
Józef Batory was a Polish soldier and resistance fighter during World War II and after.
Kąkolewnica is a village in Radzyń Podlaski County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina called Gmina Kąkolewnica. It lies approximately 18 kilometres (11 mi) north of Radzyń Podlaski and 77 km (48 mi) north of the regional capital Lublin.
Marian Bernaciak was a lieutenant in the Polish Army, a member of ZWZ and the Home Army, a major and a legendary leader of an underground partisan unit of WiN in the Lublin region.
Władysław Gurgacz was a Polish Catholic priest, member of the Society of Jesus, and chaplain of the anti-communist underground.
The Uroczysko Baran killing fields, often referred to in Poland as the "Little Katyn" or the "Second Katyn", was the location for secret executions of soldiers and officers of the Polish Underground State, Home Army, and Second Army of Ludowe Wojsko Polskie carried out by Communist forces on behalf of the NKVD, SMERSH, and PUBP in the later stages of World War II.