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Dr. Jakub Basista [email protected] Political and Social History of CEE in 20th Century Meeting 7. (25.10.2016) The Second World War – Poland. Part I – domestic problems. 1939 April 16 – Soviet Alliance Proposal with Britain and France. The Soviet government approached the British and French governments with an alliance proposal to stem German aggression in Eastern Europe. April 28 – German Renunciation of Anglo-German Naval Treaty of 1935. In a speech in the Reichstag, Chancellor Adolf Hitler officially renounced the Anglo-German Naval Treaty of 1935, which had restricted the German navy to one-third the size of the Royal Navy, as well as the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact of 1934, accusing the British and Polish governments of attempting to "encircle" Germany. August 20-September – The Danzig-Polish Crisis. After months of agitation and recrimination between the Polish and German governments, and a number of border incidents between the two countries, the long-expected crisis came to a head when Albert Forster, the National Socialist leader in Danzig, proclaimed that the hour of deliverance was at hand. August 20 – Soviet-German Trade Agreement. The world was shocked when the German and Soviet governments announced a trade agreement between the two states. Both countries had been mortal enemies ideologically and the conclusion of a trade agreement caught the world unaware. August 22 – British Support for Poland. The Chamberlain government publicly renewed Britain's pledge to Poland, but also appealed to the German government for a truce to stave off a war. The British were willing to negotiate German claims in return for peace in Eastern Europe. August 23 – Belgian Appeal for Peace August 24 – U.S. Arbitration Proposal August 24 – Anglo-Polish Mutual Assistance Pact .The British parliament met in a special session and voted the Chamberlain government almost dictatorial powers to deal with the Danzig-Polish crisis. At the same time, British and Polish representatives signed a mutual assistance pact. The British government wanted to demonstrate its support of Poland to deter a German invasion and the Polish government began to call up reserves. The September Campaign Nazis – total military campaign; Nazi armies did not make any differentiation between the military and civilians. Air attacks were directed both at army groups, but also fugitives fleeing towards the east. Hospitals, schools, factories were bombed. Civilians were arrested and shot on spot. Nazi planes bombed over 160 towns and town districts. 476 villages were burnt to ground. In some centres 50-70% of all buildings were destroyed. In the defence of Warsaw 6 thousand soldiers and 10 thousand civilians were killed. Soviets – it is extremely hard to determine the real size of destruction. Soviet army did not apply total warfare. On the other hand they opened the possibility of revenge and plunder on behalf of the local Byelorussian and Ukrainian peasants. Thousands of people were interned and arrested. Army losses: on west front – 67,000 dead, 134,000 wounded, 420-580,000 taken prisoner (40,000 in Hungary; 30,000 in Romania; 14,000 in Lithuania; 1,500 in Latvia). It is estimated that 250,000 soldiers were taken prisoner by the Red Army (18,000 officers). 28/29 September – division of Polish territories in Nazi-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Borders (Germany 187 Th. Sq. Km.; Soviet Union 192 Th. Sq. Km.; Lithuania 8 Th. Sq. Km.; Slovakia 752 Sq. Km.) Occupied Poland 8 Oct. 1939 part of Polish territory incorporated into III Reich; General Government formed (12 Oct.) III Reich Germanisation; elimination of “Polish Leading Elements” Terror Extermination of Jews and Roma in the first stage Expelling from III Reich to General Government (close to 1 mln.) “Sonderaction Krakau” – 6 November 1939 (arrest of 183 Polish Professors) Executions Attempts to get rid of Polish culture and educated elite; elimination of ALL POLISH SOCIAL and CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS. Confiscation (i.e. robbery) of objects of art. JEWS 1939 – forming of the first ghetto in Piotrkow Trybunalski 1940 April – Łódź (200 thousand) 1940 Sept. – opening of ghetto in Warsaw (360-450 thousand) 1941 – opening of ghetto in Krakow Soviet Union Terror against educated and wealthy Poles Favouring local peasants/poor population Imprisonment of Polish soldiers, civic population – mass transports Eastwards “Elections” to new local authorities in October Execution of Polish officers in Katyn, Charkow, Miednoye – about 15 thousand (April 1940) Polish officers murdered in cold blood – shot at the back of their heads Nationalisation of industry (all companies employing over 40 people) NAZI EXTERMINATION POLICY Sonderaktion Krakau - 6 Nov. 1939 - An operation directed against Polish professors and academics. On November 6 Obersturmbannfuhrer SS Bruno Muller ordered university professors to attend a lecture. When 144 of them were present in room 56 of Collegium Novum, no lecture was given, but they were arrested and – together with a group of professors from other universities – taken to Sachsenhausen and Dachau concentration camps. 183 in all. 101 were released due to bad health upon loud international protest. 15 died in camps and another 5 on the day of release. Catholic University in Lublin - 11 Nov. 1939 - 14 professors arrested May,June 1940 - over ten thousand Poles arrested and sent to concentration camps 14 June 1940 - first transport arrives in Auschwitz (only Poles) Nazi policy against the Catholic Church - all priests’ seminars were closed Educational and cultural policy towards Poles. AB Action, Ausserordentliche Befriedungsaktion July 1940 A Nazi action carried out between May and July 1940 by the police and secret police intended at extermination of Polish intellectual elite. An estimate 3,500 people were murdered as a result of the action (politicians, teachers, priests, artists, writers). 16 April 1942 – “Plastyków” coffee shop action A Nazi action directed against artists in the Kraków artists’ coffee shop on Łobzowska street. In all 168 eminent artists were arrested (both in the coffee shop and in other places in Kraków) and sent to KL Auschwitz. On May 27th all 168 were executed in the camp. Gestapo and NKVD cooperation 27 September 1939 – Brest on Bug – discussion of methods to cut any attempt of opposition under the occupation. November 1939 – Przemyśl – devoted to the exchange of political prisoners and methods of extermination of civilian population. February 1940 – Zakopane – final protocol stated, that the Polish population should be exterminated by 1975. (This is a hypothesis which can be found on the web. No sources are available to verify this statement.) March 1940 – Kraków Auschwitz and other Concentration/extermination camps Ever since the beginning of WW II, Nazis sent political prisoners to special concentration camps, often connected with labor camps. Similar policy was carried out by Soviets. In course of the occupation Nazi methods became crueler, larger numbers of accidentally rounded up people ended in concentration camps. When “final Solution” of the Jewish question was proclaimed, concentration camps became extermination camps with special gas chambers and furnaces to burn the bodies of the killed. Jews First ghetto organized in Piotrków Trybunalski in October 1939. 1940/41 - about 300 ghettos and 200 camps for Jews are organized in General Government October 1940 - biggest ghetto organized in Warsaw May 1943 - facing the regular and systematic extermination of Jews, an uprising breaks out in the Warsaw ghetto 85-89% of Polish Jews were murdered on Polish territory during WW II SOVIET EXTERMINATION POLICY Terror, Sovietization and Russification. March 1940 - 18,622 prisoners in NKVD prisons (10,685 Poles) June 1941 - number grows to 39,653 September 1939-June 1941 - according to NKVD 107,140 people were arrested (40% Poles; 23% Ukrainians; 22% Jews; 8% Byelorussians) 1939-41 - an assumption is made that 30-40,000 Poles were detained in labor camps deportations - according to Andrzej L. Sowa, the number of deported into USSR did not pass the Soviet data speaking about 325,000 Polish citizens (210,000 Poles) deported 5 March 1940 - decision is taken that 14,700 Polish p.o.w. will be executed along with 11,000 other Poles (at least 21,857 were murdered). KATYŃ A place of mass murder of Poles by NKVD. An estimated 21000 Polish officers of the reserve were murdered in cold blood by Soviet secret forces most probably in April 1940. Katyn, as a place discovered first, became a synonym, a key-word for the Soviet crimes against the Polish intelligentsia during World War II. Of course many more thousands perished in other places: Kharkiv, Kalinin, Gnezdovo and many Soviet concentration and labor camps. USSR denied having committed the crime until 1990, when Boris Yeltsin handed documents concerning crime to Lech Wałęsa. Until today Russian authorities deny this massacre to be manslaughter, Stalinist, or genocide. Russians also do not want any investigation to be carried out and fail to provide any documents referring to the massacre. POLISH UNDERGROUND STATE 1939/1940 at least 150 underground organizations formed (mostly in GG, much more difficult in Germany and Soviet Union) September/October – forming of Służba Zwycięstwu Polski (SZP) December/January 1940 – SZP changed into Związek Walki Zbrojnej (ZWZ) under the command of Polish government in France 1940 June – ZWZ headquarters transferred to occupied Poland 24 February – Political representation Polityczny Komitet Porozumiewawczy called to life (changes into Krajowa Rada Polityczna in March 1943 and next to Rada Jedności Narodowej in 1944. Civic underground administration 1941 Following Hitler’s attack on Soviet Union, all pre-war Poland comes under Nazi rule. Groups of Polish, Ukrainian, Lithuanian population welcome/back Nazis against Soviet occupation (question of Jedwabne). August – pro-Soviet Kościuszko radio formed in Soviet Union broadcasting to occupied Poland December – Grupa Inicjatywna (the Initiative Group) of Polish Communists lands in occupied Poland – Nowotko, Mołojec, Finder 1942 5 January – forming of Polska Partia Robotnicza (PPR) – Polish Workers’ Party – changes the political situation in occupied Poland – so far Communists had no representation January – “Final solution “ announced (Endlosung der Judenfrage) 15 August – Armia Krajowa (200,000 soldiers) August-September – beginning of the liquidation of Jewish ghettos 27 September – forming of Żegota – Committee for Helping Jews 1943 January-June – forming of Związek Patriotów Polskich in Moscow (1 March) February – talks in occupied Poland between PPR and London underground 12/13 April – Nazi propaganda announces the discovery of Katyn mass tombs May – forming of Peoples’ Polish Army (Ludowe Wojsko Polskie) in USSR April-May – uprising in the Warsaw ghetto Estimates of Jewish survivors 30-60 thousand among Polish population; 10-15 thousand in forests with guerrilla troops; 20-40 thousand in Nazi camps; 200 thousand in USSR. 31 December/1 January – forming of Krajowa Rada Narodowa (National State Council) – representation of PPR and Communists on Polish territory 1944 3-4 January – Red Army crosses Polish pre-war border 9 January – forming of Rada Jedności Narodu (Committee for National Unity – by London camp) 20 July – forming of Polski Komitet Wyzwolenia Narodowego (PKWN) – Polish Committee of National Salvation 22 July – Lublin Manifesto of PKWN 1 August – beginning of the Warsaw Uprising (final stage of Home Army’s “Burza” [Tempest] plan) – Warsaw surrenders on 2 October – left-bank city is burnt to the ground by Nazis 31 December – calling to life of Tymczasowy Rząd Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej – Temporary Government of the Polish Republic 1945 19 January – dissolution of Armia Krajowa