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Home Army

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(Redirected fromPolish Home Army)
Polish resistance movement in World War II

For other uses, seeHome guard.

Home Army
Armia Krajowa (AK)
Polish red-and-white flag with superposedKotwica (lit.'anchor') emblem of thePolish Underground State and Home Army
Active14 February 1942 – 19 January 1945
CountryGerman-occupied Poland
AllegiancePolish government-in-exile
RoleArmed forces of thePolish Underground State
Sizec. 400,000 (1944)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Tadeusz Komorowski
Stefan Rowecki
Leopold Okulicki
Emil August Fieldorf
Antoni Chruściel
Military unit

TheHome Army (Polish:Armia Krajowa,pronounced[ˈarmjakraˈjɔva]; abbreviatedAK) was the dominantresistance movement inGerman-occupied Poland duringWorld War II. The Home Army was formed in February 1942 from the earlierZwiązek Walki Zbrojnej (Armed Resistance) 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 otherPolish partisans and underground forces. Its allegiance was to thePolish government-in-exile in London, and it constituted the armed wing of what came to be known as thePolish 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 withSoviet andYugoslav partisans, one of Europe's largest World War II underground movements.[a]

The Home Army sabotaged German transports bound for theEastern Front in the Soviet Union, destroying German supplies and tying down substantial German forces. It also fought pitched battles against the Germans, particularly in 1943 and inOperation Tempest from January 1944. The Home Army's most widely known operation was theWarsaw Uprising of August–October 1944. The Home Army also defended Polish civilians againstatrocities by Germany's Ukrainian and Lithuaniancollaborators. Its attitude toward Jews remains a controversial topic.

AsPolish–Soviet relations deteriorated, conflict grew between the Home Army and Soviet forces. The Home Army's allegiance to the Polish government-in-exile caused the Soviet government to consider the Home Army to be an impediment to the introduction of acommunist-friendly government in Poland, which hindered cooperation and in some cases led to outright conflict. On 19 January 1945, after theRed Army had cleared most Polish territory of German forces, the Home Army was disbanded. After the war, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, communist government propaganda portrayed the Home Army as an oppressive and reactionary force. Thousands of ex-Home Army personnel were deported togulags and Soviet prisons, while other ex-members, including a number of senior commanders, were executed. After thefall of communism in Central and Eastern Europe, the portrayal of the Home Army was no longer subject to government censorship and propaganda.

Origins

Part ofa series on the
Polish
Underground State
Parasol Regiment, Warsaw, 1944

The Home Army originated in theService for Poland's Victory (Służba Zwycięstwu Polski), which GeneralMichał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski set up on 27 September 1939, just as the coordinatedGerman andSoviet invasions of Poland neared completion.[1] Seven weeks later, on 17 November 1939, on orders from GeneralWładysław Sikorski, the Service for Poland's Victory was superseded by theArmed Resistance (Związek Walki Zbrojnej), which in turn, a little over two years later, on 14 February 1942, became the Home Army.[1][2] During that time, many other resistance organisations remained active in Poland,[3] although most of them, merged with the Armed Resistance or with its successor, the Home Army, and substantially augmented its numbers between 1939 and 1944.[2][3]

The Home Army was loyal to thePolish government-in-exile and to its agency in occupied Poland, theGovernment Delegation for Poland (Delegatura). The Polish civilian government envisioned the Home Army as an apolitical, nationwide resistance organisation. The supreme command defined the Home Army's chief tasks as partisan warfare against the German occupiers, the re-creation of armed forces underground and, near the end of the German occupation, a general armed rising to be prosecuted until victory. Home Army plans envisioned, at war's end, the restoration of the pre-war government following the return of the government-in-exile to Poland.[4][1][2][5][6][7]

The Home Army, though in theory subordinate to the civil authorities and to the government-in-exile, often acted somewhat independently, with neither the Home Army's commanders in Poland nor the "London government" fully aware of the other's situation.[8]: 235–236 

AfterGermany started its invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the Soviet Union joined theAllies and signed theAnglo-Soviet Agreement on 12 July 1941. This put the Polish government in a difficult position since it had previously pursued a policy of "two enemies". Although aPolish–Soviet agreement was signed in August 1941, cooperation continued to be difficult and deteriorated further after 1943 when Nazi Germany publicised theKatyn massacre of 1940.[9]

Until the major rising in 1944, the Home Army concentrated on self-defense (the freeing of prisoners and hostages, defense against German pacification operations) and on attacks against German forces. Home Army units carried out thousands of armed raids and intelligence operations, sabotaged hundreds of railway shipments, and participated in manypartisan clashes and battles with German police andWehrmacht units. The Home Army also assassinated prominentNazi collaborators andGestapo officials in retaliation against Nazi terror inflicted on Poland's civilian population; prominent individuals assassinated by the Home Army includedIgo Sym (1941) andFranz Kutschera (1944).[1][5]

Membership

Size

In February 1942, when the Home Army was formed from the Armed Resistance, it numbered around 100,000 members.[5] Less than a year later, at the start of 1943, it had reached a strength of around 200,000.[5] In the summer of 1944, whenOperation Tempest began, the Home Army reached its highest membership:[5] estimates of membership in the first half and summer of 1944 range from 200,000,[8]: 234  through 300,000,[10] 380,000[5] and 400,000[11] to 450,000–500,000,[12] though most estimates average at about 400,000; the strength estimates vary due to the constant integration of other resistance organisations into the Home Army, and that while the number of members was high and that of sympathizers was even higher, the number of armed members participating in operations at any given time was smaller—as little as one per cent in 1943, and as many as five to ten per cent in 1944[11]—due to an insufficient number of weapons.[5][13][8]: 234 

Home Army numbers in 1944 included a cadre of over 10,000–11,000 officers, 7,500 officers-in-training (singular:podchorąży) and 88,000non-commissioned officers (NCOs).[5] The officer cadre was formed from prewar officers and NCOs, graduates of underground courses, and elite operatives usually parachuted in from the West (theSilent Unseen).[5] The basic organizational unit was the platoon, numbering 35–50 people, with an unmobilized skeleton version of 16–25; in February 1944, the Home Army had 6,287 regular and 2,613 skeleton platoons operational.[5] Such numbers made the Home Army not only the largest Polish resistance movement, but one of the two largest in World War II Europe.[a] Casualties during the war are estimated at 34,000[10] to 100,000,[5] plus some 20,000[10]–50,000[5] after the war (casualties and imprisonment).

Demographics

The Home Army was intended to be a mass organisation that was founded by a core of prewar officers.[5] Home Army soldiers fell into three groups. The first two consisted of "full-time members": undercover operatives, living mostly in urban settings under false identities (most senior Home Army officers belonged to this group); and uniformed (to a certain extent) partisans, living in forested regions (leśni, or "forest people"), who openly fought the Germans (the forest people are estimated at some 40 groups, numbering 1,200–4,000 persons in early 1943, but their numbers grew substantially duringOperation Tempest).[8]: 234–235  The third, largest group were "part-time members": sympathisers who led "double lives" under their real names in their real homes, received no payment for their services, and stayed in touch with their undercover unit commanders but were seldom mustered for operations, as the Home Army planned to use them only during a planned nationwide rising.[8]: 234–235 

The Home Army was intended to be representative of the Polish nation, and its members were recruited from most parties and social classes.[8]: 235–236  Its growth was largely based on integrating scores of smaller resistance organisations into its ranks; most of the other Polish underground armed organizations were incorporated into the Home Army, though they retained varying degrees of autonomy.[2] The largest organization that merged into the Home Army was the leftist Peasants' Battalions (Bataliony Chłopskie) around 1943–1944,[14] and parts of the National Armed Forces (Narodowe Siły Zbrojne) became subordinate to the Home Army.[15] In turn, individual Home Army units varied substantially in their political outlooks, notably in their attitudes toward ethnic minorities and toward the Soviets.[8]: 235–236  The largest group that completely refused to join the Home Army was the pro-Soviet, communist People's Army (Armia Ludowa), which numbered 30,000 people at its height in 1944.[16]

Women

YoungRadosław Group soldiers, 2 September 1944, a month into theWarsaw Uprising. They had just marched several hours through Warsaw sewers.

Home Army ranks included a number of female operatives.[17] Most women worked in the communications branch, where many held leadership roles or served as couriers.[18] Approximately a seventh to a tenth of the Home Army insurgents were female.[19][18][20]

Notable women in the Home Army includedElżbieta Zawacka, an underground courier who was sometimes called the only femaleCichociemna.[21]Grażyna Lipińska [pl] organised an intelligence network in German-occupiedBelarus in 1942–1944.[22][23]Janina Karasiówna [pl] andEmilia Malessa were high-ranking officers described as "holding top posts" within the communication branch of the organisation.[18]Wanda Kraszewska-Ancerewicz [pl] headed the distribution branch.[18] Several all-female units existed within the AK structures, includingDysk [pl], an entirely female sabotage unit led byWanda Gertz, who carried out assassinations of femaleGestapo informants in addition to sabotage.[18][24] During theWarsaw Uprising, two all-female units were created—a demolition unit and a sewer system unit.[19]

Many women participated in the Warsaw Uprising, particularly as medics or scouts;[25][26][19] they were estimated to form about 75% of the insurgent medical personnel.[20] By the end of the uprising, there were about 5,000 female casualties among the insurgents, with over 2,000 female soldiers taken captive; the latter number reported in contemporary press caused a "European sensation".[18]

Structure

Regional organization, 1944

Home Army Headquarters was divided into five sections, two bureaus and several other specialized units:[1][5][27]

  • Section I: Organization – personnel, justice, religion
  • Section II: Intelligence and Counterintelligence
  • Section III: Operations and Training – coordination, planning, preparation for a nationwide uprising
  • Section IV: Logistics
  • Section V: Communication – including with the Western Allies; air drops
  • Bureau of Information and Propaganda (sometimes called "Section VI") – information and propaganda
  • Bureau of Finances (sometimes called "Section VII") – finances
  • Kedyw (acronym forKierownictwo Dywersji, Polish for "Directorate of Diversion") – special operations
  • Directorate of Underground Resistance

The Home Army's commander was subordinate in the militarychain of command to the Polish Commander-in-Chief (General Inspector of the Armed Forces) of the Polish government-in-exile and answered in the civilian chain of command to the Government Delegation for Poland.[5][4]

The Home Army's first commander, until his arrest by the Germans in 1943, wasStefan Rowecki (nom de guerre "Grot", "Spearhead").Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski (Tadeusz Komorowski,nom de guerre "Bór", "Forest") commanded from July 1943 until his surrender to the Germans when the Warsaw Uprising was suppressed in October 1944.Leopold Okulicki,nom de guerreNiedzwiadek ("Bear"), led the Home Army in its final days.[1][28][29][30]

Home Army commanderCodenamePeriodReplaced becauseFatePhoto
GeneralMichał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski
Technically, commander ofSłużba Zwycięstwu Polski andZwiązek Walki Zbrojnej as Armia Krajowa was not named such until 1942
Torwid27 September 1939 – March 1940Arrested by the SovietsJoined theAnders Army, fought in thePolish Armed Forces in the West. Emigrated to United Kingdom.
GeneralStefan RoweckiGrot18 June 1940 – 30 June 1943Discovered and arrested by GermanGestapoImprisoned inSachsenhausen concentration camp. Executed by personal decree ofHeinrich Himmler afterWarsaw Uprising had begun.
GeneralTadeusz KomorowskiBórJuly 1943 – 2 September 1944Surrendered after end ofWarsaw Uprising.Emigrated to United Kingdom.
GeneralLeopold OkulickiNiedźwiadek3 October 1944 – 17 January 1945Dissolved AK trying to lessen the Polish-Soviet tensions.Arrested by the Soviets, sentenced to imprisonment in theTrial of the Sixteen. Likely executed in 1946.

Regions

The Home Army was divided geographically into regional branches or areas (obszar),[1] which were subdivided into subregions or subareas (podokręg) or independent areas (okręgi samodzielne). There were 89 inspectorates (inspektorat) and 280 (as of early 1944) districts (obwód) as smaller organisational units.[5] Overall, the Home Army regional structure largely resembled Poland's interwar administration division, with anokręg being similar to avoivodeship (seeAdministrative division of Second Polish Republic).[5]

There were three to five areas:Warsaw (Obszar Warszawski, with some sources differentiating between left- and right-bank areas –Obszar Warszawski prawo- i lewobrzeżny), Western (Obszar Zachodni, in thePomerania andPoznań regions), and Southeastern (Obszar Południowo-Wschodni, in theLwów area); sources vary on whether there was a Northeastern Area (centered inBiałystokObszar Białystocki) or whether Białystok was classified as an independent area (Okręg samodzielny Białystok).[31]

AreaDistrictsCodenamesUnits (re)created during the
reconstruction of the Polish
Army inOperation Tempest
Warsaw area
Codenames: Cegielnia (Brickworks), Woda (Water), Rzeka (River)
Warsaw
Col.Albin SkroczyńskiŁaszcz
Eastern
Warsaw-Praga
Col.Hieronim SuszczyńskiSzeliga
Struga (stream), Krynica (source), Gorzelnia (distillery)10th Infantry Division
Western
Warsaw
Col.Franciszek JachiećRoman
Hallerowo (Hallertown),Hajduki, Cukrownia (Sugar factory)28th Infantry Division
Northern
Warsaw
Lt. Col.Zygmunt MarszewskiKazimierz
Olsztyn,Tuchola,Królewiec, Garbarnia (tannery)8th Infantry Division
Southeastern area
Codenames: Lux, Lutnia (Lute), Orzech (Nut)
Lwów
Col.Władysław FilipkowskiJanka
Lwów
Lwów – divided into two areas
Okręg Lwów Zachód (West) and Okręg Lwów Wschód (East)
Col.Stefan CzerwińskiLuśnia
Dukat (ducat), Lira (lire), Promień (ray)5th Infantry Division
Stanisławów
Stanisławów
Capt.Władysław HermanŻuraw
Karaś (crucian carp), Struga (stream), Światła (lights)11th Infantry Division
Tarnopol
Tarnopol
Maj.Bronisław Zawadzki
Komar (mosquito), Tarcza (shield), Ton (tone)12th Infantry Division
Western area
Codename: Zamek (Castle)
Poznań
Col.Zygmunt MiłkowskiDenhoff
Pomerania
Gdynia
Col.Janusz PałubickiPiorun
Borówki (berries), Pomnik (monument)
Poznań
Poznań
Col.Henryk Kowalówka
Pałac (palace), Parcela (lot)
Independent areasWilno
Wilno
Col.Aleksander KrzyżanowskiWilk
Miód (honey), Wiano (dowry) (subunit "Kaunas Lithuania")
Nowogródek
Nowogródek
Lt.Col.Janusz SzlaskiBorsuk
Cyranka (garganey), Nów (new moon)Zgrupowanie Okręgu AK Nowogródek
Warsaw
Warsaw
Col.Antoni ChruścielMonter
Drapacz (sky-scraper), Przystań (harbour),
Wydra (otter), Prom (shuttle)
Polesie
Pińsk
Col.Henryk KrajewskiLeśny
Kwadra (quarter), Twierdza (keep), Żuraw (crane)30th Infantry Division
Wołyń
Równe
Col.Kazimierz BąbińskiLuboń
Hreczka (buckwheat), Konopie (hemp)27th Infantry Division
Białystok
Białystok
Col.Władysław LiniarskiMścisław
Lin (tench), Czapla (aigrette), Pełnia (full moon)29th Infantry Division
Lublin
Lublin
Col.Kazimierz TumidajskiMarcin
Len (linnen), Salon (saloon), Żyto (rye)3rd Legions' Infantry Division
9th Infantry Division
Kraków
Kraków
various commanders, incl. Col.Julian FilipowiczRóg
Gobelin, Godło (coat of arms), Muzeum (museum)6th Infantry Division
106th Infantry Division
21st Infantry Division
22nd Infantry Division
24th Infantry Division
Kraków Motorized Cavalry Brigade
Silesia
Katowice
various commanders, incl. Col.Zygmunt JankeZygmunt
Kilof (pick), Komin (chimney), Kuźnia (foundry), Serce (heart)
Kielce-Radom
Kielce,Radom
Col.Jan ZientarskiMieczysław
Rolnik (farmer),Jodła (fir)2nd Legions' Infantry Division
7th Infantry Division
Łódź
Łódź
Col.Michał StempkowskiGrzegorz
Arka (ark), Barka (barge), Łania (bath)25th Infantry Division
26th Infantry Division
Foreign areasHungary
Budapest
Lt.Col.Jan Korkozowicz
Liszt
Reich
Berlin
Blok (block)

In 1943 the Home Army began recreating the organization of the prewar Polish Army, its various units now being designated as platoons, battalions, regiments, brigades, divisions, andoperational groups.[5]

Operations

Intelligence

Further information:History of Polish intelligence services § 1939–1945
Der Klabautermann (anOperation N magazine), 3 January 1943 issue, satirizing Nazi terror and genocide. From the right, emerging from the "III" (Roman numeral three", of the "Third Reich"):Himmler,Hitler, andDeath.

The Home Army supplied valuableintelligence to the Allies; 48 per cent of all reports received by theBritish secret services from continental Europe between 1939 and 1945 came from Polish sources.[32] The total number of those reports is estimated at 80,000, and 85 per cent of them were deemed to be high quality or better.[33] The Polish intelligence network grew rapidly; near the end of the war, it had over 1,600 registered agents.[32]

The Western Allies had limited intelligence assets in Central and Eastern Europe. The extensive in-place Polish intelligence network proved a major resource; between the French capitulation and other Allied networks that were undeveloped at the time, it was even described as "the only [A]llied intelligence assets on the Continent".[34][35][32] According toMarek Ney-Krwawicz [pl], for the Western Allies, the intelligence provided by the Home Army was considered to be the best source of information on the Eastern Front.[36]

Home Army intelligence provided the Allies with information onGerman concentration camps andthe Holocaust in Poland (includingthe first reports on this subject received by the Allies[37][38]), German submarine operations, and, most famously,the V-1 flying bomb and V-2 rocket.[1][36] In oneProject Big Ben mission (Operation Wildhorn III;[39] Polishcryptonym,Most III, "Bridge III"), a stripped-for-lightness RAF twin-engineDakota flew fromBrindisi,Italy, to an abandoned German airfield in Poland to pick up intelligence prepared by Polish aircraft-designerAntoni Kocjan, including 100 lb (45 kg) ofV-2 rocket wreckage from aPeenemünde launch, aSpecial Report 1/R, no. 242, photographs, eight key V-2 parts, and drawings of the wreckage.[40] Polish agents also provided reports on the German war production, morale, and troop movements.[32] The Polish intelligence network extended beyond Poland and even beyond Europe: for example, the intelligence network organized by Mieczysław Zygfryd Słowikowski in North Africa has been described as "the only [A]llied ... network in North Africa".[32] The Polish network even had two agents in the German high command itself.[32]

The researchers who produced the first Polish–British in-depth monograph on Home Army intelligence (Intelligence Co-operation Between Poland and Great Britain During World War II: Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee, 2005) described contributions of Polish intelligence to the Allied victory as "disproportionally large"[41] and argued that "the work performed by Home Army intelligence undoubtedly supported the Allied armed effort much more effectively than subversive and guerilla activities".[42]

Subversion and propaganda

The Home Army also conductedpsychological warfare. ItsOperation N created the illusion of a German movement opposingAdolf Hitler within Germany itself.[1]

The Home Army published a weeklyBiuletyn Informacyjny (Information Bulletin), with a top circulation (on 25 November 1943) of 50,000 copies.[43][44]

Major operations

Sabotage was coordinated by theUnion of Retaliation and later byWachlarz andKedyw units.[2]

Major Home Army military and sabotage operations included:

  • theZamość Rising of 1942–1943, with the Home Army sabotaging German plans toexpel Poles underGeneralplan Ost[2]
  • the protection of the Polish population from themassacres of Poles in Volhynia in 1943–1944[2]
  • Operation Garland, in 1942, sabotaging German rail transport[2]
  • Operation Belt in 1943, a series of attacks on German border outposts on the frontier between theGeneral Government and the territories annexed by Germany
  • Operation Jula, in 1944, another rail-sabotage operation[2]
  • most notablyOperation Tempest; in 1944, a series of nationwide risings which aimed primarily to seize control of cities and areas where German forces were preparing defenses against the Soviet Red Army, so that Polish underground civil authorities could take power before the arrival of Soviet forces.[45]
"To arms!" Home Army poster during the 1944Warsaw Uprising

The largest and best-known of the Operation Tempest battles, the Warsaw Uprising, constituted an attempt to liberate Poland's capital and began on 1 August 1944. Polish forces took control of substantial parts of the city and resisted the German-led forces until 2 October (a total of 63 days). With the Poles receiving no aid from the approaching Red Army, the Germans eventually defeated the insurrectionists and burned the city, quelling the Uprising on 2 October 1944.[1] Other major Home Army city risings includedOperation Ostra Brama inWilno and theLwów Uprising. The Home Army also prepared for arising in Kraków but aborted due to various circumstances. While the Home Army managed to liberate a number of places from German control—for example, theLublin area, where regional structures were able to set up a functioning government—they ultimately failed to secure sufficient territory to enable the government-in-exile to return to Poland due to Soviet hostility.[1][2][45]

The Home Army alsosabotaged German rail- and road-transports to theEastern Front in the Soviet Union.[46]Richard J. Crampton estimated that an eighth of all German transports to the Eastern Front were destroyed or substantially delayed due to Home Army operations.[46]

Confirmed sabotage and covert operations of the Armed Resistance (ZWZ) and Home Army (AK)
from 1 January 1941 to 30 June 1944, listed by type[47][48]
Sabotage / covert-operation typeTotal numbers
Damaged locomotives6,930
Damaged railway wagons19,058
Delayed repairs to locomotives803
Derailed transports732
Transports set on fire443
Blown-up railway bridges38
Disruptions to electricity supply in the Warsaw grid638
Damaged or destroyed army vehicles4,326
Damaged aeroplanes28
Destroyed fuel-tanks1,167
Destroyed fuel (in tonnes)4,674
Blocked oil wells5
Destroyedwood wool wagons150
Burned down military stores130
Disruptions in factory production7
Built-in flaws in aircraft engines parts4,710
Built-in flaws in cannon muzzles203
Built-in flaws in artillery projectiles92,000
Built-in flaws in air-traffic radio stations107
Built-in flaws in condensers70,000
Built-in flaws in electro-industrial lathes1,700
Damage to important factory machinery2,872
Acts of sabotage25,145
Assassinations of Nazi Germans5,733

Assassination of Nazi leaders

Main article:Operation Heads
German poster listing 100 Polish hostages executed in reprisal for assassinations of German police and SS by a Polish "terrorist organization in the service of the English", Warsaw, 2 October 1943

The Polish Resistance carried out dozens of attacks on German commanders in Poland, the largestseries being that codenamed "Operation Heads". Dozens of additional assassinations were carried out, the best-known being:

Weapons and equipment

Kubuś, armored car used by the resistance during the 1944Warsaw Uprising

As a clandestine army operating in an enemy-occupied country and separated by over a thousand kilometers from any friendly territory, the Home Army faced unique challenges in acquiring arms and equipment,[51] though it was able to overcome these difficulties to some extent and to field tens of thousands of armed soldiers. Nevertheless, the difficult conditions meant that only infantry forces armed with light weapons could be fielded. Any use of artillery, armor or aircraft was impossible (except for a few instances during the Warsaw Uprising, such as theKubuśarmored car).[51][52] Even these light-infantry units were as a rule armed with a mixture of weapons of various types, usually in quantities sufficient to arm only a fraction of a unit's soldiers.[13][8]: 234 [51]

Home Army arms and equipment came mostly from four sources: arms that had been buried by the Polish armies on battlefields after the 1939invasion of Poland, arms purchased or captured from the Germans and their allies, arms clandestinely manufactured by the Home Army itself, and arms received from Allied air drops.[51] From arms caches hidden in 1939, the Home Army obtained 614 heavy machine guns, 1,193 light machine guns, 33,052 rifles, 6,732 pistols, 28 antitank light field guns, 25 antitank rifles, and 43,154 hand grenades. However, due to their inadequate preservation, which had to be improvised in the chaos of the September Campaign, most of the guns were in poor condition. Of those that had been buried in the ground and had been dug up in 1944 during preparations for Operation Tempest, only 30% were usable.[53]: 63 

Arms were sometimes purchased on theblack market from German soldiers or their allies, or stolen from German supply depots or transports.[51] Efforts to capture weapons from the Germans also proved highly successful. Raids were conducted on trains carrying equipment to the front, as well as on guardhouses andgendarmerie posts. Sometimes weapons were taken from individual German soldiers accosted in the street. During the Warsaw Uprising, the Home Army even managed to capture several German armored vehicles, most notably aJagdpanzer 38 Hetzer light tank destroyer renamedChwat [pl] and an armored troop transportSdKfz 251 renamedGrey Wolf [pl].[52]

Polish weapons, including (top)Błyskawica ("Lightning") submachine gun, one of very few weapons designed and mass-produced covertly in occupied Europe.Warsaw Uprising Museum.

Arms were clandestinely manufactured by the Home Army in its own secret workshops, and by Home Army members working in German armaments factories.[51] In this way the Home Army was able to procuresubmachine guns (copies of BritishStens, indigenousBłyskawicas andKIS), pistols (Vis), flamethrowers, explosive devices, road mines, andFilipinka andSidolówkahand grenades.[51] Hundreds of people were involved in the manufacturing effort. The Home Army did not produce its own ammunition, but relied on supplies stolen by Polish workers from German-run factories.[51]

The final source of supply was Alliedair drops, which was the only way to obtain more exotic, highly useful equipment such asplastic explosives and antitank weapons such as the BritishPIAT. During the war, 485 air-drop missions from the West (about half of them flown by Polish airmen) delivered some 600 tons of supplies for the Polish resistance.[54]

Besides equipment, the planes also parachuted in highly qualified instructors (Cichociemni), 316 of whom were inserted into Poland during the war.[10][55] Allied air drops to the Home Army were infrequent; deliveries from the Western Allies were limited byJoseph Stalin's refusal to let their planes land on Soviet territory, the low priority placed by Allied commanders on delivery flights to Poland and the extremely heavy losses sustained by Polish Special Duties Flight personnel. The Western Allies refused to provide significant supplies to the Home Army to avoid antagonizing Stalin.[56]

In the end, despite all efforts, most Home Army forces had inadequate weaponry. In 1944, when the Home Army was at its peak strength (200,000–600,000, according to various estimates), the Home Army had enough weaponry for only about 32,000 soldiers."[8]: 234  On 1 August 1944, when theWarsaw Uprising began, only a sixth of Home Army fighters in Warsaw were armed.[8]: 234 

Relations with ethnic groups

Jews

See also:The Holocaust in Poland andRescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust
Jewish prisoners ofGęsiówka concentration camp with Polish resistance fighters of the Home Army after the camp's liberation during theWarsaw Uprising, August 1944

Home Army members' attitudes towardJews varied widely from unit to unit,[57][58][59] and the topic remains controversial.[60] The Home Army answered to the National Council of the Polish government-in-exile, where some Jews served in leadership positions (e.g.Ignacy Schwarzbart andSzmul Zygielbojm),[61] though there were no Jewish representatives in the Government Delegation for Poland.[62]: 110–114  Traditionally, Polish historiography has presented the Home Army interactions with Jews in a positive light, while Jewish historiography has been mostly negative; most Jewish authors attribute the Home Army's hostility to endemicantisemitism in Poland.[63] More recent scholarship has presented a mixed, ambivalent view of Home Army–Jewish relations. Both "profoundly disturbing acts of violence as well as extraordinary acts of aid and compassion" have been reported. In an analysis byJoshua D. Zimmerman, postwar testimonies of Holocaust survivors reveal that their experiences with the Home Army were mixed even if predominantly negative.[64] Jews trying to seek refuge from Nazi genocidal policies were often exposed to greater danger by open resistance to German occupation.[65]: 273 

Members of the Home Army were namedRighteous Among the Nations for risking their lives to save Jews, examples includeJan Karski,[66]Aleksander Kamiński,[67]Stefan Korboński,[68]Henryk Woliński,[69]Jan Żabiński,[70]Władysław Bartoszewski,[71]Mieczysław Fogg,[72]Henryk Iwański,[73] andJan Dobraczyński.[74] However, Polish historian Ewa Kołomańska noted that many individuals associated with the Home Army, involved in rescuing the Jews, did not receive the Righteous title.[75]: 243

Daily operations

A Jewish partisan detachment served in the 1944Warsaw Uprising,[76][77] and another inHanaczów [pl].[78][79] The Home Army provided training and supplies to theWarsaw Ghetto'sJewish Combat Organization.[78] It is likely that more Jews fought in the Warsaw Uprising than in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, some fought in both.[65]: 273  Thousands of Jews joined, or claimed to join, the Home Army in order to survive in hiding, but Jews serving in the Home Army were the exception rather than the rule. Most Jews in hiding could not pass as ethnic Poles and would have faced deadly consequences if discovered.[80][65]: 275 

In February 1942, the Home Army Operational Command's Office of Information and Propaganda set up a Section for Jewish Affairs, directed byHenryk Woliński.[81] This section collected data about the situation of the Jewish population, drafted reports, and sent information to London. It also centralized contacts between Polish and Jewish military organizations. The Home Army also supported theRelief Council for Jews in Poland (Żegota) as well as the formation ofJewish resistance organizations.[82][83]

Holocaust

From 1940 onward, the Home Army courierJan Karski delivered the first eyewitness account of the Holocaust to the Western powers, after having personally visited theWarsaw Ghetto and a Nazi concentration camp.[62]: 110–114 [84][38][37] Another crucial role was played byWitold Pilecki, who was the only person to volunteer to be imprisoned atAuschwitz (where he would spend three and a half years) to organize a resistance on the inside and to gather information on the atrocities occurring there to inform the Western Allies aboutthe fate of the Jewish population.[85] Home Army reports from March 1943 described crimes committed by the Germans against the Jewish populace. AK commander General Stefan Rowecki estimated that 640,000 people had been murdered in Auschwitz between 1940 and March 1943, including 66,000 ethnic Poles and 540,000 Jews from various countries (this figure was revised later to 500,000).[86] The Home Army started carrying out death sentences forszmalcowniks in Warsaw in the summer of 1943.[87]

Antony Polonsky observed that "the attitude of the military underground to the genocide is both more complex and more controversial [than its approach towardsszmalcowniks]. Throughout the period when it was being carried out, the Home Army was preoccupied with preparing for ... [the moment when] Nazi rule in Poland collapsed. It was determined to avoid premature military action and to conserve its strength (and weapons) for the crucial confrontation that, it was assumed, would determine the fate of Poland. ... [However,] to the Home Army, the Jews were not a part of 'our nation' and ... action to defend them was not to be taken if it endangered [the Home Army's] other objectives." He added that "it is probably unrealistic to have expected the Home Army—which was neither as well armed nor as well organized as its propaganda claimed—to have been able to do much to aid the Jews. The fact remains that its leadership did not want to do so."[88]: 68  Rowecki's attitudes shifted in the following months as the brutal reality of the Holocaust became more apparent, and the Polish public support for the Jewish resistance increased. Rowecki was willing to provide Jewish fighters with aid and resources when it contributed to "the greater war effort", but had concluded that providing large quantities of supplies to the Jewish resistance would be futile. This reasoning was the norm among theAllies, who believed that the Holocaust could only be halted by a significant military action.[62]: 110–122 

Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Main article:Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

The Home Army provided theWarsaw Ghetto with firearms, ammunition, and explosives,[89] but only after it was convinced of the eagerness of theJewish Combat Organization (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa, ŻOB) to fight,[88]: 67  and afterWładysław Sikorski's intervention on the Organization's behalf.[90] Zimmerman describes the supplies as "limited but real".[62]: 121-122  Jewish fighters of theJewish Military Union (Żydowski Związek Wojskowy, ŻZW) received from the Home Army, among other things, 2 heavy machine guns, 4 light machine guns, 21 submachine guns, 30 rifles, 50 pistols, and over 400 grenades.[91] Some supplies were also provided to the ŻOB, but less than to ŻZW with whom the Home Army had closer ties and ideological similarities.[92]Antoni Chruściel, commander of the Home Army in Warsaw, ordered the entire armory of theWola district transferred to the ghetto.[93] In January 1943 the Home Army delivered a larger shipment of 50 pistols, 50 hand grenades, and several kilograms of explosives, along with a number of smaller shipments that carried a total of 70 pistols, 10 rifles, 2 hand machine guns, 1 light machine gun, ammunition, and over 150 kilograms of explosives.[93][94] The number of supplies provided to the ghetto resistance has been sometimes described as insufficient, as the Home Army faced a number of dilemmas which forced it to provide no more than limited assistance to the Jewish resistance, such as supply shortages and the inability to arm its own troops, the view (shared by most of the Jewish resistance) that any wide-scale uprising in 1943 would be premature and futile, and the difficulty of coordinating with the internally divided Jewish resistance, coupled with the pro-Soviet attitude of the ŻOB.[95][93] During the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Home Army units tried to blow up the Ghetto wall twice, carried out diversionary actions outside the Ghetto walls, and attacked German sentries sporadically near the Ghetto walls.[96][97] According toMarian Fuks, the Ghetto uprising would not have been possible without supplies from the Polish Home Army.[98][93]

A year later, during the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, theZośka Battalion liberated hundreds of Jewish inmates from theGęsiówka section of theWarsaw concentration camp.[65]: 275 

Attitude to fugitives

1943Information Bulletin article onKedyw execution ofszmalcownik Jan Grabiec, who had blackmailed residents of villages that hid Jews

Because it was the largest Polish resistance organization, the Home Army's attitude towards Jewish fugitives often determined their fate.[63] According to Antony Polonsky the Home Army saw Jewish fugitives as security risks.[88]: 66 At the same time, AK's "paper mills" suppliedforged identification documents to many Jewish fugitives, enabling them to pass as Poles.[65]: 275  Home Army published a leaflet in 1943 stating that "Every Pole is obligated to help those in hiding. Those who refuse them aid will be punished on the basis of...treason to the Polish Nation".[99] Nevertheless, Jewish historians have asserted that the main cause for the low survival rates of escaping Jews was theantisemitism of the Polish population.[100]

Attitudes towards Jews in the Home Army were mixed.[59] A few AK units actively hunted down Jews,[101]: 238 [102] and in particular two district commanders in the northeast of Poland (Władysław Liniarski of Białystok and Janusz Szlaski of Nowogródek) openly and routinely persecuted Jewish partisans and fugitives;[103] however, these were the only two provinces, out of seventeen, where such orders were issued by provincial commanders.[104] The extent of such behaviors in the Home Army overall has been disputed;[105]: 88–90 [106]Tadeusz Piotrowski wrote that the bulk of the Home Army's antisemitic behavior can be ascribed to a small minority of members,[105]: 88–90  often affiliated with the far-rightNational Democracy (ND, orEndecja) party, whoseNational Armed Forces organization was mostly integrated into the Home Army in 1944.[107]: 17 [107]: 45 Adam Puławski has suggested that some of these incidents are better understood in the context of the Polish–Soviet conflict, as some of theSoviet-affiliated partisan units that AK units attacked or was attacked by had a sizable Jewish presence.[78] In general, AK units in the east were more likely to be hostile towards Jewish partisans, who in turn were more closely associated with the Soviet underground, while AK units in the west were more helpful towards the Jews. The Home Army had a more favorable attitude towards Jewish civilians and was more hesitant or hostile towards independent Jewish partisans, whom it suspected of pro-Soviet sympathies.[108] General Rowecki believed that antisemitic attitudes in eastern Poland were related to Jewish involvement with Soviet partisans.[109] Some AK units were friendly to Jews,[110] and in Hanaczów Home Army officers hid and protected an entire 250-person Jewish community, and supplied a Jewish Home Army platoon.[111] The Home Army leadership punished a number of perpetrators of antisemitic violence in its ranks, in some cases sentencing them to death.[105]: 88–90 

Most of the underground press was sympathetic towards Jews,[86] and the Home Army's Bureau of Information and Propaganda was led by operatives who were pro-Jewish and represented the liberal wing of Home Army;[86] however, the bureau's anti-communist sub-division, created as a response to communist propaganda, was led by operatives who held strong anti-communist and anti-Jewish views, including theŻydokomuna stereotype.[112][86] The perceived association between Jews and communists was actively reinforced byOperation Antyk, whose initial reports "tended to conflate communists with Jews, dangerously disseminating the notion that Jewish loyalties were to Soviet Russia and communism rather than to Poland", and which repeated the notion that antisemitism was a "useful tool in the struggle against Soviet Russia".[113]

Lithuanians

Further information:Polish–Lithuanian relations during World War II
Aleksander Krzyżanowski,Wilno-region Home Army commander

Although theLithuanian and Polish resistance movements had common enemies—Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union—they began working together only in 1944–1945, after the Soviet reoccupation, when both fought the Soviet occupiers.[114] The main obstacle to unity was a long-standing territorial dispute over the Vilnius Region.[115]

TheLithuanian Activist Front (Lietuvos Aktyvistų Frontas, or LAF)[105]: 163  cooperated with Nazi operations against Poles during the German occupation. In autumn 1943, the Home Army carried retaliatory out operations against the Nazis' Lithuanian supporters, mainly the LithuanianSchutzmannschaft battalions, theLithuanian Territorial Defense Force, and theLithuanian Secret Police,[116] killing hundreds of mostly Lithuanian policemen and other collaborators during the first half of 1944. In response, theLithuanian Sonderkommando, who had already killed hundreds of Polish civilians since 1941 (particularly thePonary massacre),[105]: 168–169  intensified their operations against the Poles.

In April 1944, the Home Army in the Vilnius Region attempted to open negotiations withPovilas Plechavičius, commander of theLithuanian Territorial Defense Force, and proposed a non-aggression pact and cooperation against Nazi Germany.[117] The Lithuanian side refused and demanded that the Poles either leave the Vilnius region (disputed between Poles and Lithuanians) or subordinate themselves to the Lithuanians' struggle against the Soviets.[117] In the May 1944Battle of Murowana Oszmianka, the Home Army dealt a substantial blow to the Nazi-sponsoredLithuanian Territorial Defense Force,[105]: 165–166 [118] which resulted in a low-level civil war between anti-Nazi Poles and pro-Nazi Lithuanians that was encouraged by the German authorities;[116] it culminated in the June 1944 massacres of Polish and Lithuanian civilians in the villages ofGlitiškės (Glinciszki) andDubingiai (Dubinki) respectively.[105]: 168–169 

Postwar assessments of the Home Army's activities in Lithuania have been controversial. In 1993, the Home Army's activities there were investigated by a special Lithuanian government commission. Only in recent years have Polish and Lithuanian historians been able to approach consensus, though still differing in their interpretations of many events.[119][120]

Ukrainians

See also:Poland–Ukraine relations andMassacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia
Volhynia self-defense centers organized with Home Army help, 1943

In the Southeastern part of occupied Polish territories, there have been long-standing tensions between the Polish and Ukrainian populations. Poland's plans to restore its prewar borders were opposed by the Ukrainians, and some Ukrainian groups' collaboration with Nazi Germany had discredited their partisans as potential Polish allies.[121] While the Polish government-in-exile considered tentative plans about providing a limited autonomy for Ukrainians, in 1942 the staff of the Home Army ofLviv recommended deporting 1–1.5 million Ukrainians to the Soviet Union and settling the remainder in other parts of Poland once the war ended.[122] The situation escalated the next year when theUkrainian Insurgent Army (Українська повстанська армія,Ukrayins'ka Povstans'ka Armiya, UPA), a Ukrainian nationalist force and the military arm of theOrganization of Ukrainian Nationalists (Організація Українських Націоналістів,Orhanizatsiya Ukrayins'kykh Natsionalistiv, OUN),[123] directed most of its attacks against Poles and Jews.[124]Stepan Bandera, one of UPA's leaders, and his followers concluded that the war would end in the exhaustion of both Germany and the Soviet Union, leaving only the Poles—who laid claim toEast Galicia (viewed by the Ukrainians aswestern Ukraine, and by the Poles asKresy)—as a significant force, and therefore the Poles had to be weakened before the war's end.[121]

The OUN decided to attack Polish civilians, who constituted about a third of the population of the disputed territories.[121] It equated Ukrainian independence with ethnic homogeneity, which meant the Polish presence had to be completely removed.[121] By February 1943 the OUN began a deliberate campaign of killing Polish civilians.[121] Inmassacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia, beginning in the spring of 1943, 100,000 Poles were killed.[125][126][127] OUN forces targeted Polish villages, which prompted the formation of Polish self-defense units (e.g., thePrzebraże Defence) and fights between the Home Army and the OUN.[121][128][129] The Germans encouraged both sides against each other;Erich Koch said: "We have to do everything possible so that a Pole, when meeting a Ukrainian, will be ready to kill him, and conversely, a Ukrainian will be ready to kill the Pole." A German commissioner fromSarny, when local Poles complained about massacres, answered: "You wantSikorski, the Ukrainians want Bandera. Fight each other."[130] On 10 July 1943,Zygmunt Rumel was sent to talk with local Ukrainians with the goal of ending the massacres; the mission was unsuccessful, and theBanderites killed the Polish delegation.[131] On 20 July that year the Home Army command decided to establish partisan units in Volhynia. Several formations were created, most notably, in January 1944, the27th Home Army Infantry Division. Between January and March 1944, the division fought 16 major battles with the UPA, expanding its operational base and securing Polish forces against the main attack.[132] One of the largest battles between the Home Army and the UPA took place inHanaczów [pl], where local self-defence forces managed to fend off two attacks.[133] In March 1944 the Home Army also carried out reprisal attack against UPA in the village ofSahryń, remembered as "Sahryń massacre", ended in ethnic cleansing operations in which about 700 Ukrainian civilians were killed.[134]

The Polish government-in-exile in London was taken by surprise; it did not expect Ukrainian anti-Polish actions of such magnitude.[121] There is no evidence that the Polish government-in-exile contemplated a general policy of revenge against the Ukrainians, but local Poles, including Home Army commanders, engaged in retaliatory actions.[121] Polish partisans attacked the OUN, assassinated Ukrainian commanders, and carried out operations against Ukrainian villages.[121] Retaliatory operations aimed at intimidating the Ukrainian population contributed to increased support for the UPA.[135] The Home Army command tried to limit operations against Ukrainian civilians to a minimum.[136] According toGrzegorz Motyka, the Polish operations resulted in 10,000 to 15,000 Ukrainian deaths in 1943–47,[137] including 8,000-10,000 on territory of post-war Poland.[138][139] From February to April 1945, mainly inRzeszowszczyzna (theRzeszów area), Polish units (including affiliates of the Home Army) carried out retaliatory attacks in which about 3,000 Ukrainians were killed; one of the most infamous ones is known as thePawłokoma massacre.[140][141]

By mid-1944, most of the disputed regions were occupied by the Soviet Red Army. Polish partisans disbanded or went underground, as did most Ukrainian partisans. Both the Poles and the Ukrainians would increasingly concentrate on the Soviets as their primary enemy – and both would ultimately fail.[121]

Relations with the Soviet Union

Further information:Soviet partisans in Poland
Soviet and Home Army soldiers patrol together,Wilno, July 1944

Home Army relations with the SovietRed Army grew worse as the war progressed. TheSoviet Union invaded Poland on 17 September 1939 after theGerman invasion that began on 1 September 1939; even though theGermans invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, the Soviets sawPolish partisans loyal to the Polish government-in-exile more as a potential obstacle to Soviet plans to control postwar Poland than as a potential ally.[142] On orders from the SovietStavka (high command) issued on 22 June 1943,[105]: 98–99  Soviet partisans engaged Polish partisans in combat; it has also been claimed that they attacked the Poles more frequently than the Germans.[142]

In late 1943 the actions of Soviet partisans, who had been ordered to destroy Home Army forces,[105]: 98–99  even resulted in limited uneasy cooperation between some Home Army units and German forces.[105]: 88–90  While the Home Army still treated the Germans as the enemy and conducted operations against them,[105]: 88–90  some Polish units in theNowogródek andWilno areas accepted them when the Germans offered arms and supplies to the Home Army to be used against the Soviet partisans. However, such arrangements were purely tactical and indicated no ideological collaboration, as demonstrated by France'sVichy regime or Norway'sQuisling regime.[105]: 88–90  The Poles' main motive was to acquire intelligence on the Germans and to obtain much-needed equipment.[57] There were no known joint Polish–German operations, and the Germans were unsuccessful in recruiting the Poles to fight exclusively against the Soviet partisans.[105]: 88–90  Furthermore, most cooperative efforts between local Home Army commanders and the Germans were condemned by Home Army headquarters.[105]: 88–90 

With theEastern Front entering Polish territories in 1944, the Home Army established an uneasy truce with the Soviets. Even so, the mainRed Army andNKVD forces conducted operations against Home Army partisans, including during or directly after Poland'sOperation Tempest, which the Poles had envisioned to be a joint Polish–Soviet operation against the retreating Germans which would also establish Polish claims to those territories.[143][better source needed] The Home Army helped Soviet units with scouting assistance, uprisings, and assistance in liberating some cities (e.g.,Operation Ostra Brama inVilnius, and theLwów Uprising), only to find that Home Army troops were arrested, imprisoned, or executed immediately afterwards.[46]

Long after the war, Soviet forces continued engaging many Home Army soldiers, who received the moniker of "cursed soldiers".[143][better source needed]

Postwar

See also:Cursed soldiers
June 1945Moscowshow trial of 16 Polish civil and Home Army leaders. They were convicted of "planning military action against the U.S.S.R." In March 1945 they had been invited to help organize a Polish Government of National Unity and were arrested by theSovietNKVD. Despite the court's lenience, 6 years later only two of the men were alive.

The Home Army was officially disbanded on 19 January 1945 to avoid civil war and armed conflict with the Soviets. However, many former Home Army units decided to continue operations. The Soviet Union, and thePolish communist government that it controlled, viewed the underground, still loyal to the Polish government-in-exile, as a force to be extirpated before they could gain complete control of Poland. FutureSecretary General of thePolish United Workers' Party,Władysław Gomułka, is quoted as saying: "Soldiers of the AK are a hostile element which must be removed without mercy." Another prominent Polish communist,Roman Zambrowski, said that the Home Army had to be "exterminated."[143][better source needed]

The first Home Army structure designed primarily to deal with the Soviet threat had beenNIE, formed in mid-1943. Its aim was not to engage Soviet forces in combat, but to observe them and to gather intelligence while the Polish Government-in-Exile decided how to deal with the Soviets; at that time, the exiled government still believed in the possibility of constructive negotiations with the Soviets. On 7 May 1945 NIE was disbanded and transformed into theArmed Forces Delegation for Poland (Delegatura Sił Zbrojnych na Kraj), but it was disbanded on 8 August 1945 to stop partisan resistance.[143][better source needed]

The first Polish communist government formed in July 1944—thePolish Committee of National Liberation—declined to accept jurisdiction over Home Army soldiers; as a result, for over a yearSoviet agencies such as theNKVD took responsibility for disarming the Home Army. By the end of the war, around 60,000 Home Army soldiers were arrested, 50,000 of whom were deported to Sovietgulags and prisons; most of these soldiers had been taken captive by the Soviets during or afterOperation Tempest when many Home Army units tried to work together with the Soviets in a nationwide uprising against the Germans. Other Home Army veterans were arrested when they approached Polish communist government officials after having been promisedamnesty. Home Army soldiers stopped trusting the government after a number of broken promises in the first few years of communist control.[143][better source needed]

The third post-Home Army organization wasFreedom and Independence (Wolność i Niezawisłość, WiN). Its primary goal was not fighting; rather, it was designed to help Home Army soldiers transition from partisan to civilian life; while secrecy was necessary in light of increasing persecution of Home Army veterans by the communist government.[144][better source needed] WiN was in great need of funds to pay for false documents and provide resources for the partisans, many of whom had lost their homes and life savings in the war. WiN was far from efficient: it was viewed as an enemy of the state, starved of resources, and a vocal faction advocated armed resistance against the Soviets and their Polish proxies. In the second half of 1945, the SovietNKVD and the newly created Polish secret police, theDepartment of Security (Urząd Bezpieczeństwa, UB), managed to convince several Home Army and WiN leaders that they wanted to offeramnesty to Home Army members, and gained information about large numbers of Home Army and WiN people and resources in the following months. By the time the (imprisoned) Home Army and WiN leaders realised their mistake, the organizations had been crippled, with thousands of their members arrested. WiN was finally disbanded in 1952. By 1947 a colonel of the communist forces declared that "The terrorist and political underground [had] ceased to be a threatening force, though there [were] still men of the forests" to be dealt with.[143][better source needed]

Home Army veterans atSanok, Poland, 11 November 2008

The persecution of the Home Army was only part of theStalinist repressions in Poland. In 1944–56, approximately 2 million people were arrested; over 20,000, including Pilecki, organizer of the resistance inAuschwitz, were executed in communist prisons, and 6 million Polish citizens (every third adult Pole) were classified as "reactionary" or "criminal elements", and were subjected to spying by state agencies.[143][better source needed]

Most Home Army soldiers were captured by theNKVD or by Poland's UB political police. They were interrogated and imprisoned on various charges such as "fascism".[145][146] Many were sent toGulags, executed, or "disappeared".[145] For example, all the members ofBatalion Zośka, which had fought in theWarsaw Uprising, were locked up in communist prisons between 1944 and 1956.[147] In 1956 an amnesty released 35,000 former Home Army soldiers from prisons.[148]

Even then, some partisans remained in the countryside, and were unwilling or unable to rejoin the community; they became known as the cursed soldiers. Stanisław Marchewka "Ryba" was killed in 1957, and the last AK partisan,Józef "Lalek" Franczak, was killed in 1963 – almost two decades after World War II had ended. It was only four years later, in 1967, thatAdam Boryczka—a soldier of AK and a member of the elite, Britain-trainedCichociemny ("Silent Unseen") intelligence and support group—was released from prison. Until the end of thePeople's Republic of Poland, Home Army soldiers remained under investigation by the secret police, and it was only in 1989, after thefall of communism, that the sentences of Home Army soldiers were finally declared null and void by Polish courts.[143][better source needed]

Many monuments to the Home Army have since been erected in Poland, including the Polish Underground State and Home Army Monument near theSejm building in Warsaw, unveiled in 1999.[149][150] The Home Army is also commemorated in theHome Army Museum in Kraków[151] and in theWarsaw Uprising Museum in Warsaw.[152]

See also

Notes

  1. ^abA number of sources say that the Home Army was the largest resistance movement in Nazi-occupied Europe.Norman Davies writes that "Armia Krajowa (Home Army), the AK, ... could fairly claim to be the largest of European resistance [organizations]."[153] Gregor Dallas writes that the "Home Army (Armia Krajowa or AK) in late 1943 numbered around 400,000, making it the largest resistance organization in Europe."[154] Mark Wyman writes that "Armia Krajowa was considered the largest underground resistance unit in wartime Europe."[155] The numbers ofSoviet partisans were very similar to those of the Polish resistance.[156][157]

References

Notes
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  30. ^Jerzy Jan Lerski; George J. Lerski; Halina T. Lerski (1996).Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 47, 401,513–514,605–505.ISBN 978-0-313-26007-0.
  31. ^Wiesław Józef Wiąk (2003).Struktura organizacyjna Armii Krajowej 1939-1944 (in Polish). UPJW. pp. 5, 82.ISBN 978-83-916862-7-0.
  32. ^abcdefKochanski, Halik (13 November 2012).The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War.Harvard University Press. pp. 234–236.ISBN 978-0-674-06816-2.
  33. ^Soybel, Phyllis L. (2007)."Intelligence Cooperation between Poland and Great Britain during World War II. The Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee".Sarmatian Review.XXVII (1):1266–1267.ISSN 1059-5872.
  34. ^Schwonek, Matthew R. (19 April 2006). "Intelligence Co-operation Between Poland and Great Britain during World War II: The Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee, vol. 1 (review)".The Journal of Military History.70 (2):528–529.doi:10.1353/jmh.2006.0128.ISSN 1543-7795.S2CID 161747036.
  35. ^Peszke, Michael Alfred (1 December 2006). "A Review of: "Intelligence Co-Operation between Poland and Great Britain during World War II — The Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee"".The Journal of Slavic Military Studies.19 (4):787–790.doi:10.1080/13518040601028578.ISSN 1351-8046.S2CID 219626554.
  36. ^abNey-Krwawicz (2001), p. 98.
  37. ^abZimmerman (2015), p. 54.
  38. ^abEngel, David (1983). "An Early Account of Polish Jewry under Nazi and Soviet Occupation Presented to the Polish Government-In-Exile, February 1940".Jewish Social Studies.45 (1):1–16.ISSN 0021-6704.JSTOR 4467201.
  39. ^Ordway, Frederick I., III. "The Rocket Team." Apogee Books Space Series 36 (pgs 158, 173)
  40. ^McGovern, James. "Crossbow and Overcast." W. Morrow: New York, 1964. (pg 71)
  41. ^Anglo-Polish Historical Committee (2005). Tessa Stirling; Daria Nałęcz; Tadeusz Dubicki (eds.).Intelligence Co-operation Between Poland and Great Britain During World War II: Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee. Vallentine Mitchell. p. 32.ISBN 978-0-85303-656-2.This tendency influenced the unwillingness to recognize the disproportionally large contribution of Polish Intelligence to the Allied victory over Germany
  42. ^Anglo-Polish Historical Committee (2005). Tessa Stirling; Daria Nałęcz; Tadeusz Dubicki (eds.).Intelligence Co-operation Between Poland and Great Britain During World War II: Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee. Vallentine Mitchell. p. 410.ISBN 978-0-85303-656-2.
  43. ^"Biuletyn Informacyjny : wydanie codzienne".dLibra Digital Library. Warsaw Public Library. Retrieved8 December 2019.
  44. ^""Biuletyn Informacyjny" wychodził w konspiracji co tydzień przez pięć lat. Rekordowy nakład - 50 tys. egzemplarzy".wpolityce.pl. 24 November 2011. Retrieved25 January 2021.
  45. ^ab"Burza".Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Archived fromthe original on 3 October 2013. Retrieved14 March 2008.
  46. ^abcCrampton, R.J. (1994).Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. Routledge. pp. 197–198.ISBN 978-0-415-05346-4.
  47. ^Ney-Krwawicz (2001), p. 166.
  48. ^Marek Ney-Krwawicz (1993).Armia Krajowa: siła zbrojna Polskiego Państwa Polskiego (in Polish). Wydawnictwa Szkolne i Pedagogiczne. p. 214.ISBN 978-83-02-05061-9.
  49. ^Strzembosz (1983), pp. 343–346.
  50. ^Strzembosz (1983), p. 423.
  51. ^abcdefghRafal E. Stolarski,The Production of Arms and Explosive Materials by the Polish Home Army in the Years 1939–1945.Archived 30 October 2022 at theWayback Machine Translated from Polish by Antoni Bohdanowicz. Article on the pages of the London Branch of the Polish Home Army Ex-Servicemen Association. Retrieved 14 March 2008.
  52. ^abEvan McGilvray (19 July 2015).Days of Adversity: The Warsaw Uprising 1944. Helion & Company. pp. 6–.ISBN 978-1-912174-34-8.
  53. ^Stefan Korboński,The Polish Underground State, Columbia University Press, 1978,ISBN 0-914710-32-X
  54. ^Michael Alfred Peszke (2005).The Polish Underground Army, the Western Allies, and the Failure of Strategic Unity in World War II. McFarland. p. 183.ISBN 978-0-7864-2009-4.
  55. ^Stefan Bałuk (2009).Silent and Unseen: I was a Polish WWII Special Ops Commando (in Polish). Askon. p. 125.ISBN 978-83-7452-036-2.
  56. ^Peszke (2013),passim.
  57. ^abJohn Radzilowski, Review ofYaffa Eliach'sThere Once Was a World: A 900-Year Chronicle of the Shtetl of Eishyshok,Journal of Genocide Research, vol. 1, no. 2 (June 1999), City University of New York.
  58. ^Robert D. Cherry; Annamaria Orla-Bukowska (1 January 2007).Rethinking Poles and Jews: Troubled Past, Brighter Future. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 105.ISBN 978-0-7425-4666-0.
  59. ^abZimmerman (2015), p. 418.
  60. ^Blutinger, Jeffrey (Fall 2010). "An Inconvenient Past: Post-Communist Holocaust Memorialization".Shofar.29 (1):73–94.doi:10.1353/sho.2010.0093.ISSN 0882-8539.JSTOR 10.5703/shofar.29.1.73.S2CID 144954562.
  61. ^Jewish Responses to Persecution: 1938–1940. Rowman & Littlefield. 2011. p. 478.ISBN 978-0-7591-2039-6.
  62. ^abcdJoshua D. Zimmerman (January 2009). Murray Baumgarten; Peter Kenez; Bruce Allan Thompson (eds.).Case of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. University of Delaware Press.ISBN 978-0-87413-039-3.{{cite book}}:|work= ignored (help)
  63. ^abArmstrong, John Lowell (1994). "The Polish Underground and the Jews: A Reassessment of Home Army Commander Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski's Order 116 against Banditry".The Slavonic and East European Review.72 (2):259–276.ISSN 0037-6795.JSTOR 4211476.
  64. ^Zimmerman, Joshua D. (2019)."The Polish Underground Home Army (AK) and the Jews: What Postwar Jewish Testimonies and Wartime Documents Reveal".East European Politics and Societies and Cultures.34:194–220.doi:10.1177/0888325419844816.S2CID 204482531.
  65. ^abcdeSnyder, Timothy (8 September 2015).Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning. Crown/Archetype.ISBN 9781101903469.
  66. ^"Karski Jan".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  67. ^"Kamiński Aleksander".The Righteous Among The Nations Database.
  68. ^"Korbonski Stefan".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  69. ^"Woliński Henryk".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  70. ^"Żabiński Jan & Żabińska Antonina (Erdman)".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  71. ^"Bartoszewski Władysław".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  72. ^"Fogg Mieczyslaw".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  73. ^"Iwański Henryk & Iwańska Wiktoria".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  74. ^"Dobraczyński Jan".The Righteous Among The Nations Database. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  75. ^Kołomańska, Ewa (2020). "Polskie podziemie niepodległościowe w ratowaniu Żydów na Kielecczyźnie w latach 1939–1945". In Domański, Tomasz; Majcher-Ociesa, Edyta (eds.).Żydzi i wojsko polskie w XIX i XX wieku(PDF). Kielce Warszawa: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. pp. 234–250.ISBN 978-83-8098-894-1.
  76. ^Powstanie warszawskie w walce i dyplomacji - page 23 Janusz Kazimierz Zawodny, Andrzej Krzysztof Kunert 2005
  77. ^Shmuel Krakowski (January 2003). "The Attitude of the Polish Underground to the Jewish Question during the Second World War". In Joshua D. Zimmerman (ed.).Contested Memories: Poles and Jews During the Holocaust and Its Aftermath. Rutgers University Press. p. 102.ISBN 978-0-8135-3158-8.
  78. ^abcAdam Puławski (2003)."Postrzeganie żydowskich oddziałów partyzanckich przez Armię Krajową i Delegaturę Rządu RP na Kraj"(PDF).Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość [Memory and Justice] (in Polish).2 (4): 287. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 11 May 2023.
  79. ^Zimmerman (2015), p. 317.
  80. ^Zimmerman 2015, p. 5.
  81. ^"Henryk Wolinski".www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Archived fromthe original on 9 May 2023.
  82. ^John Wolffe; Open University (2004).Religion in History: Conflict, Conversion and Coexistence. Manchester University Press. p. 240.ISBN 978-0-7190-7107-2.
  83. ^"Zegota, page 4/34 of the Report"(PDF).Yad Vashem Shoa Resource Center. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 21 November 2008. Retrieved17 March 2011.
  84. ^Robert Cherry; Annamaria Orla-Bukowska (7 June 2007).Rethinking Poles and Jews: Troubled Past, Brighter Future. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 119–120.ISBN 978-1-4616-4308-1.
  85. ^Ackerman, Elliot (26 July 2019)."The Remarkable Story of the Man Who Volunteered to Enter Auschwitz".Time. Archived fromthe original on 8 May 2023. Retrieved9 December 2019.
  86. ^abcdZimmerman (2015), p. 188.
  87. ^Jarosław Piekałkiewicz (30 November 2019). Joanna Drzewieniecki (ed.).Dance with Death: A Holistic View of Saving Polish Jews during the Holocaust. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 256–257.ISBN 978-0-7618-7167-5.
  88. ^abcDavid Cesarani; Sarah Kavanaugh, eds. (2004).Holocaust: Responses to the persecution and mass murder of the Jews. Holocaust: critical concepts in historical studies. Vol. 5. London / New York: Routledge.ISBN 978-0-415-27509-5.[page needed]
  89. ^David Wdowiński (1963).And we are not saved. New York: Philosophical Library. p. 222.ISBN 0-8022-2486-5. Note: Chariton and Lazar were never co-authors of Wdowiński's memoir. Wdowiński is considered the "single author."
  90. ^Rashke, Richard (1995) [1983].Escape from Sobibor (2nd ed.). University of Illinois Press. p. 416.ISBN 978-0252064791.
  91. ^Lukas (2012), p. 175.
  92. ^David Wdowiński (1963).And we are not saved. New York: Philosophical Library. p. 222.ISBN 0-8022-2486-5. Note: Chariton and Lazar were never co-authors of Wdowiński's memoir. Wdowiński is considered the "single author".
  93. ^abcdFuks, Marian (1989)."Pomoc Polaków bojownikom getta warszawskiego" [Assistance of Poles in the Warsaw ghetto uprising].Biuletyn Żydowskiego Instytutu Historycznego (in Polish).1 (149):43–52, 144.Without assistance of Poles and even their active participation in some actions, without the supply of arms from the Polish underground movement - the outbreak of the uprising in the Warsaw ghetto was impossible.
  94. ^Peter Kenez (January 2009). Murray Baumgarten;Peter Kenez; Bruce Allan Thompson (eds.).The Attitude of the Polish Home Army (AK) to the Jewish Question during the Holocaust: the Case of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. University of Delaware Press. pp. 121–122.ISBN 978-0-87413-039-3.
  95. ^Monika Koszyńska, Paweł Kosiński,Pomoc Armii Krajowej dla powstańców żydowskich w getcie warszawskim (wiosna 1943 r.), 2012, Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. P.6. Quote: W okresie prowadzenia walki bieżącej ZWZ-AK stanowczo unikało starć zbrojnych, które byłyby skazane na niepowodzenie i okupione ofiarami o skali trudnejdo przewidzenia. To podstawowe założenie w praktyce uniemożliwiało AK czynne wystąpienie po stronie Żydów planujących demonstracje zbrojne w likwidowanych przez Niemców gettach... Kłopotem była też niemożność wytypowania przez rozbitą wewnętrznie konspirację żydowską przedstawicieli do prowadzenia rozmów z dowództwem AK.... Ograniczony rozmiar akowskiej pomocy związany był ze stałymi niedoborami uzbrojenia własnych oddziałów... oraz z lewicowym (prosowieckim) obliczem ŻOB...
  96. ^Monika Koszyńska, Paweł Kosiński,Pomoc Armii Krajowej dla powstańców żydowskich w getcie warszawskim (wiosna 1943 r.), 2012, Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. P.10-18
  97. ^Joshua D. Zimmerman (5 June 2015).The Polish Underground and the Jews, 1939–1945. Cambridge University Press. pp. 217–218.ISBN 978-1-107-01426-8.
  98. ^Joshua D. Zimmerman (9 October 2015)."Zimmerman: Podziemie polskie a Żydzi. Solidarność, zdrada i wszystko pomiędzy" [Zimmerman: Polish underground and Jews. Solidarity, betrayal and everything in between].ResPublica (Interview) (in Polish). Interviewed by Filip Mazurczak.
  99. ^Zimmerman (2015), p. 194.
  100. ^Wilhelm Heitmeyer; John Hagan (19 December 2005).International Handbook of Violence Research. Springer. p. 154.ISBN 978-1-4020-3980-5.
  101. ^Bauer, Yehuda (1989). "Jewish Resistance and Passivity in the Face of the Holocaust". In François Furet (ed.).Unanswered questions: Nazi Germany and the genocide of the Jews (1st American ed.). New York: Schocken Books. pp. 235–251.ISBN 978-0-8052-4051-1.
  102. ^Connelly, John (14 November 2012)."The Noble and the Base: Poland and the Holocaust".The Nation.ISSN 0027-8378. Archived fromthe original on 23 February 2018. Retrieved22 April 2018.
  103. ^Zimmerman (2015), pp. 267–298.
  104. ^Zimmerman, Joshua D. (2 July 2015). "Rethinking the Polish Underground". Interview in Yeshiva University News.
  105. ^abcdefghijklmnTadeusz Piotrowski (1998).Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918-1947. McFarland.ISBN 978-0-7864-0371-4.
  106. ^Eliach, Yaffa (2009) [1996]."The Pogrom at Eishyshok".The New York Times. Retrieved27 September 2009.
  107. ^abGunnar S. Paulsson (2002).Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940–1945. Yale University Press.ISBN 978-0-300-09546-3.
  108. ^Zimmerman (2015), p. 299.
  109. ^Zimmerman (2015), p. 189.
  110. ^Zimmerman (2015), p. 346.
  111. ^Zimmerman (2015), pp. 314–318.
  112. ^Zalesiński, Łukasz (2017)."Żołnierze akcji "Antyk" kontra komuniści".Polska Zbrojna.
  113. ^Zimmerman (2015), pp. 208, 357.
  114. ^(in Lithuanian)Arūnas Bubnys.Lietuvių ir lenkų pasipriešinimo judėjimai 1942–1945 m.: sąsajos ir skirtumai (Lithuanian and Polish resistance movements 1942–1945), 30 January 2004
  115. ^Petersen, Roger (2002).Understanding Ethnic Violence: Fear, Hatred, and Resentment in Twentieth-century Eastern Europe. Cambridge University. p. 152.ISBN 0-521-00774-7.
  116. ^abSnyder, Timothy (2003).The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999.Yale University Press. p. 84.ISBN 0-300-10586-X.
  117. ^abPiskunowicz, Henryk (1996). "Armia Krajowa na Wileńszczyżnie". In Krzysztof Komorowski (ed.).Armia Krajowa: Rozwój organizacyjny (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Bellona. pp. 213–214.ISBN 83-11-08544-7.
  118. ^(in Polish) Henryk Piskunowicz,Działalnośc zbrojna Armi Krajowej na Wileńszczyśnie w latach 1942–1944 inZygmunt Boradyn; Andrzej Chmielarz; Henryk Piskunowicz (1997).Tomasz Strzembosz (ed.).Armia Krajowa na Nowogródczyźnie i Wileńszczyźnie (1941–1945). Warsaw: Institute of Political Sciences,Polish Academy of Sciences. pp. 40–45.ISBN 83-907168-0-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
  119. ^Jacek J. Komar (1 September 2004)."W Wilnie pojednają się dziś weterani litewskiej armii i polskiej AK" [Today in Vilnius veterans of Lithuanian army and AK will forgive each other].Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). Archived fromthe original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved7 June 2006.
  120. ^Dovile, Budryte (30 September 2005).Taming Nationalism?. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.ISBN 0-7546-4281-X. p.187
  121. ^abcdefghijTimothy Snyder, "To Resolve the Ukrainian Question Once and for All: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ukrainians in Poland, 1943–1947Archived 16 May 2011 at Wikiwix,"Journal of Cold War Studies, Spring 1999 Vol. 1 Issue 2, pp. 86–120
  122. ^Mick, Christoph (7 April 2011)."Incompatible Experiences: Poles, Ukrainians and Jews in Lviv under Soviet and German Occupation, 1939-44"(PDF).Journal of Contemporary History.46 (2):336–363.doi:10.1177/0022009410392409.S2CID 159856277. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 25 February 2023.
  123. ^Marples, David R. (2007).Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine. Central European University Press. pp. 285–286.ISBN 978-9637326981.
  124. ^Cooke, Philip; Shepherd, Ben (2014).Hitler's Europe Ablaze: Occupation, Resistance, and Rebellion during World War II. Skyhorse Publishing. pp. 336–337.ISBN 978-1-63220-159-1.Jews who had escaped the Holocaust, and a large Polish minority, passionately hated UPA because it engaged in thorough ethnic cleansing, killing all the Jews it could find, about 50,000 Poles in Volhynia and between 20,000 and 30,000 Poles in Galicia.
  125. ^Motyka (2011), pp. 447–448.
  126. ^"The Effects of the Volhynian Massacres".1943 Volhynia Massacre. Truth and Remembrance. Institute of National Remembrance. Retrieved18 November 2019.
  127. ^J. P. Himka.Interventions: Challenging the Myths of Twentieth-Century Ukrainian history. University of Alberta. 28 March 2011. p. 4
  128. ^Motyka (2006), p. 324.
  129. ^Motyka (2006), p. 390.
  130. ^Jurij Kiriczuk,Jak za Jaremy i Krzywonosa, Gazeta Wyborcza 23 April 2003. Retrieved 5 March 2008.
  131. ^Motyka (2006), p. 327.
  132. ^Motyka (2006), pp. 358–360.
  133. ^Motyka (2006), pp. 382, 387.
  134. ^Marek Jasiak, "Overcoming Ukrainian Resistance"in:Ther, Philipp; Siljak, Ana (2001).Redrawing nations: ethnic cleansing in East-Central Europe, 1944-1948. Oxford: Rowman & Littfield. p. 174.
  135. ^Motyka (2016), p. 110.
  136. ^Motyka (2006), p. 413.
  137. ^Motyka (2016), p. 120.
  138. ^Motyka (2011), p. 448.
  139. ^Anna Kondek,Ukaże się nowa publikacja o konflikcie polsko-ukraińskim, PAP, 2011-02-20.Retrieved 2015-05-13.
  140. ^Motyka (2006), p. 578.
  141. ^Rapawy, Stephen (3 May 2016).The Culmination of Conflict: The Ukrainian-Polish Civil War and the Expulsion of Ukrainians After the Second World War. Columbia University Press. p. 220.ISBN 978-3-8382-6855-2.
  142. ^abMarek Jan Chodakiewicz (April 2006)."Review ofSowjetische Partisanen in Weißrußland".Sarmatian Review.Archived from the original on 18 July 2012.
  143. ^abcdefghRzeczpospolita, 02.10.04 Nr 232,Wielkie polowanie: Prześladowania akowców w Polsce Ludowej (Great hunt: the persecutions of AK soldiers in the People's Republic of Poland). Retrieved from Internet Archive.
  144. ^Stefan Korboński (1959).Warsaw in Chains. New York: Macmillan Publishing. pp. 112–123.
  145. ^abAndrzej Paczkowski. Poland, the "Enemy Nation", pp. 372–375, inBlack Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression.Harvard University Press, London. Seeonline excerptArchived 7 May 2023 at theWayback Machine.
  146. ^Michał Zając,Warsaw Uprising: 5 pm, 1 August 1944, Retrieved on 4 July 2007.
  147. ^Żołnierze Batalionu Armii Krajowej "Zośka" represjonowani w latach 1944–1956," Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, Warszawa 2008,ISBN 978-83-60464-92-2
  148. ^Persak, Krzysztof (December 2006). "The Polish – Soviet Confrontation in 1956 and the Attempted Soviet Military Intervention in Poland".Europe-Asia Studies.58 (8):1285–1310.doi:10.1080/09668130600996549.S2CID 154565213.
  149. ^"Państwo Podziemne było fenomenem na skalę światową".Polska Newsweek. 8 January 2010. Archived fromthe original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved19 November 2013.
  150. ^"Pomnik Polskiego Państwa Podziemnego i Armii Krajowej / pomnik / Jerzy Staniszkis" (in Polish). Puszka.waw.pl. Retrieved19 November 2013.
  151. ^"Muzeum Armii Krajowej im. Gen. Emila Fieldorfa "Nila" w Krakowie". Archived fromthe original on 15 October 2018.
  152. ^"Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego". 1944.pl. Retrieved19 November 2013.
  153. ^Norman Davies (28 February 2005).God's Playground: 1795 to the present. Columbia University Press. p. 344.ISBN 978-0-231-12819-3. Retrieved30 May 2012.
  154. ^Gregor Dallas (2005).1945: The War that Never Ended.Yale University Press. p. 79.ISBN 978-0-300-10980-1.
  155. ^Mark Wyman (18 June 1998).DPs: Europe's Displaced Persons, 1945–51. Cornell University Press. p. 34.ISBN 0-8014-8542-8.
  156. ^Walter Laqueur,The Guerilla Reader: A Historical Anthology, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1990, p. 233.
  157. ^Leonid D. Grenkevich,The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941–44: A Critical Historiographical Analysis, p. 229.

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