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The
Polish Underground State which functioned under the German
occupation in the Second World War was an unique phenomenon in
the whole history of European resistance movements.
In 1939, the territory of Poland
was occupied and carved up between Nazi Germany and Soviet
Russia. Then, the outbreak of the German-Russian war in 1941,
meant that the entire Polish territory was overrun by the
Germans, whose long-term aim was to exterminate the Poles.
Occupied Warsaw, the Polish capital, remained for Poles the
centre of their underground political life. Here in September
1939 was formed the Polish Victory Service (SZP), an underground
political-military organisation which was the embryo of the
subsequently developed underground state.
The Polish Underground State grew,
and reached its most mature form in 1943-44. The highest
authorities in this state were held by the Government Delegate
at Home, in 1944 this was the deputy premier (of the acting
government, in exile in London). The Government Delegates were,
successively, Cyryl Ratajski (pseudonym "Wartski").
Jan Piekalkiewicz (ps. “Julianski”), Jan Stanislaw
Jankowski (ps. “Soból”), Stefan Korbonski (ps. "Zielinski”).
The underground parliament was a
representation of the most important political parties and
groupings (the Political Consultative Committee – the
Political Representation at Home) which in the period 1944-45
took the name of the Council of National Unity (RJN). In the
underground parliament the more important political parties were
represented: the Peasants’ Party (SL), the Polish Socialist
Party (PPS), the National Party (SN) and smaller groupings. The
Polish Workers’ Party (PPR) remained outside this
parliamentary set up, refusing to recognise the constitutional
Government of Poland and was not only wholly dependent on
Russia, but also represented that state’s interests.
In 1944, at the side of the
Government Delegate’s Office was the Home Council of
Ministers (KRM). The Government Delegate directed the work of
the Government Delegate’s Office at Home which comprised 18
departments which corresponded to the Government-in-Exile’s
ministries in London. The Delegates’ activities encompassed ,
to the extent that conditions of enemy occupation and terror
allowed, all areas of organised society. First and foremost,
this was secret education provided at every level – primary,
secondary and higher. Secret courses were organised at the
underground universities of Warsaw, Kraków (Cracow), Wilno
(Vilna) and
Lwów (Lvov). A very important influence on public opinion
was also exerted through propaganda disseminated by the
underground press. In general, throughout the entire wartime
period, about 1500 different titles appeared. In addition to
this, an underground administrative apparatus capable of
undertaking work at the moment of restoration of an independent
Polish state was organised.
The most important, however, was
the Home Army (AK), the backbone in the struggle with the
occupant. This armed force, evolved from SZP, through the Union
of Armed Combat (ZWZ), to reach its apogee as the AK. This
constituted an integral part of the Polish Armed Forces (PSZ)
and remained under the overall command of the Polish
Commander-in-Chief who remained abroad. The successive
commanders in the SZP-ZWZ-AK chain of development were General
Michał Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz (pseudonym “Torwid”),
General Stefan Rowecki (ps. "Grot"), General Tadeusz
Komorowski (ps. "Bór"), and General Leopold Okulicki
("Niedzwiadek”).
At the top of the command structure
was the Home Army High Command (KG AK) which consisted of seven
staff bureaus and miscellaneous specialist units and
detachments. The territory of Poland, in its interwar shape, was
divided into areas and regions, each of which had its own scaled
down version of the KG AK. The chief task of the AK was to
prepare and execute a general uprising in Poland coordinated
with the Allies in the final phase of the war, which would
liberate Poland from the occupant in one fell swoop. The
on-going struggle concentrated on self-defence (freeing
prisoners and hostages, defence against pacification measures),
and striking at the occupant’s apparatus of terror (the
physical liquidation of Gestapo and SS functionaries). These
activities were conducted by a special combat department known
as the Diversionary Directorate (Kierownictwo Dywersji) –
Kedyw for short, under the command of Colonel August Emil
Fieldorf. Besides this special partisan detachments were
created, designed to train soldiers for the coming uprising
through small scale on-going skirmishing.
As a result of the unification of
the various underground military organisations, the AK finally
emerged in 1944 as an umbrella organisation for a national
military force of over 350,000 soldiers. The intelligence work
of the AK in a wide area of Europe was of capital importance to
Allied strategists. Among other achievements, the production
centre of the V1 rocket was pinpointed and essential V2 parts
were won and passed on to London. Psychological warfare was also
waged, in which Action "N" was mounted to create the
illusion of an internal German opposition movement to Hitler.
The AK single-handedly liberated a
number of places from German control. The Warsaw Uprising, due
to a lack of Allied support, collapsed after a 63 day battle. In
the face of the resumed Soviet offensive of 19 January 1945, the
AK was dissolved. The civil authorities of the Polish
Underground State followed suit in July 1945. AK soldiers
suffered repression from the Russians either through the
Moscow-controlled Polish communists, or directly at the hands of
the NKVD (the Russian security police service)
List of
confirmed sabotage-diversionary actions of
the Union of Armed Combat (ZWZ) and Home Army (AK)
from 1 January 1941 to 30 June 1944
Source: Bohdan Kwiatkowski, Sabotaż i dywersja, Bellona,
London 1949, vol.1, p.21
|
Sabotage
/ Diversionary Action Type |
Totals |
1 |
Damaged
locomotives |
6
930 |
2 |
Delayed
repairs to locomotives |
803 |
3 |
Derailed
transports |
732 |
4 |
Transports
set on fire |
443 |
5 |
Damage
to railway wagons |
19
058 |
6 |
Blown
up railway bridges |
38 |
7 |
Disruptions
to electricity supplies in the Warsaw grid |
638 |
8 |
Army
vehicles damaged or destroyed |
4
326 |
9 |
Damaged
aeroplanes |
28 |
10 |
Fuel
tanks destroyed |
1
167 |
|
Fuel
destroyed (in tonnes) |
4
674 |
11 |
Blocked
oil wells |
5 |
12 |
Wagons
of wood wool destroyed |
150 |
13 |
Military
stores burned down |
130 |
14 |
Disruptions
of production in factories |
7 |
15 |
Built-in
faults in parts for aircraft engines |
4
710 |
16 |
Built-in
faults into cannon muzzles |
203 |
17 |
Built-in
faults into artillery missiles |
92
000 |
18 |
Built-in
faults into air traffic radio stations |
107 |
19 |
Built-in
faults into condensers |
70
000 |
20 |
Built-in
faults into (electro-industrial) lathes |
1
700 |
21 |
Damage
to important factory machinery |
2
872 |
22 |
Various
acts of sabotage performed |
25
145 |
23 |
Planned
assassinations of Germans |
5
733 |
Marek Ney-Krwawicz,
Warsaw
(Translated from Polish
by Antoni Bohdanowicz)