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Adam Doboszyński

Adam Doboszyński was a soldier of the Polish Army, writer, engineer, and a social activist. Born in 1904 in Kraków, he was murdered by the Communist secret services in 1949, in the notorious Mokotów Prison in Warsaw.

Adam Doboszyński
Adam Doboszynski
Born11 January 1904
Kraków, Kingdom of Poland
Died1 March 1951(1951-03-01) (aged 47)
Mokotów Prison, Warsaw, Polish People's Republic
Allegiance Poland
Service/branch Polish Army
Years of service1920, 1939
Battles/warsPolish-Soviet War
World War II

Early life and education edit

Doboszyński was born in Kraków on 11 January 1904, in a noble family. His father Adam was a lawyer and a member of the Austrian Imperial Council. During the Polish-Soviet War, sixteen-year old Doboszyński volunteered to the 6th Regiment of Heavy Artillery in Kraków, serving for four months. After graduation from high school, Doboszyński went to study law at the University of Warsaw. He did not stay there long, moving to Free City of Danzig, to study at the Technische Hochschule der Freien Stadt Danzig (currently: Gdańsk University of Technology). He was an active member of Polish national organizations in Danzig in the 1920s. Among others, he was chairman of the Association of Gdańsk Academics Vistula and co-founded of the Brotherly Help of the Association of Polish Students. Doboszyński also participated in three Congresses of the International Conference of Students.

In 1925 he graduated from the Technische Hochschule with a diploma in construction engineering. In 1925 - 1927, Doboszyński continued his education at the Sciences Po in Paris, but was forced to quit his studies early due to his family's financial difficulties. After the return to Poland, he completed a course at the Officer Cadet Sapper School in Dęblin, after which Doboszyński was promoted to the rank of Second Lieutenant in reserve.

Career edit

Early writings, activism edit

In the late 1920s, Doboszyński returned to his family estate, located in the village of Chorowice near Kraków, where he wrote his first books. In 1928, he wrote a novel Słowo ciężarne (Pregnant Word). Also, he wrote Szlakiem Malthusa (Following Thomas Robert Malthus), and an unpublished drama Trans (Trance). Furthermore, Doboszyński was active in the local Polish landed gentry circles, holding the post of a secretary in the Kraków Branch of the Association of Landowners (1929 - 1931).

In 1931, Doboszyński became a member of Camp of Great Poland and since then was associated with Polish right-wing, national movement. In 1933, during a trip to England, he met G. K. Chesterton, whose ideas greatly influenced the Polish activist. In 1934, he wrote a book Gospodarka narodowa (National Economy), which was enthusiastically welcomed by right-wing activists. The book was a great success, it was reprinted three times, fourth reprint was terminated by the outbreak of the war.

Doboszyński's view of Polish national economy was shaped by the works of Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas. His critique of liberal capitalism and collectivism was based on the teachings of the Roman Catholic church. Doboszyński argued that both capitalism and communism, seemingly so different from each other, were based on anti-Christian, materialistic outlook. He criticized liberal capitalism, regarding it as immoral. He expressed the opinion that both liberal capitalism and communism were joined by collectivism, and in his opinion, both doctrines had the same root, which was materialistic outlook. According to his philosophy, communist destroyed the human existence, exploiting an individual in the name of the creation of utopia. The process of mindless industrialization and centralization of economy was evil in his view, contributing to the moral decline of societies and exploitation of humans.

According to Doboszyński, the alternative to liberal capitalism in Poland was the creation of a national society, which was able to defend the nation from the concentration of industry. The society should be built like a human organism, in which an individual should not feel alienated, but be supported by the family and the homeland. The basis of a new economic regime was to be trade corporations of both employers and employees. Also, stratification of society was to remain untouched.

Political career edit

In 1934, Doboszyński joined Kraków Branch of the National Party (Poland), in which he was responsible for propaganda. He was regarded as a skillful administration, who built party structures in the region. He traveled across Poland, giving speeches to the workers of industrial centers of Bielsko-Biała, Łódź, Częstochowa or Borysław. Furthermore, he created mobile libraries, which toured the country, presenting national camp publications to the readers. Doboszyński co-created "Polish Labor" trade unions, which remained under control of the National Party. He published a number of press articles, remaining in close contact with other activists of the party. Due to his activities, he was frequently harassed by the police, and was close to imprisonment at the infamous Bereza Kartuska prison.

Raid of Myślenice, imprisonment edit

On the night of 22–23 June 1936 Doboszyński carried out the so-called Raid of Myślenice. A group of national activists, commanded by him, seized control of the town of Myślenice, disarming a local police station and cutting telephone wires. Windows of several Jewish-owned businesses were broken, and goods from these stores were carried out to the main market square, where they were set on fire. The raid was a response to the killing of National Party politician Wawrzyniec Sielski, who had been shot by the police in February 1936. In the morning of June 23, Doboszyński's unit retreated from Myślenice. It was followed by the police forces, which twice clashed with the national activists, who were heading southwards, to the Czechoslovak border. Most activists were captured, two were killed in the clashes. Doboszyński himself decided to voluntarily surrender to the police on 30 June.

During the first interrogation, Doboszyński claimed that he was to be blamed for the raid. His trial began in Kraków on 14 June 1937, as one of the most famous political trials of the Second Polish Republic. Doboszyński claimed in court that he carried out the raid in protest of police terror of the Sanacja regime. He was acquitted by the jury, but the decision was protested by the Appellate Tribunal. In February 1938 in Lwów, Doboszyński was found guilty of only one charge: seizing weapons from police post. He was sentenced for three and half years, but was released in February 1939 due to deteriorating health. Doboszyński remained actively involved in politics in the last months of the Second Polish Republic. During the April 1939 Congress of the National Party, he supported Zygmunt Berezowski.

Second World War edit

In September 1939, Doboszyński joined Polish Army as a volunteer. Wounded near Lwów, he managed to escape from German captivity to Hungary and finally to France and Great Britain. For his military heroism, he was awarded the Cross of Valour (Poland) and the Croix de Guerre. In the early 1940s, while in Great Britain, Doboszyński remained in the service as a colonel. At the same time, he continued his political activity, publicly criticizing the National Party and its chairman Tadeusz Bielecki for its submission to the government in exile of General Władysław Sikorski. He actively worked on the creation of a wide national - Catholic bloc of several political movements. Doboszyński continued promoting Catholic-based ideas of a nation and social regime. In 1941 - 1941, together with Father Stanisław Bełch he published "I am a Pole" magazine, in which he criticized General Sikorski for his pro-Soviet stance. In his opinion, Sikorski was a weak man, whose career was based on his affiliations with French politicians.

In April 1941 Doboszyński was sent to a camp of Sikorski's opponents, located on the Isle of Bute in Scotland. He remained there until January 1942. After release, he continued his critique of Sikorski. In February 1943 he published an open letter, urging President Władysław Raczkiewicz and General Kazimierz Sosnkowski to overthrow Sikorski. The letter was supported by several Polish circles, but Doboszyński was arrested and then expelled from the army. Doboszyński strongly opposed all kinds of uprisings, regarding them as unnecessary and pernicious to the Polish nation. In November 1943 he published a text "The Economy of Blood", in which he argued that any uprising, breaking out in occupied Poland, would be as tragic as Polish 19th-century, failed insurrections. He also opposed the Third World War against the Soviet Union, arguing that it would not result in Poland's independence.

Post-war edit

Following the war, Doboszyński remained in London. He lived in poverty, with occasional help provided by his friends from former Polish Armed Forces. Despite these problems, he continued writing. In 1945, he wrote in English "Economics of charity", and two years later completed the "Pocket Encyclopedia of Social Notions", and "Two Platforms of Nationalism". He also translated into Polish G.K. Chesterton's "A Short History of England" and Christopher Hollins' "Breakdown of Money". Furthermore, he remained politically active, as a member of a group called the "Generation of Independent Poland", in which he promoted the creation of a federation of Central European states, as a counterbalance against the expansion of Russia and Germany. Doboszyński also supported the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations.

In December 1946 Doboszyński secretly returned to Poland. He wanted to personally become acquainted with political, economical and social situation of the country. Also, he wanted to meet with leaders of anticommunist guerilla movement, to tell them that they should not expect any support from the West. By early 1947, he was openly traveling across the country, meeting with national and Catholic activists. His plan was to create a strong national-Catholic organization, which would eventually create a stronger Poland. His activities were closely monitored by the Communist agents, as most of his partners were arrested.[citation needed]

Show trial and execution edit

December 1946 Doboszyński clandestinely returned to Poland.[1] In early summer 1947, Doboszyński completed his last work, "Half Way", which contained his opinion on the situation of Poland, prognosis for the future and advice for the national movement.[citation needed] Doboszyński was arrested July 1947.[2] His sister Jadwiga Malkiewicz was arrested in September 1947, being accused of helping him to contact the anti-Communist underground in Poland.[3]

18 June 1949 til 11 July Doboszyński was trialed at the Warsaw Regional Military Court, standing accused of being an agent of the German, as well as an American intelligence service agent from 1933 to 1947.[4]

Political legacy edit

Doboszyński is now regarded as important thinker on agrarianism, which was an important source of influenced on collectivist economics in Poland. Doboszyński is counted among the most important agrarianist theorists in the interwar period, alongside Stanislaw Milkowski. Agrarianism was supported by economists such as Franciszek Bujak, Wladyslaw Grabski, and Stanisław Głąbiński.[5] Doboszyński's ideas were not utopian, he advanced the idea of a New Middle Age, and rejected the concept of modernity.[6] He argued that it was easier for the nation state to reach an agreement with a handful of small independent craftsmen and producers; or, if that is not possible, economic mechanisms such as cooperatives and member-owned mutual organisations as well as small to medium enterprises and large-scale competition law reform such as antitrust regulations, instead of negotiating with large corporations (although he preffered corporatism over capitalism and socialism).[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jakub Karpinski (2019). Poland Since 1944: A Portrait Of Years. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000305692.
  2. ^ Jakub Karpinski (2019). Poland Since 1944: A Portrait Of Years. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000305692.
  3. ^ Anna Müller (2018). If the Walls Could Speak: Inside a Women's Prison in Communist Poland. Oxford University Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780190499860.
  4. ^ Jakub Karpinski (2019). Poland Since 1944: A Portrait Of Years. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000305692.
  5. ^ János Matyas Kovács, ed. (2018). Populating No Man's Land: Economic Concepts of Ownership Under Communism. Lexington Books. p. 176. ISBN 9781498586344.
  6. ^ Piotr Koryś (2018). Poland From Partitions to EU Accession: A Modern Economic History, 1772–2004. Springer International Publishing. p. 218. ISBN 9783319971261.
  7. ^ Magdalena Ziętek-Wielomska; Adam Wielomski (2017). The Europe of Nations and Its Future: Nationalism, Euroscepticism, Natiocratism. Klub Zachowawczo-Monarchistyczny. p. 102. ISBN 9788392716662.

adam, doboszyński, soldier, polish, army, writer, engineer, social, activist, born, 1904, kraków, murdered, communist, secret, services, 1949, notorious, mokotów, prison, warsaw, adam, doboszynskiborn11, january, 1904kraków, kingdom, polanddied1, march, 1951, . Adam Doboszynski was a soldier of the Polish Army writer engineer and a social activist Born in 1904 in Krakow he was murdered by the Communist secret services in 1949 in the notorious Mokotow Prison in Warsaw Adam DoboszynskiAdam DoboszynskiBorn11 January 1904Krakow Kingdom of PolandDied1 March 1951 1951 03 01 aged 47 Mokotow Prison Warsaw Polish People s RepublicAllegiance PolandService wbr branchPolish ArmyYears of service1920 1939Battles warsPolish Soviet WarWorld War II Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Early writings activism 2 2 Political career 2 3 Raid of Myslenice imprisonment 2 4 Second World War 2 5 Post war 2 6 Show trial and execution 3 Political legacy 4 See also 5 ReferencesEarly life and education editDoboszynski was born in Krakow on 11 January 1904 in a noble family His father Adam was a lawyer and a member of the Austrian Imperial Council During the Polish Soviet War sixteen year old Doboszynski volunteered to the 6th Regiment of Heavy Artillery in Krakow serving for four months After graduation from high school Doboszynski went to study law at the University of Warsaw He did not stay there long moving to Free City of Danzig to study at the Technische Hochschule der Freien Stadt Danzig currently Gdansk University of Technology He was an active member of Polish national organizations in Danzig in the 1920s Among others he was chairman of the Association of Gdansk Academics Vistula and co founded of the Brotherly Help of the Association of Polish Students Doboszynski also participated in three Congresses of the International Conference of Students In 1925 he graduated from the Technische Hochschule with a diploma in construction engineering In 1925 1927 Doboszynski continued his education at the Sciences Po in Paris but was forced to quit his studies early due to his family s financial difficulties After the return to Poland he completed a course at the Officer Cadet Sapper School in Deblin after which Doboszynski was promoted to the rank of Second Lieutenant in reserve Career editEarly writings activism edit In the late 1920s Doboszynski returned to his family estate located in the village of Chorowice near Krakow where he wrote his first books In 1928 he wrote a novel Slowo ciezarne Pregnant Word Also he wrote Szlakiem Malthusa Following Thomas Robert Malthus and an unpublished drama Trans Trance Furthermore Doboszynski was active in the local Polish landed gentry circles holding the post of a secretary in the Krakow Branch of the Association of Landowners 1929 1931 In 1931 Doboszynski became a member of Camp of Great Poland and since then was associated with Polish right wing national movement In 1933 during a trip to England he met G K Chesterton whose ideas greatly influenced the Polish activist In 1934 he wrote a book Gospodarka narodowa National Economy which was enthusiastically welcomed by right wing activists The book was a great success it was reprinted three times fourth reprint was terminated by the outbreak of the war Doboszynski s view of Polish national economy was shaped by the works of Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas His critique of liberal capitalism and collectivism was based on the teachings of the Roman Catholic church Doboszynski argued that both capitalism and communism seemingly so different from each other were based on anti Christian materialistic outlook He criticized liberal capitalism regarding it as immoral He expressed the opinion that both liberal capitalism and communism were joined by collectivism and in his opinion both doctrines had the same root which was materialistic outlook According to his philosophy communist destroyed the human existence exploiting an individual in the name of the creation of utopia The process of mindless industrialization and centralization of economy was evil in his view contributing to the moral decline of societies and exploitation of humans According to Doboszynski the alternative to liberal capitalism in Poland was the creation of a national society which was able to defend the nation from the concentration of industry The society should be built like a human organism in which an individual should not feel alienated but be supported by the family and the homeland The basis of a new economic regime was to be trade corporations of both employers and employees Also stratification of society was to remain untouched Political career edit In 1934 Doboszynski joined Krakow Branch of the National Party Poland in which he was responsible for propaganda He was regarded as a skillful administration who built party structures in the region He traveled across Poland giving speeches to the workers of industrial centers of Bielsko Biala Lodz Czestochowa or Boryslaw Furthermore he created mobile libraries which toured the country presenting national camp publications to the readers Doboszynski co created Polish Labor trade unions which remained under control of the National Party He published a number of press articles remaining in close contact with other activists of the party Due to his activities he was frequently harassed by the police and was close to imprisonment at the infamous Bereza Kartuska prison Raid of Myslenice imprisonment edit On the night of 22 23 June 1936 Doboszynski carried out the so called Raid of Myslenice A group of national activists commanded by him seized control of the town of Myslenice disarming a local police station and cutting telephone wires Windows of several Jewish owned businesses were broken and goods from these stores were carried out to the main market square where they were set on fire The raid was a response to the killing of National Party politician Wawrzyniec Sielski who had been shot by the police in February 1936 In the morning of June 23 Doboszynski s unit retreated from Myslenice It was followed by the police forces which twice clashed with the national activists who were heading southwards to the Czechoslovak border Most activists were captured two were killed in the clashes Doboszynski himself decided to voluntarily surrender to the police on 30 June During the first interrogation Doboszynski claimed that he was to be blamed for the raid His trial began in Krakow on 14 June 1937 as one of the most famous political trials of the Second Polish Republic Doboszynski claimed in court that he carried out the raid in protest of police terror of the Sanacja regime He was acquitted by the jury but the decision was protested by the Appellate Tribunal In February 1938 in Lwow Doboszynski was found guilty of only one charge seizing weapons from police post He was sentenced for three and half years but was released in February 1939 due to deteriorating health Doboszynski remained actively involved in politics in the last months of the Second Polish Republic During the April 1939 Congress of the National Party he supported Zygmunt Berezowski Second World War edit In September 1939 Doboszynski joined Polish Army as a volunteer Wounded near Lwow he managed to escape from German captivity to Hungary and finally to France and Great Britain For his military heroism he was awarded the Cross of Valour Poland and the Croix de Guerre In the early 1940s while in Great Britain Doboszynski remained in the service as a colonel At the same time he continued his political activity publicly criticizing the National Party and its chairman Tadeusz Bielecki for its submission to the government in exile of General Wladyslaw Sikorski He actively worked on the creation of a wide national Catholic bloc of several political movements Doboszynski continued promoting Catholic based ideas of a nation and social regime In 1941 1941 together with Father Stanislaw Belch he published I am a Pole magazine in which he criticized General Sikorski for his pro Soviet stance In his opinion Sikorski was a weak man whose career was based on his affiliations with French politicians In April 1941 Doboszynski was sent to a camp of Sikorski s opponents located on the Isle of Bute in Scotland He remained there until January 1942 After release he continued his critique of Sikorski In February 1943 he published an open letter urging President Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz and General Kazimierz Sosnkowski to overthrow Sikorski The letter was supported by several Polish circles but Doboszynski was arrested and then expelled from the army Doboszynski strongly opposed all kinds of uprisings regarding them as unnecessary and pernicious to the Polish nation In November 1943 he published a text The Economy of Blood in which he argued that any uprising breaking out in occupied Poland would be as tragic as Polish 19th century failed insurrections He also opposed the Third World War against the Soviet Union arguing that it would not result in Poland s independence Post war edit Following the war Doboszynski remained in London He lived in poverty with occasional help provided by his friends from former Polish Armed Forces Despite these problems he continued writing In 1945 he wrote in English Economics of charity and two years later completed the Pocket Encyclopedia of Social Notions and Two Platforms of Nationalism He also translated into Polish G K Chesterton s A Short History of England and Christopher Hollins Breakdown of Money Furthermore he remained politically active as a member of a group called the Generation of Independent Poland in which he promoted the creation of a federation of Central European states as a counterbalance against the expansion of Russia and Germany Doboszynski also supported the Anti Bolshevik Bloc of Nations In December 1946 Doboszynski secretly returned to Poland He wanted to personally become acquainted with political economical and social situation of the country Also he wanted to meet with leaders of anticommunist guerilla movement to tell them that they should not expect any support from the West By early 1947 he was openly traveling across the country meeting with national and Catholic activists His plan was to create a strong national Catholic organization which would eventually create a stronger Poland His activities were closely monitored by the Communist agents as most of his partners were arrested citation needed Show trial and execution edit December 1946 Doboszynski clandestinely returned to Poland 1 In early summer 1947 Doboszynski completed his last work Half Way which contained his opinion on the situation of Poland prognosis for the future and advice for the national movement citation needed Doboszynski was arrested July 1947 2 His sister Jadwiga Malkiewicz was arrested in September 1947 being accused of helping him to contact the anti Communist underground in Poland 3 18 June 1949 til 11 July Doboszynski was trialed at the Warsaw Regional Military Court standing accused of being an agent of the German as well as an American intelligence service agent from 1933 to 1947 4 Political legacy editDoboszynski is now regarded as important thinker on agrarianism which was an important source of influenced on collectivist economics in Poland Doboszynski is counted among the most important agrarianist theorists in the interwar period alongside Stanislaw Milkowski Agrarianism was supported by economists such as Franciszek Bujak Wladyslaw Grabski and Stanislaw Glabinski 5 Doboszynski s ideas were not utopian he advanced the idea of a New Middle Age and rejected the concept of modernity 6 He argued that it was easier for the nation state to reach an agreement with a handful of small independent craftsmen and producers or if that is not possible economic mechanisms such as cooperatives and member owned mutual organisations as well as small to medium enterprises and large scale competition law reform such as antitrust regulations instead of negotiating with large corporations although he preffered corporatism over capitalism and socialism 7 See also editCursed soldiers 1951 Mokotow Prison executionReferences edit Jakub Karpinski 2019 Poland Since 1944 A Portrait Of Years Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000305692 Jakub Karpinski 2019 Poland Since 1944 A Portrait Of Years Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000305692 Anna Muller 2018 If the Walls Could Speak Inside a Women s Prison in Communist Poland Oxford University Press p 69 ISBN 9780190499860 Jakub Karpinski 2019 Poland Since 1944 A Portrait Of Years Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000305692 Janos Matyas Kovacs ed 2018 Populating No Man s Land Economic Concepts of Ownership Under Communism Lexington Books p 176 ISBN 9781498586344 Piotr Korys 2018 Poland From Partitions to EU Accession A Modern Economic History 1772 2004 Springer International Publishing p 218 ISBN 9783319971261 Magdalena Zietek Wielomska Adam Wielomski 2017 The Europe of Nations and Its Future Nationalism Euroscepticism Natiocratism Klub Zachowawczo Monarchistyczny p 102 ISBN 9788392716662 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adam Doboszynski amp oldid 1188689050, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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