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Attack on the NKVD Camp in Rembertów

On May 21, 1945, a unit of the Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa, AK), led by Colonel Edward Wasilewski, attacked a Soviet NKVD camp located in Rembertów in the eastern outskirts of Warsaw. Hundreds of Polish citizens had been imprisoned there, including members of the Home Army and other members of the underground resistance.[1][2][3][4] Prisoners at the camp were being systematically deported to Siberia. As a result of the attack, all of the Polish political prisoners were freed from the camp by the pro-independence resistance.

Attack on the NKVD Camp in Rembertów
Part of Anti-communist resistance in Poland (1944–46)
DateMay 21, 1945
Location
Result Home Army victory
Belligerents
Polish Underground NKVD
Commanders and leaders
Edward Wasilewski
Edmund Swiderski
Colonel Alexandrov
Strength
44
Casualties and losses
Over 500 Polish captives freed

Background edit

Rembertów is located within the boundaries of Warsaw. In the 1940s, it was a separate town. In the summer of 1941, after the Operation Barbarossa the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the Wehrmacht opened "Stalag 333", a camp for Soviet Prisoners of War (POWs), located in a former ammunition factory (or "pocisk" meaning "bullet") in Rembertów.[5]

In 1944, the Soviet forces captured the camp and reopened it. They imprisoned members of the Home Army, who were seen as enemy combatants due to their loyalty to the Polish government in exile.

NKVD camp edit

On July 26, 1944, the Soviet sponsored Polish Committee of National Liberation gave NKVD agents their remit in the Polish territories. Then, on September 11, 1944, Soviet forces took the town of Rembertów.[6] The Soviet troops reopened the Rembertów prisoner of war camp to detain Polish and German prisoners as well as former Russian detainees, who were assumed to have collaborated with the Nazis.[1][2][3] The Polish detainees included soldiers of the Home Army as well as those of other resistance organizations such as the Narodowe Siły Zbrojne (NSZ, the national army force) and the Bataliony Chłopskie (BCh, the peasant battalions). Rembertów camp also became a mustering point for Polish anti-communists being sent to Siberia. Russian troops tried to hide this from the local Polish townsfolk by ordering the prisoners in broken German.

The camp was surrounded by two barbed wire fences. Between the fences was a path patrolled by armed guards and their dogs. The camp was also guarded by NKVD officers armed with machine guns in towers. The camp commander, Colonel Alexandrov, held a roll call of prisoners at 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. each day. Conditions in the camp were harsh.

In his book, Rising '44 (2004), Norman Davies writes, "A man who passed through Rembertów described the conditions. They were not to be compared to the relative luxury at Sandbostel or Murnau" and throughout the winter of 1944–1945, "prisoners were frequently held in the open, without shelter, in a compound surrounded by barbed wire (...) According to the reports, when locals enquired about the suffering prisoners, who were clearly visible from a nearby road, they were told that the compound contained Volksdeutsche and Nazis".[7]

On March 25, 1945, the first rail transport of Polish soldiers left Rembertów for Siberia. Over 1,000 soldiers were transported. One-quarter did not survive the journey. The dead were carried to a special rail car at the rear of the train. In early March 1945, the NKVD had arrested General Emil Fieldorf ("Nil"). Fieldorf remained unrecognised as he gave the name "Walenty Gdanicki". The Polish resistance soon learned that Fieldorf was imprisoned at the Rembertów camp. He was transported onwards to Siberia before Colonel Jan Mazurkiewicz ("Radosław") could mount an operation to free him.

Attack edit

 
Walenty Suda's grave in Piaseczno

In April and May 1945, the NKVD brought more prisoners to the camp including General Edward Gruber, Colonel Kazimierz Marszewski and the philosopher, Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz. The next transport to Siberia was planned for May 25, 1945. Captain Walenty Suda ("Młot": hammer), the Home Army commander of Mińsk Mazowiecki District planned to attack the camp prior to the transport. Suda gave Lieutenant Edward Wasilewski ("Wichura": gale) command of 44 well-trained fighters. Thirty-two of the fighters were from Wasilewski's unit. Twelve were from the unit under Colonel Edmund Swiderski. While disguised as a soldier of the Ludowe Wojsko Polskie (Polish Communist Army), Wasilewski reconnoitred the camp. On the night of Saturday, May 20, 1945, the prisoners' relatives brought large quantities of alcohol to the camp to ensure the NKVD guards would become drunk. The prisoners were informed of the imminent attack. The Soviet camp commander left for a party in the nearby village of Kawęczyn.

The Polish Army unit travelled to Rembertów on horses from nearby Długa Kościelna village and then divided into three groups. The first group, led by "Wichura" (Gale), was to open the camp gate to release the prisoners. Wichura did not want to release German prisoners nor Russian soldiers from the units of General Andrei Vlasov. The second group's mission was to suppress the guards and the third group was to act as lookouts. The attack lasted approximately 25 minutes. The surprised NKVD guards offered little resistance and about 100 wounded and sick Polish prisoners were taken away on two trucks. The remaining prisoners dispersed into the forests and villages. Reports of the NKVD dead vary between 15 and 68 men. Approximately 40 Polish prisoners were killed by machine gun fire while escaping. Three members of the Home Army unit were injured but none killed.

Aftermath edit

The number of prisoners released in the attack vary from 466 in NKVD reports, 800 in Home Army reports and 1,400 in other historical analyses. On the morning of Sunday, May 21, 1945, Soviet troops, supported by aircraft, combed the area around Rembertów in search of the escapees. On that day, twenty-seven escapees, mostly German soldiers who did not know where to go, were recaptured. In the following days, approximately fifty escapees were caught and some summarily executed. Lavrentiy Beria in Moscow ordered a special investigation; dismissed the commander of the Rembertów camp and closed the camp; and ordered a review of all such camps. On May 21, 1995, a monument to commemorate the camp and the attack was unveiled in Rembertów. The text of the tablet on the monument reads:

W miejscu tym na terenie dawnej fabryki "Pocisk" znajdowały się obozy od września 1941 do początku 1944 - hitlerowski obóz pracy jeńców sowieckich - komando stalag 333 - od lipca 1944 do września 1944 - hitlerowski obóz pracy dla więźniów polskich - od września 1944 do lipca 1945 sowiecki obóz specjalny NKWD nr 10. Żołnierzom oddziału partyzanckiego Armii Krajowej Obozu "Mewa - Kamień" Mińsk Mazowiecki który pod dowództwem ppor. Edwarda Wasilewskiego "Wichury" nocą z 20 na 21 maja 1945 roku rozbił obóz specjalny NKWD nr 10 w Rembertowie. Z obozu uwolniono ponad 500 więźniów akcja ta przerwała zsyłkę więźniów na wschód. Więźniom obozu NKWD nr 10 w Rembertowie żołnierzom i działaczom Polskiego Państwa Podziemnego represjonowanym i mordowanym których szczątki spoczywają na terenie dawnej fabryki amunicji "Pocisk" i na obszarach sowieckiego imperium.

English translation:

In this place, on the grounds of the former factory "Pocisk" the following camps were located: from September 1941 until the beginning of 1944, a Nazi labor camp for Soviet prisoners of war, Komando Stalag 333; from July 1944 until September 1944, a Nazi labor camp for Polish prisoners; from September 1944 until July 1945, Soviet NKVD special camp No.10. (The monument is dedicated to) the soldiers of the partisan unit of the Home Army from Camp "Mewa-Kamień", Mińsk Mazowiecki, who under the command of 2nd Lieutenant Edward Wasilewski "Wichura", overran the special NKVD camp No.10 in Rembertów on the night of 20/21 May 1945. Over 500 prisoners were freed from the camp and this action interrupted the deportation of the prisoners to the East. (This monument is dedicated to) prisoners of the NKVD camp No.10 in Rembertów, soldiers and activists of the Polish Underground State, repressed and murdered, whose remains lay on the grounds of former factory "Pocisk" and in the lands of the Soviet empire.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Norman Davies, Rising '44, 2004, Viking Penguin, ISBN 0-670-03284-0, p. 495
  2. ^ a b Norman Davies, Rising '44, 2003, Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-90568-7, p. 495
  3. ^ a b Norman Davies, Rising '44, 2004, Pan, ISBN 0-330-48863-5, p. 497
  4. ^ Tadeusz Piotrowski, Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918-1947, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3, p. 131 (Google Print)
  5. ^ "Pocisk". Traces of War. Retrieved November 20, 2017.
  6. ^ Tadeusz Piotrowsk, Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3, p.104 (Google Print)
  7. ^ Davies, Norman (2004). Rising '44:The Battle for Warsaw. London: Pan MacMillan. ISBN 978-0-330-48863-1.
  • (in Polish) , ŚWIATOWY ZWIĄZEK ŻOŁNIERZY ARMII KRAJOWEJ on the pages of Instytut Biotechnologii Przemysłu Rolno-Spożywczego
  • (in Polish) Marek Hołubicki, Stanisław Madras, - part of the book Sowieckiemu zniewoleniu NIE. Harcerska druga konspiracja 1944-1956, LAD, 2005, ISBN 83-921818-0-8
  • (in Polish) Andrzej Kulesza, , Nasz Dziennik, 2005-05-21
  • (in Polish) ANDRZEJ M. KOBOS, , Zwoje (The Scrolls) 6 (19), 1999
  • (in Polish) Henryk Gojski, "Rembertów - maj 1945. Kontra NKWD". Article published in "Gazeta Polska" weekly, August 1, 2007, page 17.
  • (in English) General Serov's Souvenirs, Warsaw Voice, 10 June 2001

External links edit

  • AFP 65th anniversary article of May 21, 2010
  • Camp location in Google Maps - satellite photo centered on monument

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On May 21 1945 a unit of the Polish Home Army Armia Krajowa AK led by Colonel Edward Wasilewski attacked a Soviet NKVD camp located in Rembertow in the eastern outskirts of Warsaw Hundreds of Polish citizens had been imprisoned there including members of the Home Army and other members of the underground resistance 1 2 3 4 Prisoners at the camp were being systematically deported to Siberia As a result of the attack all of the Polish political prisoners were freed from the camp by the pro independence resistance Attack on the NKVD Camp in RembertowPart of Anti communist resistance in Poland 1944 46 DateMay 21 1945LocationRembertow PolandResultHome Army victoryBelligerentsPolish UndergroundNKVDCommanders and leadersEdward WasilewskiEdmund SwiderskiColonel AlexandrovStrength44Casualties and lossesOver 500 Polish captives freed Contents 1 Background 2 NKVD camp 3 Attack 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBackground editRembertow is located within the boundaries of Warsaw In the 1940s it was a separate town In the summer of 1941 after the Operation Barbarossa the German invasion of the Soviet Union the Wehrmacht opened Stalag 333 a camp for Soviet Prisoners of War POWs located in a former ammunition factory or pocisk meaning bullet in Rembertow 5 In 1944 the Soviet forces captured the camp and reopened it They imprisoned members of the Home Army who were seen as enemy combatants due to their loyalty to the Polish government in exile NKVD camp editOn July 26 1944 the Soviet sponsored Polish Committee of National Liberation gave NKVD agents their remit in the Polish territories Then on September 11 1944 Soviet forces took the town of Rembertow 6 The Soviet troops reopened the Rembertow prisoner of war camp to detain Polish and German prisoners as well as former Russian detainees who were assumed to have collaborated with the Nazis 1 2 3 The Polish detainees included soldiers of the Home Army as well as those of other resistance organizations such as the Narodowe Sily Zbrojne NSZ the national army force and the Bataliony Chlopskie BCh the peasant battalions Rembertow camp also became a mustering point for Polish anti communists being sent to Siberia Russian troops tried to hide this from the local Polish townsfolk by ordering the prisoners in broken German The camp was surrounded by two barbed wire fences Between the fences was a path patrolled by armed guards and their dogs The camp was also guarded by NKVD officers armed with machine guns in towers The camp commander Colonel Alexandrov held a roll call of prisoners at 6 00 a m and 6 00 p m each day Conditions in the camp were harsh In his book Rising 44 2004 Norman Davies writes A man who passed through Rembertow described the conditions They were not to be compared to the relative luxury at Sandbostel or Murnau and throughout the winter of 1944 1945 prisoners were frequently held in the open without shelter in a compound surrounded by barbed wire According to the reports when locals enquired about the suffering prisoners who were clearly visible from a nearby road they were told that the compound contained Volksdeutsche and Nazis 7 On March 25 1945 the first rail transport of Polish soldiers left Rembertow for Siberia Over 1 000 soldiers were transported One quarter did not survive the journey The dead were carried to a special rail car at the rear of the train In early March 1945 the NKVD had arrested General Emil Fieldorf Nil Fieldorf remained unrecognised as he gave the name Walenty Gdanicki The Polish resistance soon learned that Fieldorf was imprisoned at the Rembertow camp He was transported onwards to Siberia before Colonel Jan Mazurkiewicz Radoslaw could mount an operation to free him Attack edit nbsp Walenty Suda s grave in PiasecznoIn April and May 1945 the NKVD brought more prisoners to the camp including General Edward Gruber Colonel Kazimierz Marszewski and the philosopher Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz The next transport to Siberia was planned for May 25 1945 Captain Walenty Suda Mlot hammer the Home Army commander of Minsk Mazowiecki District planned to attack the camp prior to the transport Suda gave Lieutenant Edward Wasilewski Wichura gale command of 44 well trained fighters Thirty two of the fighters were from Wasilewski s unit Twelve were from the unit under Colonel Edmund Swiderski While disguised as a soldier of the Ludowe Wojsko Polskie Polish Communist Army Wasilewski reconnoitred the camp On the night of Saturday May 20 1945 the prisoners relatives brought large quantities of alcohol to the camp to ensure the NKVD guards would become drunk The prisoners were informed of the imminent attack The Soviet camp commander left for a party in the nearby village of Kaweczyn The Polish Army unit travelled to Rembertow on horses from nearby Dluga Koscielna village and then divided into three groups The first group led by Wichura Gale was to open the camp gate to release the prisoners Wichura did not want to release German prisoners nor Russian soldiers from the units of General Andrei Vlasov The second group s mission was to suppress the guards and the third group was to act as lookouts The attack lasted approximately 25 minutes The surprised NKVD guards offered little resistance and about 100 wounded and sick Polish prisoners were taken away on two trucks The remaining prisoners dispersed into the forests and villages Reports of the NKVD dead vary between 15 and 68 men Approximately 40 Polish prisoners were killed by machine gun fire while escaping Three members of the Home Army unit were injured but none killed Aftermath editThe number of prisoners released in the attack vary from 466 in NKVD reports 800 in Home Army reports and 1 400 in other historical analyses On the morning of Sunday May 21 1945 Soviet troops supported by aircraft combed the area around Rembertow in search of the escapees On that day twenty seven escapees mostly German soldiers who did not know where to go were recaptured In the following days approximately fifty escapees were caught and some summarily executed Lavrentiy Beria in Moscow ordered a special investigation dismissed the commander of the Rembertow camp and closed the camp and ordered a review of all such camps On May 21 1995 a monument to commemorate the camp and the attack was unveiled in Rembertow The text of the tablet on the monument reads W miejscu tym na terenie dawnej fabryki Pocisk znajdowaly sie obozy od wrzesnia 1941 do poczatku 1944 hitlerowski oboz pracy jencow sowieckich komando stalag 333 od lipca 1944 do wrzesnia 1944 hitlerowski oboz pracy dla wiezniow polskich od wrzesnia 1944 do lipca 1945 sowiecki oboz specjalny NKWD nr 10 Zolnierzom oddzialu partyzanckiego Armii Krajowej Obozu Mewa Kamien Minsk Mazowiecki ktory pod dowodztwem ppor Edwarda Wasilewskiego Wichury noca z 20 na 21 maja 1945 roku rozbil oboz specjalny NKWD nr 10 w Rembertowie Z obozu uwolniono ponad 500 wiezniow akcja ta przerwala zsylke wiezniow na wschod Wiezniom obozu NKWD nr 10 w Rembertowie zolnierzom i dzialaczom Polskiego Panstwa Podziemnego represjonowanym i mordowanym ktorych szczatki spoczywaja na terenie dawnej fabryki amunicji Pocisk i na obszarach sowieckiego imperium English translation In this place on the grounds of the former factory Pocisk the following camps were located from September 1941 until the beginning of 1944 a Nazi labor camp for Soviet prisoners of war Komando Stalag 333 from July 1944 until September 1944 a Nazi labor camp for Polish prisoners from September 1944 until July 1945 Soviet NKVD special camp No 10 The monument is dedicated to the soldiers of the partisan unit of the Home Army from Camp Mewa Kamien Minsk Mazowiecki who under the command of 2nd Lieutenant Edward Wasilewski Wichura overran the special NKVD camp No 10 in Rembertow on the night of 20 21 May 1945 Over 500 prisoners were freed from the camp and this action interrupted the deportation of the prisoners to the East This monument is dedicated to prisoners of the NKVD camp No 10 in Rembertow soldiers and activists of the Polish Underground State repressed and murdered whose remains lay on the grounds of former factory Pocisk and in the lands of the Soviet empire See also editSoviet repressions of Polish citizens 1939 1946 Raids on communist prisons in Poland 1944 1946 Cursed soldiers Battle of Kurylowka Raid on Kielce PrisonReferences edit a b Norman Davies Rising 44 2004 Viking Penguin ISBN 0 670 03284 0 p 495 a b Norman Davies Rising 44 2003 Macmillan ISBN 0 333 90568 7 p 495 a b Norman Davies Rising 44 2004 Pan ISBN 0 330 48863 5 p 497 Tadeusz Piotrowski Poland s Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 McFarland amp Company 1998 ISBN 0 7864 0371 3 p 131 Google Print Pocisk Traces of War Retrieved November 20 2017 Tadeusz Piotrowsk Poland s Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 McFarland amp Company 1998 ISBN 0 7864 0371 3 p 104 Google Print Davies Norman 2004 Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw London Pan MacMillan ISBN 978 0 330 48863 1 in Polish LIKWIDACJA OBWODU OBROZA AK DRAMAT LAT 1944 1945 SWIATOWY ZWIAZEK ZOLNIERZY ARMII KRAJOWEJ on the pages of Instytut Biotechnologii Przemyslu Rolno Spozywczego in Polish Marek Holubicki Stanislaw Madras ROZBICIE OBOZU NKWD W REMBERTOWIE Fragment ksiazki part of the book Sowieckiemu zniewoleniu NIE Harcerska druga konspiracja 1944 1956 LAD 2005 ISBN 83 921818 0 8 in Polish Andrzej Kulesza Oboz specjalny nr 10 Nasz Dziennik 2005 05 21 in Polish ANDRZEJ M KOBOS STALINOWSKI TERROR KOMUNISTYCZNY W POLSCE Zwoje The Scrolls 6 19 1999 in Polish Henryk Gojski Rembertow maj 1945 Kontra NKWD Article published in Gazeta Polska weekly August 1 2007 page 17 in English General Serov s Souvenirs Warsaw Voice 10 June 2001External links editAFP 65th anniversary article of May 21 2010 A photo of the monument in Rembertow Camp location in Google Maps satellite photo centered on monument Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Attack on the NKVD Camp in Rembertow amp oldid 1103421200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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