fbpx
Wikipedia

Bereza Kartuska Prison

52°33′N 24°58′E / 52.550°N 24.967°E / 52.550; 24.967

Bereza Kartuska
Concentration camp
Main building.
Location of Bereza Kartuska within Poland
Coordinates52°33′N 24°58′E / 52.550°N 24.967°E / 52.550; 24.967
LocationBereza Kartuska, Polesie Voivodeship
Built bySecond Polish Republic
Operated byPolish police force
Original usePolitical and criminal prison
Operational1934—1939
InmatesNational Democrats, communists, members of the Polish People's Party, Ukrainian and Belarusian nationalists
Number of inmatesMore than 3,000
Liberated byAbandoned, 17 September 1939

Bereza Kartuska Prison (Miejsce Odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej, "Place of Isolation at Bereza Kartuska")[1] was operated by Poland's Sanation government from 1934 to 1939 in Bereza Kartuska, Polesie Voivodeship (today, Biaroza, Belarus).[2][3][4][5] Because the inmates were detained without trial or conviction, it is considered an internment camp[6] or concentration camp.[7][8][9]

Bereza Kartuska Prison was established on 17 June 1934 by order of President Ignacy Mościcki[10] to detain persons who were viewed by the Polish state as a "threat to security, peace, and social order"[10] or alternately to isolate and demoralize political opponents of the Sanation government such as National Democrats, communists, members of the Polish People's Party, and Ukrainian and Belarusian nationalists. Prisoners were sent to the camp on the basis of an administrative decision, without formal charges, judicial sanction, or trial, and without the possibility of appeal.[11] Prisoners were detained for a period of three months, with the possibility of indefinite extension.[12]

Detainees were expected to perform penal labour. Often prisoners were tortured, and at least 13 prisoners died.[11]

Besides political prisoners, starting in October 1937 recidivists and financial criminals were also sent to the camp.[12] During the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, the camp guards fled on news of the German advance, and the prisoners were freed.[13]

History

 
Former building of the prison in 2010

It was created on July 12, 1934, in former Russian barracks and prison at Bereza Kartuska on the authority of a June 17, 1934, order issued by Polish President Ignacy Mościcki. The event that directly influenced Poland's de facto dictator, Józef Piłsudski, to create the prison was the assassination of Polish Minister of Internal Affairs Bronisław Pieracki on June 15, 1934, by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN).[14] It was intended to accommodate persons "whose activities or conduct give reason to believe that they threaten the public security, peace or order."[10]

The Bereza Kartuska Prison was organized by the director of the Political Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Wacław Żyborski, and the head of that Department's Nationalities Section (Wydział Narodowościowy), Colonel Leon Jarosławski. The institution was later supervised by the Governor of Polesie Province, Colonel Wacław Kostek-Biernacki.[15] In the view of some historians, Kostek-Biernacki did not serve as commandant; they identify its commandants as police inspectors Bolesław Greffner (whose given name is sometimes stated as "Jan"), of Poznań, and Józef Kamala-Kurhański.[16] Officially, Bereza Kartuska was not a part of Poland's penitentiary system, and the staff was composed of policemen, sent there as a punishment, rather than professional prison guards.

 
Former prison building in 2010, to be reconstructed

Individuals were incarcerated at Bereza Kartuska by administrative decision, without right of appeal, for three months, although this term was often extended while Colonel Wacław Kostek-Biernacki served as its commander.[15] The average prisoner would spend 8 months in the camp.[17] In the first three years of its history, the camp incarcerated people perceived as subversives and political opponents of the ruling Sanation regime. Recidivists and financial criminals were also detained starting from October 1937.[12] Citizens suspected of pro-German sympathies were first detained in Bereza in the middle 1938.[18] In the first days of the September Campaign of 1939, Polish authorities started mass arrests of people suspected of such sympathies.[19] Some members of the German minority in Poland were detained in whole families, including women (previously never detained in the camp).[19]

The camp de facto ceased to exist on the night of September 17–18, 1939 when, after learning about the Soviet invasion of Poland, the staff had abandoned it.[20] According to two reports, the departing policemen murdered some prisoners.[21]

Inmates

 
Prison building in 2010

According to the surviving documentation of the camp, more than 3,000 people were overall detained in Bereza Kartuska from July 1934 until August 29, 1939.[22] However, the camp's authorities stopped formally registering detainees in September 1939, after mass arrests began.[23] According to incomplete data from Soviet sources, at least 10,000 people had gone through the prison.[24]

Reasons for arrest

Prisoners included members of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), Polish Communist Party (KPP) and National Radical Camp (ONR), as well as members of the People's Party (SL) and Polish Socialist Party (PPS). The detainees included Bolesław Piasecki and, for some dozen days, the journalist Stanisław Mackiewicz (the latter, paradoxically, a warm supporter of the prison's establishment). Also a number of Belarusians who had resisted Polonization found themselves in the camp.[25]

The first inmates - Polish ONR activists - arrived on July 17, 1934. A few days later, OUN activists arrived: Roman Shukhevych, Dmytro Hrytsai and Volodymyr Yaniv.[26] By August 1939, Ukrainians constituted 17 percent of prisoners.[27]

In April 1939, 38 members of Karpacka Sicz organization were detained in the camp.[28] They were ethnic Ukrainians, previously residing in the Carpathian Ruthenia region of Czechoslovakia, where they were attempting to create an independent Ukrainian state. After this region was annexed by Hungary, Hungarian authorities deported them to Poland, whey they were sent to Bereza Kartuska. Unlike other prisoners, they didn't have to perform any labours and had the right to freely talk to each other in low voice.[28]

Reason for detention by percentage of inmates:[23]

1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 I-VIII 1939 Summary
Communists 70% 66% 100% 73% 39% 50% 55%
Far-right parties' members 10% 17% - - - - 2%
Ukrainian nationalists 30% 17% - - - - 4%
Peasant parties' activists - - - - 1% - 1%
Nazism supporters - - - - 1% - 1%
"Anti-state activists" (szkodnicy) - - - - - 1% ≈0%
Karpacka Sicz members - - - - - 2% ≈0%
Criminals - - - 23% 55% 41% 35%
Financial criminals - - - 4% 4% 6% 2%

Known inmates

Conditions

From 1934 to 1937, the facility usually housed 100–500 inmates at a time. In April 1938 the number went up to 800.[29] In early 1938, the Polish government suddenly increased the number of inmates by sending 4,500 Ukrainian nationalists, terrorists, and members of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists to Bereza Kartuska without the right of appeal.[26]

Conditions were exceptionally harsh, and only one inmate managed to escape.[30] Only one suicide occurred; on 5 February 1939, inmate Dawid Cymerman slit his throat in a toilet.[31] The number of deaths in detention was kept artificially low by releasing prisoners who were in poor health.[32] According to Śleszyński, 13 inmates died during the facility's operation, most of them at a hospital in Kobryń.[31][33] In other sources, the total number of deaths, is variously given as between 17 and 20.[34] This number is also repeated in recent sources; for example, Norman Davies in God's Playground (1979) gives the number of deaths as 17.[35] Ukrainian historian, Viktor Idzio, states that according to official statistics, 176 men – by unofficial Polish statistics, 324 Ukrainians[clarification needed] – were murdered or tortured to death during questioning, or died from disease, while escaping, or disappeared without a trace. According to Idzio, most were OUN members.[26]

OUN members who were incarcerated at Bereza Kartuska testified to the use of torture. There were frequent beatings (with boards being placed against inmates' backs and struck with hammers), forced labor, constant harassment, the use of solitary confinement without provocation, punishment for inmates' use of the Ukrainian language, etc.[26] By the time they were released from Bereza Kartuska, many Ukrainians had had their health destroyed or had died. Taras Bulba-Borovetz, who later became otaman of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), developed epilepsy as a result of his stay in Bereza Kartuska.[26]

Prisoners were accommodated within the main compound, in a three-story brick building. A small white structure served for solitary confinement (in Ukrainian, "kartser"; in Polish, "karcer"). South of the solitary-confinement structure was a well, and south of that was a bathing area. The whole compound was encircled by an electrified barbed-wire fence.[citation needed] Across a road from this compound were the commandant's house and officers' barracks.[citation needed] In the prisoners' building, each cell initially held 15 inmates. There were no benches or tables. In 1938 the number of inmates per cell was increased to up to 70. The floors were of concrete and were constantly showered with water so that inmates could not sit.[26]

Kazimierz Baran [pl] wrote that "the rigour detectable in Beraza Kartuska camp can by no means be compared with the dreadful conditions of the Nazi or Soviet-organized labour camps".[36]

Naming

The Polish government called the institution "Miejsce Odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej" ("Place of Isolation at Bereza Kartuska"). From the facility's inception, the Sanation government's opponents openly criticized the legal basis for its establishment and operation, calling it a "concentration camp."[37] This term was also used by Western media sources such as The Times, both during the interbellum[38] and immediately after World War II.[39] It was later popularized by communist propaganda,[40] which cited the prison as evidence that Poland's prewar government had been a "fascist" regime.[41][42] In 2007, the Polish Embassy objected to the use of the term in a memorial plaque in Paris for the Bereza Kartuska inmate Aron Skrobek. Its objections were successful and the plaque instead described the facility as a seclusion camp.[43]

Modern scholarship has characterized the facility as a concentration camp,[44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52] including Yale University professor Timothy Snyder,[53] the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,[54] the Library of Congress,[55] Polish Nobel prize-winning author Czesław Miłosz,[56] and historian Karol Modzelewski, who was political prisoner and one of the leaders of the democratic opposition in the communist Poland.[57] Ukrainian sources such as Kubijovych and Idzio representing the Ukrainian Nationalist camp of the interpretation of history also categorize Bereza Kartuska as a concentration camp.[58] Polish-American historian Tadeusz Piotrowski who also calls it a concentration camp, notes that the establishment of the facility was a norm of its times, similar to other facilities where political opponents were locked up, often in an extrajudicial manner. (Like the giant German or Soviet networks of concentration camps, degrees of brutality and number of prisoners aside.) [35][59] Describing Bereza Kartuska as a concentration camp may be against the Polish Holocaust law, according to historian Tomasz Stryjek [pl].[60]

See also

References

  1. ^ Misiuk, Andrzej (2007). "Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic, 1918–39". Policing Interwar Europe: 159–171. doi:10.1057/9780230599864_8. ISBN 978-1-349-54365-6.
  2. ^ Rossolinski, Grzegorz (October 2014). Stepan Bandera: The Life and Afterlife of a Ukrainian Nationalist. Columbia University Press. pp. 167, 168. ISBN 9783838266848.
  3. ^ Howansky Reilly, Diana (2013). Scattered: The Forced Relocation of Poland's Ukrainians After World War II. University of Wisconsin Press. p. ix. ISBN 9780299293437.
  4. ^ Ravel, Aviva (1980). Faithful Unto Death: The Story of Arthur Zygielbaum. Workmen's Circle. pp. 42, 43. ISBN 9780969043508.
  5. ^ Misiuk, Andrzej (2007). "Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic, 1918–39". Policing Interwar Europe: 159–171. doi:10.1057/9780230599864_8. ISBN 978-1-349-54365-6.
  6. ^ Norman Davies (24 February 2005). God's Playground A History of Poland: Volume II: 1795 to the Present. OUP Oxford. p. 302. ISBN 978-0-19-925340-1.
  7. ^ Marples, David R. (2010). "Anti-Soviet Partisans and Ukrainian Memory". East European Politics and Societies and Cultures. 24 (1): 26–43. doi:10.1177/0888325409354908. S2CID 144394106.
  8. ^ Copsey, Nathaniel (2008). "Remembrance of Things Past: the Lingering Impact of History on Contemporary Polish–Ukrainian Relations". Europe-Asia Studies. 60 (4): 531–560. doi:10.1080/09668130801999847. S2CID 144530368.
  9. ^ Misiuk, Andrzej (2007). "Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic, 1918–39". Policing Interwar Europe: Continuity, Change and Crisis, 1918–40. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 159–171. ISBN 978-0-230-59986-4.
  10. ^ a b c Śleszyński 2003a, p. 16.
  11. ^ a b Śleszyński 2003a, p. 53.
  12. ^ a b c Śleszyński 2003a, p. 85.
  13. ^ Braun, Connie T. (26 September 2017). Silentium: And Other Reflections On Memory, Sorrow, Place, and the Sacred. Wipf and Stock Publishers. pp. 64, 65. ISBN 9781498243018.
  14. ^ (in Polish) Andrzej Misiuk BIAŁYM ŻELAZEM January 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Gazeta Wyborcza, 12/07/1994
  15. ^ a b Jerzy Jan Lerski; Piotr Wróbel; Richard J. Kozicki (1996). Historical dictionary of Poland, 966-1945. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 33.
  16. ^ Mikołaj Falkowski (2008). "Wacław Kostek-Biernacki". HISTORIA.polskieradio.pl (in Polish). Polish Radio. Retrieved 2010-01-13.
  17. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 100.
  18. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 90.
  19. ^ a b Śleszyński 2003a, p. 91.
  20. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 92.
  21. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 93.
  22. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 83
  23. ^ a b Śleszyński 2003a, p. 84
  24. ^ Ladusev U.F. Communist party of Western Belarus as organizer of workers struggle for democratic rights and freedoms. Minsk, 1976, Page 24.
  25. ^ Jan Zaprudnik, "Belarus: At a Crossroads" (1993, ISBN 0-8133-1794-0), p. 85
  26. ^ a b c d e f Viktor Idzio, Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya: zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv (The Ukrainian Insurgent Army: Gleanings from German and Soviet Archives), Lviv, 2005, ISBN 966-665-268-4, p. 6.
  27. ^ G. Motyka, Ukraińska partyzantka, 1942-1960, PAN, 2006, p. 65
  28. ^ a b Śleszyński 2003a, p. 88.
  29. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 84.
  30. ^ Śleszyński 2003b, 48.
  31. ^ a b Śleszyński 2003b, 49.
  32. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 51.
  33. ^ Śleszyński gives the full names of the deceased inmates, as well as the dates of their deaths and their camp numbers.
  34. ^ Zdzisław J. Winnicki, "Bereza Kartuska – jak było naprawdę?", 2008 February 26, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ a b Norman Davies, God's Playground: A History of Poland, Columbia University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-231-12819-3, Google Print, p. 316.
  36. ^ Kazimierz Baran (2010). Constitutional Developments of the Habsburg Empire in the Last Decades before its Fall: The Materials of Polish-Hungarian Conference. Cracow, September 2007. Wydawnictwo UJ. p. 12. ISBN 978-83-233-8026-9.
  37. ^ Śleszyński 2003a, p. 151.
  38. ^ The Times . Archived from the original on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2009-12-02. March 24, 1938
  39. ^ The Times "M. Biernacki to be tried" [1][dead link] November 23, 1946
  40. ^ Lagzi 2004, 203.
  41. ^ Richard M. Watt, Poland and Its Fate, 1918 to 1939, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1979, p. 302.
  42. ^ Morawiec, Arkadiusz (January 2019). "After Bereza. Polish literature towards the Confinement Centre in Bereza Kartuska. 1939–2018". Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica. 55 (4): 273–309. doi:10.18778/1505-9057.55.14. hdl:11089/35870. S2CID 242909153.
  43. ^ "Intervention of the Embassy of Poland in Paris against the term "Polish concentration camp" used on the memorial plaque for Aron Skrobek. December 2007, Paris". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland. Retrieved 2009-12-28.
  44. ^ Marples, David R. (2007). Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine. Central European University Press. pp. 87, 133. ISBN 978-963-7326-98-1.
  45. ^ Keller, Lech (2002). "Non-Science Fiction Prose of Stanislaw Lem". The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review. 29 (3): 241–256. doi:10.1163/187633202X00035.
  46. ^ Marples, David R. (2010). "Anti-Soviet Partisans and Ukrainian Memory". East European Politics and Societies and Cultures. 24 (1): 26–43. doi:10.1177/0888325409354908. S2CID 144394106.
  47. ^ Copsey, Nathaniel (2008). "Remembrance of Things Past: the Lingering Impact of History on Contemporary Polish–Ukrainian Relations". Europe-Asia Studies. 60 (4): 531–560. doi:10.1080/09668130801999847. S2CID 144530368.
  48. ^ Misiuk, Andrzej (2007). "Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic, 1918–39". Policing Interwar Europe: Continuity, Change and Crisis, 1918–40. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 159–171. ISBN 978-0-230-59986-4.
  49. ^ Magierowski, Mateusz (2016). "(A)symmetry of (Non-)memory: The Missed Opportunity to Work Through the Traumatic Memory of the Polish–Ukrainian Ethnic Conflict in Pawłokoma". East European Politics and Societies. 30 (4): 766–784. doi:10.1177/0888325416651328. S2CID 147713876.
  50. ^ Marples, David R. (1999). Belarus: A Denationalized Nation. Taylor & Francis. p. 7. ISBN 978-90-5702-343-9.
  51. ^ Reilly, Diana Howansky (2013). Scattered: The Forced Relocation of Poland's Ukrainians After World War II. University of Wisconsin Press. p. ix. ISBN 978-0-299-29343-7.
  52. ^ Melzer, Emanuel (1997). No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry 1935-1939. Monographs of the Hebrew Union College. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-87820-141-9.
  53. ^ Timothy Snyder, The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999., 2004.[2],
  54. ^ "Collections Search - Bereza Kartuska (Concentration camp)". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  55. ^ Library of Congress Subject Headings.[3]
  56. ^ Czesław Miłosz, The History of Polish Literature, New York, Macmillan, 1969, p. 383: "Pilsudski soon revealed himself as a man of whims and resentments... He founded a concentration camp, where he sent several members of the Diet." [4]
  57. ^ Kalina Błażejowska (7 November 2018). "Prof. Modzelewski: Za rodaków wstydzi się tylko patriota". Magazyn Opinii Pismo. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  58. ^ (Ukrainian) Idzio, Viktor (2005). Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya – zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv (The Ukrainian Insurgent Army, according to Testimony in German and Soviet Archives). ISBN 966-665-268-4. [page needed]
  59. ^ Tadeusz Piotrowski, Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947, McFarlandMcFarland, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3, p.193
  60. ^ Stryjek, Tomasz (2018). "The Hypertrophy of Polish Remembrance Policy after 2015: Trends and Outcomes". Zoon Politikon. 1 (9): 43–66. doi:10.4467/2543408XZOP.18.003.10059. ISSN 2082-7806. Such threats [of prosecution under the memory law] also concern researchers who use the term "concentration camp" in relation to crimes committed by Polish state officials, consisting in creating conditions resulting in death from illness, starvation and exhaustion of political prisoners. It applies to camps in: Bereza Kartuska (1934-1 939), officially a "place of detention", Świętochłowice-Zgoda (in 1945, detaining mainly Germans and Silesians) and Jaworzno (1945-1949, from 1947 used for Ukrainians and Lemkos deported under the "Vistula" action), called "labour camps" ( Łuszczyna 2017).

Further reading

  • (in Polish) "Bereza Kartuska," Encyklopedia Polski (Encyclopedia of Poland), p. 45.
  • Idzio, Viktor (2005). Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya - zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv (The Ukrainian Insurgent Army, according to Testimony in German and Soviet Archives) (in Ukrainian). Lviv: Spolom. ISBN 966-665-268-4.
  • Lagzi, Gábor (2004). "The Ukrainian Radical National Movement in Inter-War Poland - the Case of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN)". Regio - Minorities, Politics, Society (1): 194–206.
  • Polit, Ireneusz (2003). Obóz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934–39 (The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp, 1934–39) (in Polish). Toruń: Adam Marszałek. ISBN 83-7322-469-6.
  • Siekanowicz, Piotr (1991). Obóz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934–39 (The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp, 1934–39) (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Historyczny im. Romana Dmowskiego.
  • Śleszyński, Wojciech (2003a). Obóz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934–39 (The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp, 1934–39) (in Polish). BENKOWSKI. ISBN 83-918161-0-9.
  • Śleszyński, Wojciech (2003b). "Utworzenie i funkcjonowanie obozu odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej (1934–1939)". Dzieje Najnowsze (in Polish). 35 (2): 35–53.

External links

  • (in Polish) - Z Lucjanem Motyką, więźniem Berezy Kartuskiej, rozmawia Magdalena Kaszulanis, Trybuna.com.pl.
  • (in Polish) Włodzimierz Kalicki, 10 września 1930. Droga do Berezy, Gazeta Wyborcza, 2006-09-11.

bereza, kartuska, prison, bereza, kartuskaconcentration, campmain, building, location, bereza, kartuska, within, polandcoordinates52, 967locationbereza, kartuska, polesie, voivodeshipbuilt, bysecond, polish, republicoperated, bypolish, police, forceoriginal, u. 52 33 N 24 58 E 52 550 N 24 967 E 52 550 24 967 Bereza KartuskaConcentration campMain building Location of Bereza Kartuska within PolandCoordinates52 33 N 24 58 E 52 550 N 24 967 E 52 550 24 967LocationBereza Kartuska Polesie VoivodeshipBuilt bySecond Polish RepublicOperated byPolish police forceOriginal usePolitical and criminal prisonOperational1934 1939InmatesNational Democrats communists members of the Polish People s Party Ukrainian and Belarusian nationalistsNumber of inmatesMore than 3 000Liberated byAbandoned 17 September 1939 Bereza Kartuska Prison Miejsce Odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej Place of Isolation at Bereza Kartuska 1 was operated by Poland s Sanation government from 1934 to 1939 in Bereza Kartuska Polesie Voivodeship today Biaroza Belarus 2 3 4 5 Because the inmates were detained without trial or conviction it is considered an internment camp 6 or concentration camp 7 8 9 Bereza Kartuska Prison was established on 17 June 1934 by order of President Ignacy Moscicki 10 to detain persons who were viewed by the Polish state as a threat to security peace and social order 10 or alternately to isolate and demoralize political opponents of the Sanation government such as National Democrats communists members of the Polish People s Party and Ukrainian and Belarusian nationalists Prisoners were sent to the camp on the basis of an administrative decision without formal charges judicial sanction or trial and without the possibility of appeal 11 Prisoners were detained for a period of three months with the possibility of indefinite extension 12 Detainees were expected to perform penal labour Often prisoners were tortured and at least 13 prisoners died 11 Besides political prisoners starting in October 1937 recidivists and financial criminals were also sent to the camp 12 During the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 the camp guards fled on news of the German advance and the prisoners were freed 13 Contents 1 History 2 Inmates 2 1 Reasons for arrest 2 2 Known inmates 3 Conditions 4 Naming 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory nbsp Former building of the prison in 2010 It was created on July 12 1934 in former Russian barracks and prison at Bereza Kartuska on the authority of a June 17 1934 order issued by Polish President Ignacy Moscicki The event that directly influenced Poland s de facto dictator Jozef Pilsudski to create the prison was the assassination of Polish Minister of Internal Affairs Bronislaw Pieracki on June 15 1934 by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN 14 It was intended to accommodate persons whose activities or conduct give reason to believe that they threaten the public security peace or order 10 The Bereza Kartuska Prison was organized by the director of the Political Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Waclaw Zyborski and the head of that Department s Nationalities Section Wydzial Narodowosciowy Colonel Leon Jaroslawski The institution was later supervised by the Governor of Polesie Province Colonel Waclaw Kostek Biernacki 15 In the view of some historians Kostek Biernacki did not serve as commandant they identify its commandants as police inspectors Boleslaw Greffner whose given name is sometimes stated as Jan of Poznan and Jozef Kamala Kurhanski 16 Officially Bereza Kartuska was not a part of Poland s penitentiary system and the staff was composed of policemen sent there as a punishment rather than professional prison guards nbsp Former prison building in 2010 to be reconstructedIndividuals were incarcerated at Bereza Kartuska by administrative decision without right of appeal for three months although this term was often extended while Colonel Waclaw Kostek Biernacki served as its commander 15 The average prisoner would spend 8 months in the camp 17 In the first three years of its history the camp incarcerated people perceived as subversives and political opponents of the ruling Sanation regime Recidivists and financial criminals were also detained starting from October 1937 12 Citizens suspected of pro German sympathies were first detained in Bereza in the middle 1938 18 In the first days of the September Campaign of 1939 Polish authorities started mass arrests of people suspected of such sympathies 19 Some members of the German minority in Poland were detained in whole families including women previously never detained in the camp 19 The camp de facto ceased to exist on the night of September 17 18 1939 when after learning about the Soviet invasion of Poland the staff had abandoned it 20 According to two reports the departing policemen murdered some prisoners 21 Inmates nbsp Prison building in 2010 According to the surviving documentation of the camp more than 3 000 people were overall detained in Bereza Kartuska from July 1934 until August 29 1939 22 However the camp s authorities stopped formally registering detainees in September 1939 after mass arrests began 23 According to incomplete data from Soviet sources at least 10 000 people had gone through the prison 24 Reasons for arrest Prisoners included members of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN Polish Communist Party KPP and National Radical Camp ONR as well as members of the People s Party SL and Polish Socialist Party PPS The detainees included Boleslaw Piasecki and for some dozen days the journalist Stanislaw Mackiewicz the latter paradoxically a warm supporter of the prison s establishment Also a number of Belarusians who had resisted Polonization found themselves in the camp 25 The first inmates Polish ONR activists arrived on July 17 1934 A few days later OUN activists arrived Roman Shukhevych Dmytro Hrytsai and Volodymyr Yaniv 26 By August 1939 Ukrainians constituted 17 percent of prisoners 27 In April 1939 38 members of Karpacka Sicz organization were detained in the camp 28 They were ethnic Ukrainians previously residing in the Carpathian Ruthenia region of Czechoslovakia where they were attempting to create an independent Ukrainian state After this region was annexed by Hungary Hungarian authorities deported them to Poland whey they were sent to Bereza Kartuska Unlike other prisoners they didn t have to perform any labours and had the right to freely talk to each other in low voice 28 Reason for detention by percentage of inmates 23 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 I VIII 1939 Summary Communists 70 66 100 73 39 50 55 Far right parties members 10 17 2 Ukrainian nationalists 30 17 4 Peasant parties activists 1 1 Nazism supporters 1 1 Anti state activists szkodnicy 1 0 Karpacka Sicz members 2 0 Criminals 23 55 41 35 Financial criminals 4 4 6 2 Known inmates Polish nationalists Zygmunt Dziarmaga Wladyslaw Chackiewicz Jan Jodzewicz Edward Kemnitz Boleslaw Piasecki Mieczyslaw Proszynski Henryk Rossman Boleslaw Swiderski Witold Borowski Stanislaw Mackiewicz Adam Doboszynski Leon Mirecki Polish communists Henryk Bromboszcz Leib Dajez Abram Germanski died there Leon Pasternak Marek Rakowski Aron Skrobek Szymon Dobrzynski aka Eckstein Ukrainian nationalists Taras Bulba Borovets Dmytro Dontsov Dmytro Hrytsai Dmytro Klyachkivsky Hryhory Klymiv Omelian Matla Roman Shukhevych Mykhailo Yaniv Volodymyr Yaniv Bohdan Pashkovskyi Ukrainian communists Wlodzimierz Sznarbachowski Belarusian nationalists Viachaslau Bahdanovich Uladzislau Pauliukouski Juljan Sakovich Others Orest Kazanivsky Leonard Malik Jan Mozyrko died there Janka ShutovichConditionsFrom 1934 to 1937 the facility usually housed 100 500 inmates at a time In April 1938 the number went up to 800 29 In early 1938 the Polish government suddenly increased the number of inmates by sending 4 500 Ukrainian nationalists terrorists and members of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists to Bereza Kartuska without the right of appeal 26 Conditions were exceptionally harsh and only one inmate managed to escape 30 Only one suicide occurred on 5 February 1939 inmate Dawid Cymerman slit his throat in a toilet 31 The number of deaths in detention was kept artificially low by releasing prisoners who were in poor health 32 According to Sleszynski 13 inmates died during the facility s operation most of them at a hospital in Kobryn 31 33 In other sources the total number of deaths is variously given as between 17 and 20 34 This number is also repeated in recent sources for example Norman Davies in God s Playground 1979 gives the number of deaths as 17 35 Ukrainian historian Viktor Idzio states that according to official statistics 176 men by unofficial Polish statistics 324 Ukrainians clarification needed were murdered or tortured to death during questioning or died from disease while escaping or disappeared without a trace According to Idzio most were OUN members 26 OUN members who were incarcerated at Bereza Kartuska testified to the use of torture There were frequent beatings with boards being placed against inmates backs and struck with hammers forced labor constant harassment the use of solitary confinement without provocation punishment for inmates use of the Ukrainian language etc 26 By the time they were released from Bereza Kartuska many Ukrainians had had their health destroyed or had died Taras Bulba Borovetz who later became otaman of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army UPA developed epilepsy as a result of his stay in Bereza Kartuska 26 Prisoners were accommodated within the main compound in a three story brick building A small white structure served for solitary confinement in Ukrainian kartser in Polish karcer South of the solitary confinement structure was a well and south of that was a bathing area The whole compound was encircled by an electrified barbed wire fence citation needed Across a road from this compound were the commandant s house and officers barracks citation needed In the prisoners building each cell initially held 15 inmates There were no benches or tables In 1938 the number of inmates per cell was increased to up to 70 The floors were of concrete and were constantly showered with water so that inmates could not sit 26 Kazimierz Baran pl wrote that the rigour detectable in Beraza Kartuska camp can by no means be compared with the dreadful conditions of the Nazi or Soviet organized labour camps 36 NamingThe Polish government called the institution Miejsce Odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej Place of Isolation at Bereza Kartuska From the facility s inception the Sanation government s opponents openly criticized the legal basis for its establishment and operation calling it a concentration camp 37 This term was also used by Western media sources such as The Times both during the interbellum 38 and immediately after World War II 39 It was later popularized by communist propaganda 40 which cited the prison as evidence that Poland s prewar government had been a fascist regime 41 42 In 2007 the Polish Embassy objected to the use of the term in a memorial plaque in Paris for the Bereza Kartuska inmate Aron Skrobek Its objections were successful and the plaque instead described the facility as a seclusion camp 43 Modern scholarship has characterized the facility as a concentration camp 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 including Yale University professor Timothy Snyder 53 the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 54 the Library of Congress 55 Polish Nobel prize winning author Czeslaw Milosz 56 and historian Karol Modzelewski who was political prisoner and one of the leaders of the democratic opposition in the communist Poland 57 Ukrainian sources such as Kubijovych and Idzio representing the Ukrainian Nationalist camp of the interpretation of history also categorize Bereza Kartuska as a concentration camp 58 Polish American historian Tadeusz Piotrowski who also calls it a concentration camp notes that the establishment of the facility was a norm of its times similar to other facilities where political opponents were locked up often in an extrajudicial manner Like the giant German or Soviet networks of concentration camps degrees of brutality and number of prisoners aside 35 59 Describing Bereza Kartuska as a concentration camp may be against the Polish Holocaust law according to historian Tomasz Stryjek pl 60 See alsoInternment List of concentration and internment camps KresyReferences Misiuk Andrzej 2007 Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic 1918 39 Policing Interwar Europe 159 171 doi 10 1057 9780230599864 8 ISBN 978 1 349 54365 6 Rossolinski Grzegorz October 2014 Stepan Bandera The Life and Afterlife of a Ukrainian Nationalist Columbia University Press pp 167 168 ISBN 9783838266848 Howansky Reilly Diana 2013 Scattered The Forced Relocation of Poland s Ukrainians After World War II University of Wisconsin Press p ix ISBN 9780299293437 Ravel Aviva 1980 Faithful Unto Death The Story of Arthur Zygielbaum Workmen s Circle pp 42 43 ISBN 9780969043508 Misiuk Andrzej 2007 Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic 1918 39 Policing Interwar Europe 159 171 doi 10 1057 9780230599864 8 ISBN 978 1 349 54365 6 Norman Davies 24 February 2005 God s Playground A History of Poland Volume II 1795 to the Present OUP Oxford p 302 ISBN 978 0 19 925340 1 Marples David R 2010 Anti Soviet Partisans and Ukrainian Memory East European Politics and Societies and Cultures 24 1 26 43 doi 10 1177 0888325409354908 S2CID 144394106 Copsey Nathaniel 2008 Remembrance of Things Past the Lingering Impact of History on Contemporary Polish Ukrainian Relations Europe Asia Studies 60 4 531 560 doi 10 1080 09668130801999847 S2CID 144530368 Misiuk Andrzej 2007 Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic 1918 39 Policing Interwar Europe Continuity Change and Crisis 1918 40 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 159 171 ISBN 978 0 230 59986 4 a b c Sleszynski 2003a p 16 a b Sleszynski 2003a p 53 a b c Sleszynski 2003a p 85 Braun Connie T 26 September 2017 Silentium And Other Reflections On Memory Sorrow Place and the Sacred Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 64 65 ISBN 9781498243018 in Polish Andrzej Misiuk BIALYM ZELAZEM Archived January 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine Gazeta Wyborcza 12 07 1994 a b Jerzy Jan Lerski Piotr Wrobel Richard J Kozicki 1996 Historical dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Greenwood Publishing Group p 33 Mikolaj Falkowski 2008 Waclaw Kostek Biernacki HISTORIA polskieradio pl in Polish Polish Radio Retrieved 2010 01 13 Sleszynski 2003a p 100 Sleszynski 2003a p 90 a b Sleszynski 2003a p 91 Sleszynski 2003a p 92 Sleszynski 2003a p 93 Sleszynski 2003a p 83 a b Sleszynski 2003a p 84 Ladusev U F Communist party of Western Belarus as organizer of workers struggle for democratic rights and freedoms Minsk 1976 Page 24 Jan Zaprudnik Belarus At a Crossroads 1993 ISBN 0 8133 1794 0 p 85 a b c d e f Viktor Idzio Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv The Ukrainian Insurgent Army Gleanings from German and Soviet Archives Lviv 2005 ISBN 966 665 268 4 p 6 G Motyka Ukrainska partyzantka 1942 1960 PAN 2006 p 65 a b Sleszynski 2003a p 88 Sleszynski 2003a p 84 Sleszynski 2003b 48 a b Sleszynski 2003b 49 Sleszynski 2003a p 51 Sleszynski gives the full names of the deceased inmates as well as the dates of their deaths and their camp numbers Zdzislaw J Winnicki Bereza Kartuska jak bylo naprawde 2008 Archived February 26 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland Columbia University Press 2005 ISBN 0 231 12819 3 Google Print p 316 Kazimierz Baran 2010 Constitutional Developments of the Habsburg Empire in the Last Decades before its Fall The Materials of Polish Hungarian Conference Cracow September 2007 Wydawnictwo UJ p 12 ISBN 978 83 233 8026 9 Sleszynski 2003a p 151 The Times Anti Jewish Agitation in Poland Archived from the original on 2011 07 22 Retrieved 2009 12 02 March 24 1938 The Times M Biernacki to be tried 1 dead link November 23 1946 Lagzi 2004 203 Richard M Watt Poland and Its Fate 1918 to 1939 New York Simon and Schuster 1979 p 302 Morawiec Arkadiusz January 2019 After Bereza Polish literature towards the Confinement Centre in Bereza Kartuska 1939 2018 Acta Universitatis Lodziensis Folia Litteraria Polonica 55 4 273 309 doi 10 18778 1505 9057 55 14 hdl 11089 35870 S2CID 242909153 Intervention of the Embassy of Poland in Paris against the term Polish concentration camp used on the memorial plaque for Aron Skrobek December 2007 Paris Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland Retrieved 2009 12 28 Marples David R 2007 Heroes and Villains Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine Central European University Press pp 87 133 ISBN 978 963 7326 98 1 Keller Lech 2002 Non Science Fiction Prose of Stanislaw Lem The Soviet and Post Soviet Review 29 3 241 256 doi 10 1163 187633202X00035 Marples David R 2010 Anti Soviet Partisans and Ukrainian Memory East European Politics and Societies and Cultures 24 1 26 43 doi 10 1177 0888325409354908 S2CID 144394106 Copsey Nathaniel 2008 Remembrance of Things Past the Lingering Impact of History on Contemporary Polish Ukrainian Relations Europe Asia Studies 60 4 531 560 doi 10 1080 09668130801999847 S2CID 144530368 Misiuk Andrzej 2007 Police and Policing Under the Second Polish Republic 1918 39 Policing Interwar Europe Continuity Change and Crisis 1918 40 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 159 171 ISBN 978 0 230 59986 4 Magierowski Mateusz 2016 A symmetry of Non memory The Missed Opportunity to Work Through the Traumatic Memory of the Polish Ukrainian Ethnic Conflict in Pawlokoma East European Politics and Societies 30 4 766 784 doi 10 1177 0888325416651328 S2CID 147713876 Marples David R 1999 Belarus A Denationalized Nation Taylor amp Francis p 7 ISBN 978 90 5702 343 9 Reilly Diana Howansky 2013 Scattered The Forced Relocation of Poland s Ukrainians After World War II University of Wisconsin Press p ix ISBN 978 0 299 29343 7 Melzer Emanuel 1997 No Way Out The Politics of Polish Jewry 1935 1939 Monographs of the Hebrew Union College p 7 ISBN 978 0 87820 141 9 Timothy Snyder The Reconstruction of Nations Poland Ukraine Lithuania Belarus 1569 1999 2004 2 Collections Search Bereza Kartuska Concentration camp United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 26 September 2020 Library of Congress Subject Headings 3 Czeslaw Milosz The History of Polish Literature New York Macmillan 1969 p 383 Pilsudski soon revealed himself as a man of whims and resentments He founded a concentration camp where he sent several members of the Diet 4 Kalina Blazejowska 7 November 2018 Prof Modzelewski Za rodakow wstydzi sie tylko patriota Magazyn Opinii Pismo Retrieved 15 December 2018 Ukrainian Idzio Viktor 2005 Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv The Ukrainian Insurgent Army according to Testimony in German and Soviet Archives ISBN 966 665 268 4 page needed Tadeusz Piotrowski Poland s Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 McFarlandMcFarland 1998 ISBN 0 7864 0371 3 p 193 Stryjek Tomasz 2018 The Hypertrophy of Polish Remembrance Policy after 2015 Trends and Outcomes Zoon Politikon 1 9 43 66 doi 10 4467 2543408XZOP 18 003 10059 ISSN 2082 7806 Such threats of prosecution under the memory law also concern researchers who use the term concentration camp in relation to crimes committed by Polish state officials consisting in creating conditions resulting in death from illness starvation and exhaustion of political prisoners It applies to camps in Bereza Kartuska 1934 1 939 officially a place of detention Swietochlowice Zgoda in 1945 detaining mainly Germans and Silesians and Jaworzno 1945 1949 from 1947 used for Ukrainians and Lemkos deported under the Vistula action called labour camps Luszczyna 2017 Further reading in Polish Bereza Kartuska Encyklopedia Polski Encyclopedia of Poland p 45 Idzio Viktor 2005 Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya zhidno zi svidchennia nimetskykh ta radianskykh arkhiviv The Ukrainian Insurgent Army according to Testimony in German and Soviet Archives in Ukrainian Lviv Spolom ISBN 966 665 268 4 Lagzi Gabor 2004 The Ukrainian Radical National Movement in Inter War Poland the Case of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN Regio Minorities Politics Society 1 194 206 Polit Ireneusz 2003 Oboz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934 39 The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp 1934 39 in Polish Torun Adam Marszalek ISBN 83 7322 469 6 Siekanowicz Piotr 1991 Oboz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934 39 The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp 1934 39 in Polish Warszawa Instytut Historyczny im Romana Dmowskiego Sleszynski Wojciech 2003a Oboz odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934 39 The Bereza Kartuska Isolation Camp 1934 39 in Polish BENKOWSKI ISBN 83 918161 0 9 Sleszynski Wojciech 2003b Utworzenie i funkcjonowanie obozu odosobnienia w Berezie Kartuskiej 1934 1939 Dzieje Najnowsze in Polish 35 2 35 53 External linksBereza Kartuzka The Documentary Feature Film in Polish Bylem wiezniem Berezy Z Lucjanem Motyka wiezniem Berezy Kartuskiej rozmawia Magdalena Kaszulanis Trybuna com pl in Polish Wlodzimierz Kalicki 10 wrzesnia 1930 Droga do Berezy Gazeta Wyborcza 2006 09 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bereza Kartuska Prison amp oldid 1220734910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.