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Kresy

Eastern Borderlands[1] (Polish: Kresy Wschodnie) or simply Borderlands (Polish: Kresy, Polish pronunciation: [ˈkrɛsɨ]) was a term coined for the eastern part of the Second Polish Republic during the interwar period (1918–1939). Largely agricultural and extensively multi-ethnic with a Polish minority,[2] it amounted to nearly half of the territory of interwar Poland. Historically situated in the eastern Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, following the 18th-century foreign partitions it was divided between the Empires of Russia and Austria-Hungary, and ceded to Poland in 1921 after the Treaty of Riga. As a result of the post-World War II border changes, all of the territory was ceded to the USSR, and none of it is in modern Poland.

Eastern Borderlands
Kresy Wschodnie
Part of the Second Polish Republic
In the 1939 German-Soviet Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact the Eastern Borderlands (grey) were annexed directly into the Soviet Union. The Soviet gains east of the Curzon line devised in 1919 were confirmed (with minor adjustments in the areas around Białystok and Przemyśl) by the Western Allies at the Tehran Conference, the Yalta conference and the Potsdam conference. In 1945 most of Germany's territory east of the Oder–Neisse line (pink) was ceded to what remained of Poland (white), both of which would compose the newly created People's Republic of Poland
Historical region
Period1919–1939; 1945
AreaTerritories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union in the Invasion of Poland of 1939
Today part of Ukraine
 Belarus
 Lithuania

The Polish plural term Kresy corresponds to the Russian okrainy (окраины), meaning "the border regions".[3] During the existence of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Kresy only referred to the borderlands of the Kingdom of Poland and not the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[4] Kresy is also largely co-terminous with the northern areas of the Pale of Settlement, a scheme devised by Catherine II of Russia to limit Jews from settling in the homogenously Christian Orthodox core of the Russian Empire, such as Moscow and Saint Petersburg. The Pale was established after the Second Partition of Poland and lasted until the Russian Revolution in 1917, when the Russian Empire ceased to exist. In the aftermath of the Polish wars against Ukraine, Lithuania and Soviet Russia, the latter of which was ended by the Treaty of Riga, large parts of the Austrian and Russian partitions became part of Poland. As many as 12 million inhabitants lived in the Eastern Borderlands, but ethnic Poles only were a third of that population, with another third being Ukrainian.[4][5] Most small towns in the Borderlands were shtetls.[5]

Administratively, the Eastern Borderlands territory was composed of Lwów, Nowogródek, Polesie, Stanisławów, Tarnopol, Wilno, Wołyń, and Białystok voivodeships (provinces). Today, all these regions are divided between Western Ukraine, Western Belarus, and south-eastern Lithuania, with the major cities of Lviv, Vilnius, and Grodno no longer in Poland. During the Second Polish Republic, the Eastern Borderlands denoted the lands beyond the Curzon Line proposed after World War I in December 1919 by the British Foreign Office as the eastern border of the re-emerging sovereign Polish Republic, after over a century of partition. In September 1939, after Germany invaded Poland and follow-up invasion by Soviet Union, in accordance with Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact all Eastern Borderlands territories were incorporated into the Soviet republics of Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania, often by means of terror.[6]

Soviet territorial annexations during World War II were later ratified by the Allies at the Conferences of Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam and most of Poles here were expelled after the end of World War II in Europe. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, there was no change to the post-World War II borders. Despite the former provinces of the Eastern Borderlands no longer being part of Poland, a Polish minority remains.

Etymology edit

 
Typical landscape view of the Kresy, marked by low-lying rolling hills and grasslands (location Sielec, Drohobych Raion, western Ukraine)
 
Polish voivodeships 1922–1939. One can consider the six easternmost voivodeships as roughly equivalent with Kresy.

The Polish word kresy ("borderlands") is the plural form of the word kres meaning 'edge'. According to Zbigniew Gołąb, it is "a medieval borrowing from the German word Kreis", which in the Middle Ages meant Kreislinie, Umkreis, Landeskreis ("borderline, delineation or circumscribed territory").[7] Samuel Linde in his Dictionary of the Polish Language gives a different etymology of the term. According to him, kresy meant the borderline between Poland and the Crimean Khanate, in the region of the lower Dnieper. The term kresy appeared for the first time in literature in Wincenty Pol poems, "Mohort" (1854) and "Pieśń o ziemi naszej". Pol claimed that Kresy was the line between the Dniester and Dnieper rivers, neighbouring the Tatar borderland.[8] Coincidentally in relation to Jewish settlement in the macro region, the notion of the pale is an archaic English term derived from the Latin word palus, (which in Polish exists as pal and also means a stake), extended in this instance to mean the area enclosed by a fence or boundary.[9]

At the beginning of the 20th century, the meaning of the term expanded to include the lands of the former eastern provinces of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, east of the LwówWilno line. In the Second Polish Republic, Kresy equated to historically Polish settled lands to the east of the notional Curzon line. Currently, the term applies to all the eastern lands of the Second Polish Republic that are no longer within the frontiers of modern Poland, together with lands further east, that had been integral to the Commonwealth before 1772, and where Polish communities continue to exist.[10]

History edit

Polish eastern settlements date back to the dawn of Poland as a state. In 1018, King Bolesław I the Brave invaded Kievan Rus' (see Bolesław I's intervention in the Kievan succession crisis, 1018), capturing Kyiv, and annexing the Cherven Cities. In 1340, Red Ruthenia came under Polish control, which intensified defensive Polish settlement and the introduction of Catholicism. After the Union of Lublin 1569, more Polish settlers moved into the eastern borderlands of the vast Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Most of them came from the Polish provinces of Mazovia and Lesser Poland. They had moved gradually eastwards settling in sparsely populated areas, inhabited by earlier inhabitants such as Lithuanians and Ruthenians. Moreover, the indigenous upper classes of Kresy accepted Polish religion, culture and language, resulting in their assimilation and Polonization.

The Partitions of Poland edit

The year 1772 marked the first partition of the Commonwealth of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (see Partitions of Poland). By 1795, the whole eastern half of the state had been annexed by the Russian Empire in concert with the Habsburgs and Prussia's Hohenzollerns. The dramatic westward expansion of the Russian Empire through the annexation of Polish-Lithuanian territory substantially increased the new "Russian" Jewish population. Kresy and the superimposed Pale, in the former Polish and Lithuanian territories, had a Jewish population of over five million, and represented the largest community (40%) of the world Jewish population at that time.

From the Polish perspective, the lands came to be called the "Stolen Lands". Even though Poles were a minority in those areas, owing to forced depopulation, the "Stolen Lands" remained an integral part of Polish national identity, with Polish cultural centres and seats of learning in Vilnius University, Jan Kazimierz University and Krzemieniec Lyceum among many others. Since many local educated inhabitants had actively participated in Polish–Lithuanian national insurgencies (November Uprising, January Uprising), the Russian authorities resorted to intensified persecution, confiscations of property and land, penal deportation to Siberia, and the systematic attempt at Russification of Poles and their traditional culture and institutions.

The Pale of Settlement edit

 
The Pale of Settlement

From the Russian perspective the "Pale of Settlement" included all of Belarus, Lithuania and Moldova, much of present-day Ukraine, parts of eastern Latvia, eastern Poland, and some parts of western Russia, generally corresponding to the Kresy macroregion and the modern-day western border of Russia. It extended from the eastern pale, or demarcation line, to the Russian border with the Kingdom of Prussia (later the German Empire) and Austria-Hungary. It also comprised about 20% of the territory of European Russia and largely corresponded to historical lands of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Cossack Hetmanate, and the Ottoman Empire (with Crimean Khanate).

The area included in the Pale, with its large Roman Catholic, Eastern Catholic and Jewish populations, was acquired through a series of military conquests and diplomatic manoeuvres, between 1654 and 1815. While the religious nature of the edicts creating the Pale is clear: conversion to Russian Orthodoxy, the state religion, released individuals from the strictures - historians argue that the motivations for its creation and maintenance were primarily economic and nationalistic in nature.[11]

Economic decline of Kresy edit

 
Leon Wyczółkowski "Ploughing in the Ukraine"

The Russian Empire had abandoned Kresy to decline as a vast rural backwater after the original Polish–Lithuanian landowners had been disposed of in the wake of insurrections and the Abolition of serfdom in Poland in 1864. The devastation of country estates put a halt to large scale economic activity which had depended on agriculture, forestry, brewing and small scale industries. Paradoxically, the Southern Kresy (present-day Ukraine) was famous for its fertile soil and was known as the "bread basket of Europe". Towards the end of the 19th century, the decline was so acute that trade and food supplies became problematic and large scale emigration from towns and villages began as Jewish communities, in particular, began heading West, to Europe and the United States. By the time of a newly resurgent Polish state, the provinces had been additionally disadvantaged by having the lowest literacy levels in the country, since education had not been compulsory during Russian rule.[12][13][14] The regions had suffered a legacy of decades of neglect and underinvestment so were generally less economically developed than the western parts of interwar Poland.

Between the World Wars edit

The years 1918–1921 were especially turbulent for Kresy, due to the resurgence of the Polish nation-state and the formation of new borders. At that time, Poland had fought three wars to establish its eastern frontier: with Ukraine, Lithuania and Soviet Russia. In all three conflicts, Poland made territorial conquests, and as a result, it seized territories east of the Curzon line that were previously conquered by Russia, in addition to the land formerly part of the Austrian Galicia. The Kresy was the most war-devasted area in the whole of interwar Poland.[15] The region later formed the eastern provinces of the Second Polish Republic.

Territories included in the Kresy during the interbellum period comprised the eastern parts of the Voivodeships of Lwów and Białystok and the whole of the Nowogródek, Polesie, Stanisławów, Tarnopol, Wilno, Wołyń Voivodeships. The Polish government undertook an active policy of Polonizing the Kresy to alter its ethnic profile in favour of the Poles.[15] One of the ways to do so was through the Osadnik colonists.[15] These military colonists were one of the most "emotionalized" parts of the Polish government's policy in the Kresy and elicited opposition from the locals.[16] The German historian Bernhard Chiari [de] said that the Kresy were "the poorhouse of Poland", while the Yad Vashem historian Leonid Rein even wrote that "it would not be a great exaggeration to say it was the poor-house of the whole of Europe."[17] This led to frequent conflicts with Ukrainian nationalists in the southeastern part of Kresy, which led to the pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia.

Numerous Polish communities continued to live beyond the eastern border of the Second Polish Republic, especially around Minsk, Zhytomyr and Berdychiv. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Soviet authorities created two Polish National District in Belarus and Ukraine, but during the Polish Operation of the NKVD, most of the Poles in those areas were murdered, while those remaining were forcibly resettled in Kazakhstan (see also Poles in the Soviet Union).

During and after World War II edit

 
Members of the German Ordnungspolizei shooting naked women and children in the Mizoch Ghetto, October 1942
 
Massacres of Poles in Volhynia in 1943. Most Poles of Volhynia (now in Ukraine) had either been murdered or had fled the area.

As a consequence of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, on 17 September 1939, the Kresy territories were annexed by the Soviet Union (see Soviet invasion of Poland), and a significant part of the ethnic Polish population of Kresy was deported to other areas of the Soviet Union including Siberia and Kazakhstan.[18] The new border between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union was re-designated by the German–Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty, signed on 29 September 1939. After the elections to the People's Assemblies of Western Ukraine and Western Belarus, communist governments for Western Ukraine and Western Belarus were formed and immediately announced their intention of joining their respective republics to the Soviet Union (see also Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union). After the German invasion of the USSR, the southeastern part of Kresy was absorbed into Greater Germany's General Government, whereas the rest was integrated with the Reichskommissariats Ostland and Ukraine. In 1943–1944, units of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, with the help of Ukrainian peasants, carried out mass exterminations of Poles living in southeastern Kresy (see Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia).

In January 1944, Soviet troops had reached the former Polish–Soviet border, and by the end of July 1944, they again re-annexed the whole territory that had been taken by the USSR in September 1939 into their control. During the Tehran Conference in 1943, a new Soviet-Polish border was established, in effect sanctioning most of the Soviet territorial acquisitions of September 1939 (except for some areas around Białystok and Przemyśl), ignoring protests from the Polish government-in-exile in London. The Potsdam Conference, via substantive recognition of the pro-Soviet Polish Committee of National Liberation, implicitly consented to the deportation of Polish people from Kresy (see Polish population transfers (1944–1946)). Most Polish inhabitants of Kresy were ordered by the Soviets to migrate west to Germany's former eastern provinces, newly emptied of their German population and renamed as the "Recovered Territories" of the Polish People's Republic, based on Polish medieval settlement of the areas. Poles from the southern Kresy (now Ukraine) were forced to settle mainly in Silesia, while those from the north (Belarus and Lithuania) moved to Pomerania and Masuria. Polish residents of Lwów settled not only in Wrocław, but also in Gliwice and in Bytom. Those cities had not been destroyed during the war. They were relatively closer to the new eastern border of Poland, which could become significant in case of a sudden hoped for a return to the East.[19]

Frequently, whole Kresy villages and towns were deported in a single rail transport to new locations in the west. For instance, the village of Biała, near Chojnów, is still divided into two parts: Lower Biała and Upper Biała. Lower Biała was settled by people who used to live in a Bieszczady village of Polana near Ustrzyki Dolne (this area belonged to the Soviet Union until 1951: see 1951 Polish–Soviet territorial exchange), while inhabitants of the village Pyszkowce near Buczacz moved to Upper Biała. Every year in September, Biała is the scene of an annual festival called Kresowiana.[20] In Szczecin and Polish West Pomerania, in the immediate postwar period, one-third of Polish settlers were either people from Kresy or Sybiraks.[21] In 1948, people born in the Eastern Borderlands made up 47.5% of the population of Opole, 44.7% of Baborów, 47.5% of Wołczyn, 42.1% of Głubczyce, 40.1% of Lewin Brzeski, and 32.6% of Brzeg. In 2011, people with Kresy background made up 25% of the population of the Opole Voivodeship.[22] The town of Jasień was settled by people from the area of Ternopil in late 1945 and early 1946,[23] while Poles from Borschiv moved to Trzcińsko-Zdrój and Chojna.[24] The situation was completely different in Wschowa and its county. In 1945–1948, more than 8,000 people moved there. They came from different areas of the KresyAshmyany, Stanislawow, Równe, Lwów, Brody, Dzyatlava District, and Ternopil.[25]

Altogether, between 1944 and 1946, more than a million Poles from the Kresy were moved to the Recovered Territories, including 150,000 from the area of Wilno, 226,300 from Polesia, 133,900 from Volhynia, 5,000 from Northern Bukovina, and 618,200 from Eastern Galicia.[26] The so-called First Repatriation of Poles (1944–1946) was carried out in a chaotic, disorganized way. People had to spend weeks, even months at railroad stations, waiting for transport. During that time, they were robbed of their belongings by either locals, Soviet soldiers or Soviet rail workers. For lack of railroad cars, in Lithuania at some point the "one-suitcase policy" was introduced, which meant that Poles had to leave behind all their belongings. They travelled in freight or open wagons, and the journeys were long and dangerous, as there was no protection from the military or the police.[19] In the years 1955–1959, the second mass repatriation of Poles from Kresy took place. As a result, in the years 1945–1960, over 2 million Polish people left Kresy. About 1-2 million more remained in the Kresy after 1960 (especially in the territories of the Lithuanian SSR and the Byelorussian SSR). Even today, Poles constitute the majority of inhabitants in many regions in the Grodno and Vilnius regions.

In the immediate postwar period, Polish Communists, who ceded the Eastern Borderlands to the Soviet Union, were universally regarded as traitors, and Władysław Gomułka, First Secretary of the Polish Workers' Party, was fully aware of it. People who moved from the East to the Recovered Territories talked amongst themselves about a hypothetical return to Lwów and other eastern locations, and the German return to Silesia, as a result of World War III, in which Western Allies would defeat the Soviets. One of the adages of the postwar period was: "Just one atom bomb, and we will be back in Lwów again. Just second one is small but strong and we will be back in Wilno again." ("Jedna bomba atomowa i wrócimy znów do Lwowa. Druga mała, ale silna i wrócimy znów do Wilna").[27][28] Polish settlers in former German areas were insecure about their future there until the 1970s (see Kniefall von Warschau). Eastern settlers did not feel at home in Lower Silesia, and as a result, they did not care about the machinery, households and farms abandoned by Germans. Lubomierz in 1945 was in good condition, but in the following years, Polish settlers from the area of Chortkiv in Podolia let it run down and become a ruin. The Germans were aware of it. In 1959, German sources wrote that Lower Silesia had been ruined by the Poles. Zdzisław Mach, a sociologist from the Jagiellonian University, explains that when Kresy Poles were forced to resettle in the West, which they resented, they had to leave the land they considered sacred and move to areas inhabited by the longtime enemy. In addition, Communist authorities did not initially invest in the Recovered Territories because, like the settlers, for a long time they were unsure about the future of these lands. As Mach explains, people in Western Poland for years lived "on their suitcases", with all their belongings packed in case of an unlikely return to the East.[29]

Interwar population edit

The population of Kresy was multi-ethnic, primarily comprising Poles, Ukrainians, Jews and Belarusians. According to official Polish statistics from the interwar period, Poles formed the largest linguistic group in these regions, and were demographically the largest ethnic group in the cities. Other national minorities included Lithuanians and Karaites (in the north), Jews (scattered in cities and towns across the area), Czechs and Germans (in Volhynia and East Galicia), Armenians and Hungarians (in Lviv) and also Russians and Tatars.[30]

 
Map of interwar Poland based on the most spoken native language in each powiat: Polish (white), Ukrainian (green), Belarusian (red) and "local language" such as Polesian or other dialects (grey). Shaded denotes subdivisions where the difference in share between the first and second most spoken languages is less than 5%. Data extracted from the Polish census of 1931.

The proportions of different native languages in each voivodeship in 1931, according to the Polish census of 1931, were as follows:

In addition to ethnic Poles in former eastern Poland, there were also large Polish communities in the USSR and in the Baltic states. Polish population east of the Curzon Line before World War II can be estimated by adding together figures for Former Eastern Poland and for pre-1939 Soviet Union:

1. Interwar Poland Polish mother tongue (of whom Roman Catholics) Source (census) Today part of:
South-Eastern Poland 2,249,703 (1,765,765)[32] 1931 Polish census[33]   Ukraine
North-Eastern Poland 1,663,888 (1,358,029)[34][35] 1931 Polish census   and  
2. Interwar USSR Ethnic Poles according to official census Source (census) Today part of:
Soviet Ukraine 476,435 1926 Soviet census   Ukraine
Soviet Belarus 97,498 1926 Soviet census   Belarus
Soviet Russia 197,827 1926 Soviet census   Russia
rest of the USSR 10,574 1926 Soviet census
3. Interwar Baltic states Ethnic Poles according to official census Source (census) Today part of:
Lithuania 65,599 [Note 1] 1923 Lithuanian census   Lithuania
Latvia 59,374 1930 Latvian census[36]   Latvia
Estonia 1,608 1934 Estonian census   Estonia
TOTAL (1., 2., 3.) 4 to 5 million ethnic Poles
  1. ^ Polish sources estimated, based on the percentage of votes for Polish parties in the 1923 Lithuanian parliamentary election, that the real number of ethnic Poles in interwar Lithuania in 1923 was 202,026.

Largest cities and towns edit

In 1931, according to the Polish National Census, the ten largest cities in Polish Eastern Borderlands were: Lwów (pop. 312,200), Wilno (pop. 195,100), Stanisławów (pop. 60,000), Grodno (pop. 49,700), Brześć nad Bugiem (pop. 48,400), Borysław (pop. 41,500), Równe (pop. 40,600), Tarnopol (pop. 35,600), Łuck (pop. 35,600) and Kołomyja (pop. 33,800).

In addition, Daugavpils (pop. 43,200 in 1930) in inter-war Latvia was also a major Polish community with 21% ethnic Polish inhabitants.

Ethnolinguistic structure (mother tongue) of the population in 24 largest cities and towns in Kresy according to the censuses of 1931[33] and 1930[37]
City Pop. Polish Yiddish & Hebrew German Ukrainian Belarusian Russian Lithuanian Other Today part of:
Lwów 312,231 63.5% (198,212) 24.1% (75,316) 0.8% (2,448) 11.3% (35,137) 0% (24) 0.1% (462) 0% (6) 0.2% (626)   Ukraine
Wilno 195,071 65.9% (128,628) 28% (54,596) 0.3% (561) 0.1% (213) 0.9% (1,737) 3.8% (7,372) 0.8% (1,579) 0.2% (385)   Lithuania
Stanisławów 59,960 43.7% (26,187) 38.3% (22,944) 2.2% (1,332) 15.6% (9,357) 0% (3) 0.1% (50) 0% (1) 0.1% (86)   Ukraine
Grodno 49,669 47.2% (23,458) 42.1% (20,931) 0.2% (99) 0.2% (83) 2.5% (1,261) 7.5% (3,730) 0% (22) 0.2% (85)   Belarus
Brześć 48,385 42.6% (20,595) 44.1% (21,315) 0% (24) 0.8% (393) 7.1% (3,434) 5.3% (2,575) 0% (1) 0.1% (48)   Belarus
Daugavpils 43,226 20.8% (9,007) 26.9% (11,636) - - 2.3% (1,006) 19.5% (8,425) - 30.4% (13,152)   Latvia
Borysław 41,496 55.3% (22,967) 25.4% (10,538) 0.5% (209) 18.5% (7,686) 0% (4) 0.1% (37) 0% (2) 0.1% (53)   Ukraine
Równe 40,612 27.5% (11,173) 55.5% (22,557) 0.8% (327) 7.9% (3,194) 0.1% (58) 6.9% (2,792) 0% (4) 1.2% (507)   Ukraine
Tarnopol 35,644 77.7% (27,712) 14% (5,002) 0% (14) 8.1% (2,896) 0% (2) 0% (6) 0% (0) 0% (12)   Ukraine
Łuck 35,554 31.9% (11,326) 48.6% (17,267) 2.3% (813) 9.3% (3,305) 0.1% (36) 6.4% (2,284) 0% (1) 1.5% (522)   Ukraine
Kołomyja 33,788 65% (21,969) 20.1% (6,798) 3.6% (1,220) 11.1% (3,742) 0% (0) 0% (6) 0% (2) 0.2% (51)   Ukraine
Drohobycz 32,261 58.4% (18,840) 24.8% (7,987) 0.4% (120) 16.3% (5,243) 0% (13) 0.1% (21) 0% (0) 0.1% (37)   Ukraine
Pińsk 31,912 23% (7,346) 63.2% (20,181) 0.1% (45) 0.3% (82) 4.3% (1,373) 9% (2,866) 0% (2) 0.1% (17)   Belarus
Stryj 30,491 42.3% (12,897) 31.4% (9,561) 1.6% (501) 24.6% (7,510) 0% (0) 0% (10) 0% (0) 0% (12)   Ukraine
Kowel 27,677 37.2% (10,295) 46.2% (12,786) 0.2% (50) 9% (2,489) 0.1% (27) 7.1% (1,954) 0% (1) 0.3% (75)   Ukraine
Włodzimierz 24,591 39.1% (9,616) 43.1% (10,611) 0.6% (138) 14% (3,446) 0.1% (18) 2.9% (724) 0% (0) 0.2% (38)   Ukraine
Baranowicze 22,818 42.8% (9,758) 41.3% (9,423) 0.1% (25) 0.2% (50) 11.1% (2,537) 4.4% (1,006) 0% (1) 0.1% (18)   Belarus
Sambor 21,923 61.9% (13,575) 24.3% (5,325) 0.1% (28) 13.2% (2,902) 0% (4) 0% (4) 0% (0) 0.4% (85)   Ukraine
Krzemieniec 19,877 15.6% (3,108) 36.4% (7,245) 0.1% (23) 42.4% (8,430) 0% (6) 4.4% (883) 0% (2) 0.9% (180)   Ukraine
Lida 19,326 63.3% (12,239) 32.6% (6,300) 0% (5) 0.1% (28) 2.1% (414) 1.7% (328) 0% (2) 0.1% (10)   Belarus
Czortków 19,038 55.2% (10,504) 25.5% (4,860) 0.1% (11) 19.1% (3,633) 0% (0) 0.1% (17) 0% (0) 0.1% (13)   Ukraine
Brody 17,905 44.9% (8,031) 35% (6,266) 0.2% (37) 19.8% (3,548) 0% (5) 0.1% (9) 0% (0) 0.1% (9)   Ukraine
Słonim 16,251 52% (8,452) 41.1% (6,683) 0.1% (9) 0.3% (45) 4% (656) 2.3% (369) 0% (2) 0.2% (35)   Belarus
Wołkowysk 15,027 49.6% (7,448) 38.8% (5,827) 0% (7) 0.1% (10) 6.9% (1,038) 4.6% (689) 0% (3) 0% (5)   Belarus

Polish minority after World War II edit

Despite the expulsion of most of ethnic Poles from the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1958, the Soviet census of 1959 still counted around 1.5 million ethnic Poles remaining in the USSR:

Republic of the USSR Ethnic Poles in 1959 census
Belarusian SSR 538,881
Ukrainian SSR 363,297
Lithuanian SSR 230,107
Latvian SSR 59,774
Estonian SSR 2,256
rest of the USSR 185,967
TOTAL 1,380,282

According to a more recent census, there were about 295,000 Poles in Belarus in 2009 (3.1% of the Belarus population).[38]

Notable people edit

[disputed ]

A number of influential figures in Polish history were born in the area of kresy (note: the redirected list does not include Poles born in the cities of Lwów (Lviv), and Wilno (Vilnius) - see List of Leopolitans, List of people from Vilnius). The family of former President of Poland, Bronisław Komorowski, allegedly hails from northern Lithuania.[39] The mother of Bogdan Zdrojewski, Minister of Culture and National Heritage is from Boryslav,[40] and the father of former First Lady Jolanta Kwaśniewska was born in Wołyń, where his sister was murdered in 1943 by the Ukrainian nationalists.[41]

Cradle of Polish culture edit

 
Map of areas where Polish was used as a primary language in 1916
 
Map of the Polish population living in Lithuania on the basis of elections to the parliament of Lithuania in 1923, censuses in 1921 and elections to the Polish parliament in 1922

Since some of the most distinguished names of Polish literature and music were born in Kresy, e.g. Mikołaj Rej, Adam Mickiewicz, Juliusz Słowacki, Karol Szymanowski or Czesław Miłosz, Eastern Borderlands have featured repeatedly in the Polish Literary canon. Mickiewicz's Pan Tadeusz begins with the Polish language invocation, "O Lithuania, my fatherland, thou art like good health...." Other notable works located in Kresy, are Nad Niemnem, Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass, With Fire and Sword, Fire in the Steppe. In Communist Poland, all Kresy-related topics, such as Poland's eastern centuries old heritage, including ecclesiastical architecture, country houses and stately homes down to the Massacres of Poles in Wołyń were banned from publication for Soviet propaganda reasons, because these lands now belonged to the Soviet Union. In official documents, people born in the Eastern Borderlands were declared as born in the Soviet Union, and very few Kresy-themed books or films were passed by the state censor at that time.[42] One of the exceptions was the immensely popular comedy trilogy by Sylwester Chęciński (Sami swoi from 1967, Nie ma mocnych from 1974, and Kochaj albo rzuć from 1977). The trilogy tells the story of two quarreling families, who after the end of the Second World War were resettled from current Western Ukraine to Lower Silesia, after Poland was shifted westwards.

After the collapse of the Communist system, the old Kresy returned as a Polish cultural theme in the form of historical polemics. Numerous books and albums were published about the Eastern Borderlands, frequently with original photos from the prewar era. Examples of such publications include:

  • Roman Aftanazy. Dzieje rezydencji na dawnych kresach Rzeczypospolitej. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Ossolineum, 1991–1997. History of Residences in Poland's Former Eastern Borderlands, (1991–1997), listing and describing in a monumental eleven volume work the cultural heritage contained in the myriad estates and grand residences in the once Polish Kresy and Inflanty regions.
  • Kresy in Photos of Henryk Poddębski, published in May 2010 in Lublin, with a foreword by people with a Kresy background - Anna Seniuk, Krzesimir Dębski and Maciej Płażyński[43]
  • The World of Kresy, with numerous photos, postcards and maps[44]
  • Sentimental Journeys. Travel across Kresy with Andrzej Wajda and Daniel Olbrychski[45]
  • The Encyclopedia of Kresy, with 3600 articles, and foreword by another famous person from Kresy, Stanisław Lem.[46] Articles about the Eastern Borderlands frequently appear in Polish newspapers and magazines. The local office of Gazeta Wyborcza in Wrocław in late 2010 began a Kresy Family Album, stories and photos of those who were forced to move from the East.

In the first half of 2011, Rzeczpospolita daily published a series called "The Book of Eastern Borderlands" (Księga kresów wschodnich).[47] The July 2012 issue of the Uważam Rze Historia magazine was dedicated to the Eastern Borderlands and their importance in Polish history and culture.[48]

Present day edit

 
Grey: Areas with majority Polish population in modern Lithuania. Red: pre-World War II Polish-Lithuanian border

The territory known to Poles as Kresy is now partitioned off between the states of Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania. Ethnic Poles still live in those areas: in Lithuania, they are the largest ethnic minority in the country (see Poles in Lithuania), in Belarus, they are the second largest ethnic minority in the country after Russians (see Poles in Belarus), and in Ukraine, they officially number 144,130, but some Polish organizations claim that the number of Poles in Ukraine may be as many as 2 million, most of them assimilated.[49] (see Poles in Ukraine). Furthermore, there is a 50,000 Polish minority in Latvia. In Lithuania and Belarus, Poles are more numerous than in Ukraine. This is the result of the Polish population transfers (1944–1946)[50] as well as Massacres of Poles in Volhynia. Those Poles who survived the slaughter begged for the opportunity to emigrate.[19]

Many Polish organizations are active in the former Eastern Borderlands, such as the Association of Poles in Ukraine, Association of Polish Culture of the Lviv Land, the Federation of Polish Organizations in Ukraine, Union of Poles in Belarus, and the Association of Poles in Lithuania. There are Polish sports clubs (Pogoń Lwów, FK Polonia Vilnius), newspapers (Gazeta Lwowska, Kurier Wileński), radio stations (in Lviv and Vilnius), many theatres, schools, choirs and folk ensembles. Poles living in Kresy are helped by a government-sponsored organization Fundacja Pomoc Polakom na Wschodzie, and by other organizations, such as the Association of Help of Poles in the East Kresy (see also Karta Polaka). Money is frequently collected to help those Poles who live in Kresy, and there are several annual events, such as "Christmas Package for a Polish Veteran in Kresy", and "Summer with Poland", sponsored by Association "Polish Community", in which Polish children from Kresy are invited to visit Poland.[51] Polish language handbooks and films, as well as medicines and clothes are collected and sent to Kresy. Books are most often sent to Polish schools which exist there — for example, in December 2010, University of Wrocław organized an event called "Become a Polish Santa Claus and Give a Book to a Polish Child in Kresy".[52] Polish churches and cemeteries (such as Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwów) are renovated with money from Poland. For example, in Nysa, money is collected to renovate the Roman Catholic church in Łopatyn near Lviv,[53] while residents of Oława collect funds to renovate the church in Sasiv, also in the area of Lviv.[54] Also, physicians from Kraków's organization Doctors of Hope regularly visit Eastern Borderlands, and the Polish Ministry of Education runs a special program, which sends Polish teachers to the former Soviet Union. In 2007, more than 700 teachers worked in the East, most of them in Kresy.[55] Studio East of Polish TV Wrocław organizes an event called "Save your grandfather's tomb from oblivion" (Mogiłę pradziada ocal od zapomnienia), during which students from Lower Silesia visit Western Ukraine, to clean Polish cemeteries there. In July 2011, about 150 students cleaned 16 cemeteries in the areas of Lviv, Ternopil, Podolia and Pokuttya.[56]

Despite wars and ethnic cleansing many treasures of Polish culture still remain in the East. In Vilnius, there is the Wróblewski Library, with 160,000 volumes and 30,000 manuscripts, which now belong to the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences. In Lviv, there is the Ossolineum, one of the most important Polish culture centres. Adolf Juzwenko, current president of Wrocław's office of the Ossolineum, says that in 1945, there was a mass public campaign in Poland, aimed at transporting the whole Ossolineum to Wrocław. It succeeded in recovering only 200,000 volumes, as the Soviets decided that the bulk of the library had to remain in Lviv.[57]

In contemporary Poland edit

Even though Poland lost its Eastern Borderlands in the aftermath of World War II, Poles connected with the Kresy still have some affection for those lands. Since Poles from current Western Ukraine mostly moved to Silesia. The cities of Wrocław and Gliwice are regarded as miasta lwowskie (cities of Lwów affinity), while Szczecin, Gdańsk and Olsztyn are regarded as miasta wileńskie (cities of Wilno affinity).[58] Lwów's Ossolineum Foundation, its collections and famous library are now located in Wrocław. Polish academics from Lwów established the Polish University of Wrocław (taking over from the old German University of Breslau) and Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice. At the same time, Polish academics from Vilnius founded Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń (even though Toruń belonged to Poland before the outbreak of World War II before 1939).

There are numerous Kresy-oriented organizations, with the largest one, World Congress of Kresy Inhabitants (Światowy Kongres Kresowian), located in Bytom, and branches scattered across Poland, and abroad. The Congress organizes annual World Convention and Pilgrimage of Kresy Inhabitants to Jasna Góra Monastery.[59]

Other important Kresy organizations, active in contemporary Poland, include:

  • Polskie Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Krzemieńca i Ziemi Krzemienieckiej (Polish Association of Lovers of Krzemieniec and Krzemieniec Land) from Poznań.
  • Stowarzyszenie Kresowe "Podkamień" (Kresy Association "Podkamien") from Wołów,
  • Stowarzyszenie Odra-Niemen (Association Odra - Niemen) from Wrocław,
  • Stowarzyszenie Przyjaciół Ziemi Drohobyckiej (Association of Friends of Drohobycz Land) from Legnica,
  • Stowarzyszenie Rodzin Osadników Wojskowych i Cywilnych Kresów Wschodnich (Association of Families of Osadniks of Eastern Borderlands) from Warsaw,
  • Towarzystwo Miłośników Kultury Kresowej (Association of Friends of Kresy Culture) from Wrocław,
  • Towarzystwo Miłośników Wołynia i Polesia (Association of Lovers of Wołyn and Polesie) from Warsaw,
  • Towarzystwo Miłośników Lwowa i Kresów Południowo-Wschodnich (Association of Lovers of Lwów and Southeastern Kresy) from Wrocław, with branches in Brzeg, Bydgoszcz, Bytom, Chełm, Gdańsk, Jelenia Góra, Kłodzko, Kraków, Leszno, Lublin, Poznań, Szczecinek, Świdwin, Warszawa, Węgliniec and Zabrze,
  • Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Grodna i Wilna (Association of Friends of Grodno and Wilno), with branches in Białystok, Ełk, Gdańsk, Giżycko, Lublin, Łódź, Ostrołęka, Stargard Szczeciński, Warszawa, Węgorzewo, Wrocław,
  • Związek Sybirakow (Association of Sybiraks) from Warsaw, with branches scattered across Poland and abroad.
 
the Skirmunt estate, Moładaŭ, by Napoleon Orda 1875

Every year, in the Masurian town of Mrągowo, there is a Festiwal Kultury Kresowej (Festival of Kresy Culture), sponsored among others by the Senate of the Republic of Poland and the Minister of Culture, with the patronage of the First Lady. The Festival is broadcast by TVP2 and TVP Polonia, and in 2011 it was organized for the 17th time. Among participants of the 2011 Festival, there were such artists, as Folk Ensemble Mozyrzanka from Mozyr, Children and Youth Band Tęcza from Minsk, Folk Band Kresowianka from Ivyanets, Polish Academic Choir Zgoda from Brest, Instrumental Band Biedronki from Minsk, Vocal Duo Wspólna wędrówka from Minsk, Children's Polonia Ensemble Dolinianka from Stara Huta (Ukraine), Ensemble Fujareczka from Sambir, Ensemble Boryslawiacy from Boryslav, Ensemble Niebo do Wynajecia from Stralhivci (Ukraine), Polish Dance and Song Ensemble Wilenka from Vilnius, Dance and Song Band Troczenie from Trakai, Band Wesołe Wilno from Vilnius, Song and Dance Ensemble Kotwica from Kaunas, and Folk and Polish Folklore Dance and Song Ensemble Syberyjski Krakowiak from Abakan in Siberia.[60]

Other notable Kresy-oriented festivals are:

In Lubaczów is a Museum of Kresy, and there is a project, supported by local government, to create a Museum of Eastern Borderlands in Wrocław, the city where a number of Poles from Kresy settled after World War II.[66] Numerous photo albums and books, depicting cities, towns and landscapes of Kresy are published every year in Poland. In Chełm, there is Kresy Bicycle Marathon, Polish Radio Białystok every week broadcasts Kresy Magazine, dedicated to the history and present times of the Eastern Borderlands. Every Sunday, Polish Radio Katowice broadcasts a program based on famous prewar Lwów's Merry Wave, every Tuesday, Polish Radio Rzeszów broadcasts a program Kresy Landscapes. In Wrocław, the Association of Remembrance of Victims of Ukrainian Nationalists publishes Na Rubieży (On the Border) magazine. Among best known Kresy activists of contemporary Poland are Father Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski, and Dr. Tadeusz Kukiz, father of popular singer Paweł Kukiz. Since 2007, annual medals Heritage of Eastern Borderlands are awarded in Wrocław. The 2011 recipient was emeritus Archbishop of Wrocław, Henryk Gulbinowicz.[67] Participants of annual Katyń Motorcycle Raid (Motocyklowy Rajd Katyński) always visit Polish centers in Kresy, giving presents to children, and meeting local Poles.[68]

The program of 2011 Days of Kresy Culture (October 22–23) in Brzeg covered such events, as: Kresy themed cabaret, promotion of Kresy books, Eastern Borderlands cuisine, mass in a local church, meetings with Kresy activists and scholars, and theatre shows of Brzeg's Garrison Club as well as Lwów Eaglets Middle School number 3 in Brzeg. Organizers of the festival assured that for the two days Brzeg would turn into the "capital of interwar Polish Kresy".[69]

In January, February and March 2012, Centre for Public Opinion Research did a survey, asking Poles about their ties to Kresy. It turned out that almost 15% of the population of Poland (4,3 - 4,6 million people) declared that they either were born in the Kresy, or have a parent or a grandparent from that region. The number of Kresowiacy is high in northern and western Poland – as many as 51% of inhabitants of Lubusz Voivodeship, and 47% of inhabitants of Lower Silesian Voivodeship stated that their family has ties to the Kresy. Furthermore, Kresowiacy now make 30% of the population of Opole Voivodeship, 25% of the population of West Pomeranian Voivodeship, and 18% of the population of Warmian–Masurian Voivodeship.[70]

Polish regional dialects edit

Since Poles have lived in Kresy for hundreds of years, two groups of Kresy Polish dialects emerged: the northern (dialekt północnokresowy), and the southern (dialekt południowokresowy).[71] Both dialects have been influenced either by Ukrainian, Belarusian or by Lithuanian. To Polish speakers in Poland, Kresy dialects are easy to distinguish, as their pronunciation and intonation are markedly different from standard Polish.[72] Before World War II, the Kresy provinces were part of Poland, and both dialects were in common usage, spoken by millions of ethnic Poles. After the war and Soviet annexation of Kresy, however, the majority of ethnic Poles were deported westward, resulting in a severe decline in the number of native speakers. The northern Kresy dialect is still used along the Lithuanian-Belarusian border, where Poles still live in large numbers, but the southern Kresy dialect is endangered, as Poles in western Ukraine do not form a majority of the population in any district. Particularly notable among the Kresy dialects is the Lwów dialect which emerged early in the 19th century and was spoken in the city gaining much recognition in the 1920s and 1930s, partly due to the countrywide popularity of numerous Kresy-born and trained actors and comedians whose native speech it was (see also: Dialects of the Polish language).

See also edit

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Kresy.pl - The Biggest Polish Kresy Portal
  • Commonwealth of Diverse Cultures: Poland's Heritage
  • Polish maps of present-day Western Ukraine and Belarus (1930s)
  • Virtual Commonwealth - Eastern Borderlands
  • Virtual Tour of Kresy 2018-02-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • MojeKresy.pl The newest Polish Kresy Portal

kresy, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, eastern, borderlands, polish, wschodnie, simply, borderlands, polish, polish, pronunciation, ˈkrɛsɨ, term, coined, eastern, part, second, polish, republic, during, interwar, period, 1918, 1939, largely, a. For other places with the same name see Kresy disambiguation Eastern Borderlands 1 Polish Kresy Wschodnie or simply Borderlands Polish Kresy Polish pronunciation ˈkrɛsɨ was a term coined for the eastern part of the Second Polish Republic during the interwar period 1918 1939 Largely agricultural and extensively multi ethnic with a Polish minority 2 it amounted to nearly half of the territory of interwar Poland Historically situated in the eastern Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth following the 18th century foreign partitions it was divided between the Empires of Russia and Austria Hungary and ceded to Poland in 1921 after the Treaty of Riga As a result of the post World War II border changes all of the territory was ceded to the USSR and none of it is in modern Poland Eastern BorderlandsKresy WschodniePart of the Second Polish RepublicIn the 1939 German Soviet Molotov Ribbentrop Pact the Eastern Borderlands grey were annexed directly into the Soviet Union The Soviet gains east of the Curzon line devised in 1919 were confirmed with minor adjustments in the areas around Bialystok and Przemysl by the Western Allies at the Tehran Conference the Yalta conference and the Potsdam conference In 1945 most of Germany s territory east of the Oder Neisse line pink was ceded to what remained of Poland white both of which would compose the newly created People s Republic of PolandHistorical regionPeriod1919 1939 1945AreaTerritories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union in the Invasion of Poland of 1939Today part of Ukraine Belarus LithuaniaThe Polish plural term Kresy corresponds to the Russian okrainy okrainy meaning the border regions 3 During the existence of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Kresy only referred to the borderlands of the Kingdom of Poland and not the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 4 Kresy is also largely co terminous with the northern areas of the Pale of Settlement a scheme devised by Catherine II of Russia to limit Jews from settling in the homogenously Christian Orthodox core of the Russian Empire such as Moscow and Saint Petersburg The Pale was established after the Second Partition of Poland and lasted until the Russian Revolution in 1917 when the Russian Empire ceased to exist In the aftermath of the Polish wars against Ukraine Lithuania and Soviet Russia the latter of which was ended by the Treaty of Riga large parts of the Austrian and Russian partitions became part of Poland As many as 12 million inhabitants lived in the Eastern Borderlands but ethnic Poles only were a third of that population with another third being Ukrainian 4 5 Most small towns in the Borderlands were shtetls 5 Administratively the Eastern Borderlands territory was composed of Lwow Nowogrodek Polesie Stanislawow Tarnopol Wilno Wolyn and Bialystok voivodeships provinces Today all these regions are divided between Western Ukraine Western Belarus and south eastern Lithuania with the major cities of Lviv Vilnius and Grodno no longer in Poland During the Second Polish Republic the Eastern Borderlands denoted the lands beyond the Curzon Line proposed after World War I in December 1919 by the British Foreign Office as the eastern border of the re emerging sovereign Polish Republic after over a century of partition In September 1939 after Germany invaded Poland and follow up invasion by Soviet Union in accordance with Molotov Ribbentrop Pact all Eastern Borderlands territories were incorporated into the Soviet republics of Ukraine Belarus and Lithuania often by means of terror 6 Soviet territorial annexations during World War II were later ratified by the Allies at the Conferences of Tehran Yalta and Potsdam and most of Poles here were expelled after the end of World War II in Europe After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 there was no change to the post World War II borders Despite the former provinces of the Eastern Borderlands no longer being part of Poland a Polish minority remains Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 The Partitions of Poland 2 2 The Pale of Settlement 2 3 Economic decline of Kresy 2 4 Between the World Wars 2 5 During and after World War II 3 Interwar population 3 1 Largest cities and towns 4 Polish minority after World War II 5 Notable people 6 Cradle of Polish culture 7 Present day 7 1 In contemporary Poland 8 Polish regional dialects 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Typical landscape view of the Kresy marked by low lying rolling hills and grasslands location Sielec Drohobych Raion western Ukraine nbsp Polish voivodeships 1922 1939 One can consider the six easternmost voivodeships as roughly equivalent with Kresy The Polish word kresy borderlands is the plural form of the word kres meaning edge According to Zbigniew Golab it is a medieval borrowing from the German word Kreis which in the Middle Ages meant Kreislinie Umkreis Landeskreis borderline delineation or circumscribed territory 7 Samuel Linde in his Dictionary of the Polish Language gives a different etymology of the term According to him kresy meant the borderline between Poland and the Crimean Khanate in the region of the lower Dnieper The term kresy appeared for the first time in literature in Wincenty Pol poems Mohort 1854 and Piesn o ziemi naszej Pol claimed that Kresy was the line between the Dniester and Dnieper rivers neighbouring the Tatar borderland 8 Coincidentally in relation to Jewish settlement in the macro region the notion of the pale is an archaic English term derived from the Latin word palus which in Polish exists as pal and also means a stake extended in this instance to mean the area enclosed by a fence or boundary 9 At the beginning of the 20th century the meaning of the term expanded to include the lands of the former eastern provinces of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth east of the Lwow Wilno line In the Second Polish Republic Kresy equated to historically Polish settled lands to the east of the notional Curzon line Currently the term applies to all the eastern lands of the Second Polish Republic that are no longer within the frontiers of modern Poland together with lands further east that had been integral to the Commonwealth before 1772 and where Polish communities continue to exist 10 History editPolish eastern settlements date back to the dawn of Poland as a state In 1018 King Boleslaw I the Brave invaded Kievan Rus see Boleslaw I s intervention in the Kievan succession crisis 1018 capturing Kyiv and annexing the Cherven Cities In 1340 Red Ruthenia came under Polish control which intensified defensive Polish settlement and the introduction of Catholicism After the Union of Lublin 1569 more Polish settlers moved into the eastern borderlands of the vast Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Most of them came from the Polish provinces of Mazovia and Lesser Poland They had moved gradually eastwards settling in sparsely populated areas inhabited by earlier inhabitants such as Lithuanians and Ruthenians Moreover the indigenous upper classes of Kresy accepted Polish religion culture and language resulting in their assimilation and Polonization The Partitions of Poland edit The year 1772 marked the first partition of the Commonwealth of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania see Partitions of Poland By 1795 the whole eastern half of the state had been annexed by the Russian Empire in concert with the Habsburgs and Prussia s Hohenzollerns The dramatic westward expansion of the Russian Empire through the annexation of Polish Lithuanian territory substantially increased the new Russian Jewish population Kresy and the superimposed Pale in the former Polish and Lithuanian territories had a Jewish population of over five million and represented the largest community 40 of the world Jewish population at that time From the Polish perspective the lands came to be called the Stolen Lands Even though Poles were a minority in those areas owing to forced depopulation the Stolen Lands remained an integral part of Polish national identity with Polish cultural centres and seats of learning in Vilnius University Jan Kazimierz University and Krzemieniec Lyceum among many others Since many local educated inhabitants had actively participated in Polish Lithuanian national insurgencies November Uprising January Uprising the Russian authorities resorted to intensified persecution confiscations of property and land penal deportation to Siberia and the systematic attempt at Russification of Poles and their traditional culture and institutions The Pale of Settlement edit Main article Pale of Settlement nbsp The Pale of SettlementFrom the Russian perspective the Pale of Settlement included all of Belarus Lithuania and Moldova much of present day Ukraine parts of eastern Latvia eastern Poland and some parts of western Russia generally corresponding to the Kresy macroregion and the modern day western border of Russia It extended from the eastern pale or demarcation line to the Russian border with the Kingdom of Prussia later the German Empire and Austria Hungary It also comprised about 20 of the territory of European Russia and largely corresponded to historical lands of the former Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Cossack Hetmanate and the Ottoman Empire with Crimean Khanate The area included in the Pale with its large Roman Catholic Eastern Catholic and Jewish populations was acquired through a series of military conquests and diplomatic manoeuvres between 1654 and 1815 While the religious nature of the edicts creating the Pale is clear conversion to Russian Orthodoxy the state religion released individuals from the strictures historians argue that the motivations for its creation and maintenance were primarily economic and nationalistic in nature 11 Economic decline of Kresy edit nbsp Leon Wyczolkowski Ploughing in the Ukraine The Russian Empire had abandoned Kresy to decline as a vast rural backwater after the original Polish Lithuanian landowners had been disposed of in the wake of insurrections and the Abolition of serfdom in Poland in 1864 The devastation of country estates put a halt to large scale economic activity which had depended on agriculture forestry brewing and small scale industries Paradoxically the Southern Kresy present day Ukraine was famous for its fertile soil and was known as the bread basket of Europe Towards the end of the 19th century the decline was so acute that trade and food supplies became problematic and large scale emigration from towns and villages began as Jewish communities in particular began heading West to Europe and the United States By the time of a newly resurgent Polish state the provinces had been additionally disadvantaged by having the lowest literacy levels in the country since education had not been compulsory during Russian rule 12 13 14 The regions had suffered a legacy of decades of neglect and underinvestment so were generally less economically developed than the western parts of interwar Poland Between the World Wars edit The years 1918 1921 were especially turbulent for Kresy due to the resurgence of the Polish nation state and the formation of new borders At that time Poland had fought three wars to establish its eastern frontier with Ukraine Lithuania and Soviet Russia In all three conflicts Poland made territorial conquests and as a result it seized territories east of the Curzon line that were previously conquered by Russia in addition to the land formerly part of the Austrian Galicia The Kresy was the most war devasted area in the whole of interwar Poland 15 The region later formed the eastern provinces of the Second Polish Republic Territories included in the Kresy during the interbellum period comprised the eastern parts of the Voivodeships of Lwow and Bialystok and the whole of the Nowogrodek Polesie Stanislawow Tarnopol Wilno Wolyn Voivodeships The Polish government undertook an active policy of Polonizing the Kresy to alter its ethnic profile in favour of the Poles 15 One of the ways to do so was through the Osadnik colonists 15 These military colonists were one of the most emotionalized parts of the Polish government s policy in the Kresy and elicited opposition from the locals 16 The German historian Bernhard Chiari de said that the Kresy were the poorhouse of Poland while the Yad Vashem historian Leonid Rein even wrote that it would not be a great exaggeration to say it was the poor house of the whole of Europe 17 This led to frequent conflicts with Ukrainian nationalists in the southeastern part of Kresy which led to the pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia Numerous Polish communities continued to live beyond the eastern border of the Second Polish Republic especially around Minsk Zhytomyr and Berdychiv In the late 1920s and early 1930s the Soviet authorities created two Polish National District in Belarus and Ukraine but during the Polish Operation of the NKVD most of the Poles in those areas were murdered while those remaining were forcibly resettled in Kazakhstan see also Poles in the Soviet Union During and after World War II edit See also Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia nbsp Members of the German Ordnungspolizei shooting naked women and children in the Mizoch Ghetto October 1942 nbsp Massacres of Poles in Volhynia in 1943 Most Poles of Volhynia now in Ukraine had either been murdered or had fled the area As a consequence of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact on 17 September 1939 the Kresy territories were annexed by the Soviet Union see Soviet invasion of Poland and a significant part of the ethnic Polish population of Kresy was deported to other areas of the Soviet Union including Siberia and Kazakhstan 18 The new border between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union was re designated by the German Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty signed on 29 September 1939 After the elections to the People s Assemblies of Western Ukraine and Western Belarus communist governments for Western Ukraine and Western Belarus were formed and immediately announced their intention of joining their respective republics to the Soviet Union see also Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union After the German invasion of the USSR the southeastern part of Kresy was absorbed into Greater Germany s General Government whereas the rest was integrated with the Reichskommissariats Ostland and Ukraine In 1943 1944 units of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army with the help of Ukrainian peasants carried out mass exterminations of Poles living in southeastern Kresy see Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia In January 1944 Soviet troops had reached the former Polish Soviet border and by the end of July 1944 they again re annexed the whole territory that had been taken by the USSR in September 1939 into their control During the Tehran Conference in 1943 a new Soviet Polish border was established in effect sanctioning most of the Soviet territorial acquisitions of September 1939 except for some areas around Bialystok and Przemysl ignoring protests from the Polish government in exile in London The Potsdam Conference via substantive recognition of the pro Soviet Polish Committee of National Liberation implicitly consented to the deportation of Polish people from Kresy see Polish population transfers 1944 1946 Most Polish inhabitants of Kresy were ordered by the Soviets to migrate west to Germany s former eastern provinces newly emptied of their German population and renamed as the Recovered Territories of the Polish People s Republic based on Polish medieval settlement of the areas Poles from the southern Kresy now Ukraine were forced to settle mainly in Silesia while those from the north Belarus and Lithuania moved to Pomerania and Masuria Polish residents of Lwow settled not only in Wroclaw but also in Gliwice and in Bytom Those cities had not been destroyed during the war They were relatively closer to the new eastern border of Poland which could become significant in case of a sudden hoped for a return to the East 19 Frequently whole Kresy villages and towns were deported in a single rail transport to new locations in the west For instance the village of Biala near Chojnow is still divided into two parts Lower Biala and Upper Biala Lower Biala was settled by people who used to live in a Bieszczady village of Polana near Ustrzyki Dolne this area belonged to the Soviet Union until 1951 see 1951 Polish Soviet territorial exchange while inhabitants of the village Pyszkowce near Buczacz moved to Upper Biala Every year in September Biala is the scene of an annual festival called Kresowiana 20 In Szczecin and Polish West Pomerania in the immediate postwar period one third of Polish settlers were either people from Kresy or Sybiraks 21 In 1948 people born in the Eastern Borderlands made up 47 5 of the population of Opole 44 7 of Baborow 47 5 of Wolczyn 42 1 of Glubczyce 40 1 of Lewin Brzeski and 32 6 of Brzeg In 2011 people with Kresy background made up 25 of the population of the Opole Voivodeship 22 The town of Jasien was settled by people from the area of Ternopil in late 1945 and early 1946 23 while Poles from Borschiv moved to Trzcinsko Zdroj and Chojna 24 The situation was completely different in Wschowa and its county In 1945 1948 more than 8 000 people moved there They came from different areas of the Kresy Ashmyany Stanislawow Rowne Lwow Brody Dzyatlava District and Ternopil 25 Altogether between 1944 and 1946 more than a million Poles from the Kresy were moved to the Recovered Territories including 150 000 from the area of Wilno 226 300 from Polesia 133 900 from Volhynia 5 000 from Northern Bukovina and 618 200 from Eastern Galicia 26 The so called First Repatriation of Poles 1944 1946 was carried out in a chaotic disorganized way People had to spend weeks even months at railroad stations waiting for transport During that time they were robbed of their belongings by either locals Soviet soldiers or Soviet rail workers For lack of railroad cars in Lithuania at some point the one suitcase policy was introduced which meant that Poles had to leave behind all their belongings They travelled in freight or open wagons and the journeys were long and dangerous as there was no protection from the military or the police 19 In the years 1955 1959 the second mass repatriation of Poles from Kresy took place As a result in the years 1945 1960 over 2 million Polish people left Kresy About 1 2 million more remained in the Kresy after 1960 especially in the territories of the Lithuanian SSR and the Byelorussian SSR Even today Poles constitute the majority of inhabitants in many regions in the Grodno and Vilnius regions In the immediate postwar period Polish Communists who ceded the Eastern Borderlands to the Soviet Union were universally regarded as traitors and Wladyslaw Gomulka First Secretary of the Polish Workers Party was fully aware of it People who moved from the East to the Recovered Territories talked amongst themselves about a hypothetical return to Lwow and other eastern locations and the German return to Silesia as a result of World War III in which Western Allies would defeat the Soviets One of the adages of the postwar period was Just one atom bomb and we will be back in Lwow again Just second one is small but strong and we will be back in Wilno again Jedna bomba atomowa i wrocimy znow do Lwowa Druga mala ale silna i wrocimy znow do Wilna 27 28 Polish settlers in former German areas were insecure about their future there until the 1970s see Kniefall von Warschau Eastern settlers did not feel at home in Lower Silesia and as a result they did not care about the machinery households and farms abandoned by Germans Lubomierz in 1945 was in good condition but in the following years Polish settlers from the area of Chortkiv in Podolia let it run down and become a ruin The Germans were aware of it In 1959 German sources wrote that Lower Silesia had been ruined by the Poles Zdzislaw Mach a sociologist from the Jagiellonian University explains that when Kresy Poles were forced to resettle in the West which they resented they had to leave the land they considered sacred and move to areas inhabited by the longtime enemy In addition Communist authorities did not initially invest in the Recovered Territories because like the settlers for a long time they were unsure about the future of these lands As Mach explains people in Western Poland for years lived on their suitcases with all their belongings packed in case of an unlikely return to the East 29 Interwar population editThe population of Kresy was multi ethnic primarily comprising Poles Ukrainians Jews and Belarusians According to official Polish statistics from the interwar period Poles formed the largest linguistic group in these regions and were demographically the largest ethnic group in the cities Other national minorities included Lithuanians and Karaites in the north Jews scattered in cities and towns across the area Czechs and Germans in Volhynia and East Galicia Armenians and Hungarians in Lviv and also Russians and Tatars 30 nbsp Map of interwar Poland based on the most spoken native language in each powiat Polish white Ukrainian green Belarusian red and local language such as Polesian or other dialects grey Shaded denotes subdivisions where the difference in share between the first and second most spoken languages is less than 5 Data extracted from the Polish census of 1931 The proportions of different native languages in each voivodeship in 1931 according to the Polish census of 1931 were as follows Lwow Voivodeship 58 Polish 34 Ukrainian 8 Yiddish Nowogrodek Voivodeship 53 Polish 39 Belarusian 7 Yiddish 1 Russian Polesie Voivodeship 63 Other or Tutejszy Polesian and other dialects 14 Polish 10 Yiddish 6 Belarusian 5 Ukrainian Stanislawow Voivodeship 69 Ukrainian 23 Polish 7 Yiddish 1 German Tarnopol Voivodeship 50 Polish 45 Ukrainian 5 Yiddish Wilno Voivodeship 60 Polish 23 Belarusian 8 Yiddish 3 Russian 8 Other including Lithuanian Wolyn Voivodeship 68 Ukrainian 17 Polish 10 Yiddish 2 German 1 Russian 2 Other Bialystok Voivodeship 71 Polish 13 Belarusian 11 Yiddish 3 Russian 2 Other 31 In addition to ethnic Poles in former eastern Poland there were also large Polish communities in the USSR and in the Baltic states Polish population east of the Curzon Line before World War II can be estimated by adding together figures for Former Eastern Poland and for pre 1939 Soviet Union 1 Interwar Poland Polish mother tongue of whom Roman Catholics Source census Today part of South Eastern Poland 2 249 703 1 765 765 32 1931 Polish census 33 nbsp UkraineNorth Eastern Poland 1 663 888 1 358 029 34 35 1931 Polish census nbsp and nbsp 2 Interwar USSR Ethnic Poles according to official census Source census Today part of Soviet Ukraine 476 435 1926 Soviet census nbsp UkraineSoviet Belarus 97 498 1926 Soviet census nbsp BelarusSoviet Russia 197 827 1926 Soviet census nbsp Russiarest of the USSR 10 574 1926 Soviet census3 Interwar Baltic states Ethnic Poles according to official census Source census Today part of Lithuania 65 599 Note 1 1923 Lithuanian census nbsp LithuaniaLatvia 59 374 1930 Latvian census 36 nbsp LatviaEstonia 1 608 1934 Estonian census nbsp EstoniaTOTAL 1 2 3 4 to 5 million ethnic Poles Polish sources estimated based on the percentage of votes for Polish parties in the 1923 Lithuanian parliamentary election that the real number of ethnic Poles in interwar Lithuania in 1923 was 202 026 Largest cities and towns edit In 1931 according to the Polish National Census the ten largest cities in Polish Eastern Borderlands were Lwow pop 312 200 Wilno pop 195 100 Stanislawow pop 60 000 Grodno pop 49 700 Brzesc nad Bugiem pop 48 400 Boryslaw pop 41 500 Rowne pop 40 600 Tarnopol pop 35 600 Luck pop 35 600 and Kolomyja pop 33 800 In addition Daugavpils pop 43 200 in 1930 in inter war Latvia was also a major Polish community with 21 ethnic Polish inhabitants Ethnolinguistic structure mother tongue of the population in 24 largest cities and towns in Kresy according to the censuses of 1931 33 and 1930 37 City Pop Polish Yiddish amp Hebrew German Ukrainian Belarusian Russian Lithuanian Other Today part of Lwow 312 231 63 5 198 212 24 1 75 316 0 8 2 448 11 3 35 137 0 24 0 1 462 0 6 0 2 626 nbsp UkraineWilno 195 071 65 9 128 628 28 54 596 0 3 561 0 1 213 0 9 1 737 3 8 7 372 0 8 1 579 0 2 385 nbsp LithuaniaStanislawow 59 960 43 7 26 187 38 3 22 944 2 2 1 332 15 6 9 357 0 3 0 1 50 0 1 0 1 86 nbsp UkraineGrodno 49 669 47 2 23 458 42 1 20 931 0 2 99 0 2 83 2 5 1 261 7 5 3 730 0 22 0 2 85 nbsp BelarusBrzesc 48 385 42 6 20 595 44 1 21 315 0 24 0 8 393 7 1 3 434 5 3 2 575 0 1 0 1 48 nbsp BelarusDaugavpils 43 226 20 8 9 007 26 9 11 636 2 3 1 006 19 5 8 425 30 4 13 152 nbsp LatviaBoryslaw 41 496 55 3 22 967 25 4 10 538 0 5 209 18 5 7 686 0 4 0 1 37 0 2 0 1 53 nbsp UkraineRowne 40 612 27 5 11 173 55 5 22 557 0 8 327 7 9 3 194 0 1 58 6 9 2 792 0 4 1 2 507 nbsp UkraineTarnopol 35 644 77 7 27 712 14 5 002 0 14 8 1 2 896 0 2 0 6 0 0 0 12 nbsp UkraineLuck 35 554 31 9 11 326 48 6 17 267 2 3 813 9 3 3 305 0 1 36 6 4 2 284 0 1 1 5 522 nbsp UkraineKolomyja 33 788 65 21 969 20 1 6 798 3 6 1 220 11 1 3 742 0 0 0 6 0 2 0 2 51 nbsp UkraineDrohobycz 32 261 58 4 18 840 24 8 7 987 0 4 120 16 3 5 243 0 13 0 1 21 0 0 0 1 37 nbsp UkrainePinsk 31 912 23 7 346 63 2 20 181 0 1 45 0 3 82 4 3 1 373 9 2 866 0 2 0 1 17 nbsp BelarusStryj 30 491 42 3 12 897 31 4 9 561 1 6 501 24 6 7 510 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 12 nbsp UkraineKowel 27 677 37 2 10 295 46 2 12 786 0 2 50 9 2 489 0 1 27 7 1 1 954 0 1 0 3 75 nbsp UkraineWlodzimierz 24 591 39 1 9 616 43 1 10 611 0 6 138 14 3 446 0 1 18 2 9 724 0 0 0 2 38 nbsp UkraineBaranowicze 22 818 42 8 9 758 41 3 9 423 0 1 25 0 2 50 11 1 2 537 4 4 1 006 0 1 0 1 18 nbsp BelarusSambor 21 923 61 9 13 575 24 3 5 325 0 1 28 13 2 2 902 0 4 0 4 0 0 0 4 85 nbsp UkraineKrzemieniec 19 877 15 6 3 108 36 4 7 245 0 1 23 42 4 8 430 0 6 4 4 883 0 2 0 9 180 nbsp UkraineLida 19 326 63 3 12 239 32 6 6 300 0 5 0 1 28 2 1 414 1 7 328 0 2 0 1 10 nbsp BelarusCzortkow 19 038 55 2 10 504 25 5 4 860 0 1 11 19 1 3 633 0 0 0 1 17 0 0 0 1 13 nbsp UkraineBrody 17 905 44 9 8 031 35 6 266 0 2 37 19 8 3 548 0 5 0 1 9 0 0 0 1 9 nbsp UkraineSlonim 16 251 52 8 452 41 1 6 683 0 1 9 0 3 45 4 656 2 3 369 0 2 0 2 35 nbsp BelarusWolkowysk 15 027 49 6 7 448 38 8 5 827 0 7 0 1 10 6 9 1 038 4 6 689 0 3 0 5 nbsp BelarusPolish minority after World War II editDespite the expulsion of most of ethnic Poles from the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1958 the Soviet census of 1959 still counted around 1 5 million ethnic Poles remaining in the USSR Republic of the USSR Ethnic Poles in 1959 censusBelarusian SSR 538 881Ukrainian SSR 363 297Lithuanian SSR 230 107Latvian SSR 59 774Estonian SSR 2 256rest of the USSR 185 967TOTAL 1 380 282According to a more recent census there were about 295 000 Poles in Belarus in 2009 3 1 of the Belarus population 38 Notable people editMain article List of Kresy born Poles disputed discuss A number of influential figures in Polish history were born in the area of kresy note the redirected list does not include Poles born in the cities of Lwow Lviv and Wilno Vilnius see List of Leopolitans List of people from Vilnius The family of former President of Poland Bronislaw Komorowski allegedly hails from northern Lithuania 39 The mother of Bogdan Zdrojewski Minister of Culture and National Heritage is from Boryslav 40 and the father of former First Lady Jolanta Kwasniewska was born in Wolyn where his sister was murdered in 1943 by the Ukrainian nationalists 41 Cradle of Polish culture edit nbsp Map of areas where Polish was used as a primary language in 1916 nbsp Map of the Polish population living in Lithuania on the basis of elections to the parliament of Lithuania in 1923 censuses in 1921 and elections to the Polish parliament in 1922Since some of the most distinguished names of Polish literature and music were born in Kresy e g Mikolaj Rej Adam Mickiewicz Juliusz Slowacki Karol Szymanowski or Czeslaw Milosz Eastern Borderlands have featured repeatedly in the Polish Literary canon Mickiewicz s Pan Tadeusz begins with the Polish language invocation O Lithuania my fatherland thou art like good health Other notable works located in Kresy are Nad Niemnem Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass With Fire and Sword Fire in the Steppe In Communist Poland all Kresy related topics such as Poland s eastern centuries old heritage including ecclesiastical architecture country houses and stately homes down to the Massacres of Poles in Wolyn were banned from publication for Soviet propaganda reasons because these lands now belonged to the Soviet Union In official documents people born in the Eastern Borderlands were declared as born in the Soviet Union and very few Kresy themed books or films were passed by the state censor at that time 42 One of the exceptions was the immensely popular comedy trilogy by Sylwester Checinski Sami swoi from 1967 Nie ma mocnych from 1974 and Kochaj albo rzuc from 1977 The trilogy tells the story of two quarreling families who after the end of the Second World War were resettled from current Western Ukraine to Lower Silesia after Poland was shifted westwards After the collapse of the Communist system the old Kresy returned as a Polish cultural theme in the form of historical polemics Numerous books and albums were published about the Eastern Borderlands frequently with original photos from the prewar era Examples of such publications include Roman Aftanazy Dzieje rezydencji na dawnych kresach Rzeczypospolitej Wroclaw Wydawnictwo Ossolineum 1991 1997 History of Residences in Poland s Former Eastern Borderlands 1991 1997 listing and describing in a monumental eleven volume work the cultural heritage contained in the myriad estates and grand residences in the once Polish Kresy and Inflanty regions Kresy in Photos of Henryk Poddebski published in May 2010 in Lublin with a foreword by people with a Kresy background Anna Seniuk Krzesimir Debski and Maciej Plazynski 43 The World of Kresy with numerous photos postcards and maps 44 Sentimental Journeys Travel across Kresy with Andrzej Wajda and Daniel Olbrychski 45 The Encyclopedia of Kresy with 3600 articles and foreword by another famous person from Kresy Stanislaw Lem 46 Articles about the Eastern Borderlands frequently appear in Polish newspapers and magazines The local office of Gazeta Wyborcza in Wroclaw in late 2010 began a Kresy Family Album stories and photos of those who were forced to move from the East In the first half of 2011 Rzeczpospolita daily published a series called The Book of Eastern Borderlands Ksiega kresow wschodnich 47 The July 2012 issue of the Uwazam Rze Historia magazine was dedicated to the Eastern Borderlands and their importance in Polish history and culture 48 Present day edit nbsp Grey Areas with majority Polish population in modern Lithuania Red pre World War II Polish Lithuanian borderThe territory known to Poles as Kresy is now partitioned off between the states of Ukraine Belarus and Lithuania Ethnic Poles still live in those areas in Lithuania they are the largest ethnic minority in the country see Poles in Lithuania in Belarus they are the second largest ethnic minority in the country after Russians see Poles in Belarus and in Ukraine they officially number 144 130 but some Polish organizations claim that the number of Poles in Ukraine may be as many as 2 million most of them assimilated 49 see Poles in Ukraine Furthermore there is a 50 000 Polish minority in Latvia In Lithuania and Belarus Poles are more numerous than in Ukraine This is the result of the Polish population transfers 1944 1946 50 as well as Massacres of Poles in Volhynia Those Poles who survived the slaughter begged for the opportunity to emigrate 19 Many Polish organizations are active in the former Eastern Borderlands such as the Association of Poles in Ukraine Association of Polish Culture of the Lviv Land the Federation of Polish Organizations in Ukraine Union of Poles in Belarus and the Association of Poles in Lithuania There are Polish sports clubs Pogon Lwow FK Polonia Vilnius newspapers Gazeta Lwowska Kurier Wilenski radio stations in Lviv and Vilnius many theatres schools choirs and folk ensembles Poles living in Kresy are helped by a government sponsored organization Fundacja Pomoc Polakom na Wschodzie and by other organizations such as the Association of Help of Poles in the East Kresy see also Karta Polaka Money is frequently collected to help those Poles who live in Kresy and there are several annual events such as Christmas Package for a Polish Veteran in Kresy and Summer with Poland sponsored by Association Polish Community in which Polish children from Kresy are invited to visit Poland 51 Polish language handbooks and films as well as medicines and clothes are collected and sent to Kresy Books are most often sent to Polish schools which exist there for example in December 2010 University of Wroclaw organized an event called Become a Polish Santa Claus and Give a Book to a Polish Child in Kresy 52 Polish churches and cemeteries such as Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwow are renovated with money from Poland For example in Nysa money is collected to renovate the Roman Catholic church in Lopatyn near Lviv 53 while residents of Olawa collect funds to renovate the church in Sasiv also in the area of Lviv 54 Also physicians from Krakow s organization Doctors of Hope regularly visit Eastern Borderlands and the Polish Ministry of Education runs a special program which sends Polish teachers to the former Soviet Union In 2007 more than 700 teachers worked in the East most of them in Kresy 55 Studio East of Polish TV Wroclaw organizes an event called Save your grandfather s tomb from oblivion Mogile pradziada ocal od zapomnienia during which students from Lower Silesia visit Western Ukraine to clean Polish cemeteries there In July 2011 about 150 students cleaned 16 cemeteries in the areas of Lviv Ternopil Podolia and Pokuttya 56 Despite wars and ethnic cleansing many treasures of Polish culture still remain in the East In Vilnius there is the Wroblewski Library with 160 000 volumes and 30 000 manuscripts which now belong to the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences In Lviv there is the Ossolineum one of the most important Polish culture centres Adolf Juzwenko current president of Wroclaw s office of the Ossolineum says that in 1945 there was a mass public campaign in Poland aimed at transporting the whole Ossolineum to Wroclaw It succeeded in recovering only 200 000 volumes as the Soviets decided that the bulk of the library had to remain in Lviv 57 In contemporary Poland edit Even though Poland lost its Eastern Borderlands in the aftermath of World War II Poles connected with the Kresy still have some affection for those lands Since Poles from current Western Ukraine mostly moved to Silesia The cities of Wroclaw and Gliwice are regarded as miasta lwowskie cities of Lwow affinity while Szczecin Gdansk and Olsztyn are regarded as miasta wilenskie cities of Wilno affinity 58 Lwow s Ossolineum Foundation its collections and famous library are now located in Wroclaw Polish academics from Lwow established the Polish University of Wroclaw taking over from the old German University of Breslau and Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice At the same time Polish academics from Vilnius founded Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun even though Torun belonged to Poland before the outbreak of World War II before 1939 There are numerous Kresy oriented organizations with the largest one World Congress of Kresy Inhabitants Swiatowy Kongres Kresowian located in Bytom and branches scattered across Poland and abroad The Congress organizes annual World Convention and Pilgrimage of Kresy Inhabitants to Jasna Gora Monastery 59 Other important Kresy organizations active in contemporary Poland include Polskie Towarzystwo Milosnikow Miasta Krzemienca i Ziemi Krzemienieckiej Polish Association of Lovers of Krzemieniec and Krzemieniec Land from Poznan Stowarzyszenie Kresowe Podkamien Kresy Association Podkamien from Wolow Stowarzyszenie Odra Niemen Association Odra Niemen from Wroclaw Stowarzyszenie Przyjaciol Ziemi Drohobyckiej Association of Friends of Drohobycz Land from Legnica Stowarzyszenie Rodzin Osadnikow Wojskowych i Cywilnych Kresow Wschodnich Association of Families of Osadniks of Eastern Borderlands from Warsaw Towarzystwo Milosnikow Kultury Kresowej Association of Friends of Kresy Culture from Wroclaw Towarzystwo Milosnikow Wolynia i Polesia Association of Lovers of Wolyn and Polesie from Warsaw Towarzystwo Milosnikow Lwowa i Kresow Poludniowo Wschodnich Association of Lovers of Lwow and Southeastern Kresy from Wroclaw with branches in Brzeg Bydgoszcz Bytom Chelm Gdansk Jelenia Gora Klodzko Krakow Leszno Lublin Poznan Szczecinek Swidwin Warszawa Wegliniec and Zabrze Towarzystwo Przyjaciol Grodna i Wilna Association of Friends of Grodno and Wilno with branches in Bialystok Elk Gdansk Gizycko Lublin Lodz Ostroleka Stargard Szczecinski Warszawa Wegorzewo Wroclaw Zwiazek Sybirakow Association of Sybiraks from Warsaw with branches scattered across Poland and abroad nbsp the Skirmunt estate Moladaŭ by Napoleon Orda 1875Every year in the Masurian town of Mragowo there is a Festiwal Kultury Kresowej Festival of Kresy Culture sponsored among others by the Senate of the Republic of Poland and the Minister of Culture with the patronage of the First Lady The Festival is broadcast by TVP2 and TVP Polonia and in 2011 it was organized for the 17th time Among participants of the 2011 Festival there were such artists as Folk Ensemble Mozyrzanka from Mozyr Children and Youth Band Tecza from Minsk Folk Band Kresowianka from Ivyanets Polish Academic Choir Zgoda from Brest Instrumental Band Biedronki from Minsk Vocal Duo Wspolna wedrowka from Minsk Children s Polonia Ensemble Dolinianka from Stara Huta Ukraine Ensemble Fujareczka from Sambir Ensemble Boryslawiacy from Boryslav Ensemble Niebo do Wynajecia from Stralhivci Ukraine Polish Dance and Song Ensemble Wilenka from Vilnius Dance and Song Band Troczenie from Trakai Band Wesole Wilno from Vilnius Song and Dance Ensemble Kotwica from Kaunas and Folk and Polish Folklore Dance and Song Ensemble Syberyjski Krakowiak from Abakan in Siberia 60 Other notable Kresy oriented festivals are Dzien Kresowiaka Kresy Inhabitant Day in the village of Lagiewniki near Malbork Dzien Kresowy Kresy Day in Wschowa Dzien Kultury Kresowej Day of Kresy Culture in Kedzierzyn Kozle Dni Kultury Kresowej Days of Kresy Culture in Bialystok Dni Kultury Kresowej Days of Kresy Culture in Brzeg Dni Kultury Kresowej Days of Kresy Culture in Prochowice Kaziuki Kaziuko muge an annual folk arts and crafts fair which takes place in Vilnius is organized in several Polish cities Gdansk 61 Olsztyn 62 Poznan 63 Suwalki 64 Warsaw 65 on initiative of Poles resettled from Vilnius Kresowy Festiwal Polonijny Mlodziezy Szkolnej Kresy Festival of Polonia Schoolchildren in Zamosc Legnickie Dni Kultury Kresowej Legnica Days of Kresy Culture in Legnica Lubin Jawor Chojnow Lipcowy Festiwal Kresowy July Kresy Festival in Rejowiec Miedzynarodowy Festiwal Kultury Kresowej International Festival of Kresy Culture in Jaroslaw Prezentacja Kultury Polakow z Kresow Wschodnich i Bukowiny Show of Culture of Poles from Eastern Borderlands and Bucovina in Zielona Gora Szprotawa Nowa Sol Kozuchow Zagan Swidnicki Dzien Kultury Kresowej i Lwowa Swidnica Day of Kresy and Lwow Culture in Swidnica In Lubaczow is a Museum of Kresy and there is a project supported by local government to create a Museum of Eastern Borderlands in Wroclaw the city where a number of Poles from Kresy settled after World War II 66 Numerous photo albums and books depicting cities towns and landscapes of Kresy are published every year in Poland In Chelm there is Kresy Bicycle Marathon Polish Radio Bialystok every week broadcasts Kresy Magazine dedicated to the history and present times of the Eastern Borderlands Every Sunday Polish Radio Katowice broadcasts a program based on famous prewar Lwow s Merry Wave every Tuesday Polish Radio Rzeszow broadcasts a program Kresy Landscapes In Wroclaw the Association of Remembrance of Victims of Ukrainian Nationalists publishes Na Rubiezy On the Border magazine Among best known Kresy activists of contemporary Poland are Father Tadeusz Isakowicz Zaleski and Dr Tadeusz Kukiz father of popular singer Pawel Kukiz Since 2007 annual medals Heritage of Eastern Borderlands are awarded in Wroclaw The 2011 recipient was emeritus Archbishop of Wroclaw Henryk Gulbinowicz 67 Participants of annual Katyn Motorcycle Raid Motocyklowy Rajd Katynski always visit Polish centers in Kresy giving presents to children and meeting local Poles 68 The program of 2011 Days of Kresy Culture October 22 23 in Brzeg covered such events as Kresy themed cabaret promotion of Kresy books Eastern Borderlands cuisine mass in a local church meetings with Kresy activists and scholars and theatre shows of Brzeg s Garrison Club as well as Lwow Eaglets Middle School number 3 in Brzeg Organizers of the festival assured that for the two days Brzeg would turn into the capital of interwar Polish Kresy 69 In January February and March 2012 Centre for Public Opinion Research did a survey asking Poles about their ties to Kresy It turned out that almost 15 of the population of Poland 4 3 4 6 million people declared that they either were born in the Kresy or have a parent or a grandparent from that region The number of Kresowiacy is high in northern and western Poland as many as 51 of inhabitants of Lubusz Voivodeship and 47 of inhabitants of Lower Silesian Voivodeship stated that their family has ties to the Kresy Furthermore Kresowiacy now make 30 of the population of Opole Voivodeship 25 of the population of West Pomeranian Voivodeship and 18 of the population of Warmian Masurian Voivodeship 70 Polish regional dialects editSince Poles have lived in Kresy for hundreds of years two groups of Kresy Polish dialects emerged the northern dialekt polnocnokresowy and the southern dialekt poludniowokresowy 71 Both dialects have been influenced either by Ukrainian Belarusian or by Lithuanian To Polish speakers in Poland Kresy dialects are easy to distinguish as their pronunciation and intonation are markedly different from standard Polish 72 Before World War II the Kresy provinces were part of Poland and both dialects were in common usage spoken by millions of ethnic Poles After the war and Soviet annexation of Kresy however the majority of ethnic Poles were deported westward resulting in a severe decline in the number of native speakers The northern Kresy dialect is still used along the Lithuanian Belarusian border where Poles still live in large numbers but the southern Kresy dialect is endangered as Poles in western Ukraine do not form a majority of the population in any district Particularly notable among the Kresy dialects is the Lwow dialect which emerged early in the 19th century and was spoken in the city gaining much recognition in the 1920s and 1930s partly due to the countrywide popularity of numerous Kresy born and trained actors and comedians whose native speech it was see also Dialects of the Polish language See also editBug River land Lithuanian and Belarusian Self Defence Lwow Eaglets Peace of Riga Poles in the former Soviet Union Polish historical regions Polish National Territorial Region Polonia Republic of Central Lithuania Repatriation of Poles 1955 1959 Soviet repressions of Polish citizens 1939 1946 Suwalki Agreement Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union Treaty of Brest Litovsk Treaty of Warsaw 1920 Vilnius Region Volhynia Experiment Wanda Wasilewska West Ukrainian People s Republic Zakerzonia Zeligowski s MutinyReferences edit The 2nd edition of the IPN s educational project Polish Eastern Borderlands in the 20th century Institute of National Remembrance Retrieved 2021 01 24 Bohler Jochen 2018 11 01 Civil War in Central Europe 1918 1921 The Reconstruction of Poland Oxford University Press p 130 ISBN 978 0 19 251332 8 Tomasz Kamusella 2018 The Russian Okrainy Okrainy and the Polish Kresy Objectivity and Historiography Global Intellectual History DOI 10 1080 23801883 2018 1511186 a b Liekis Sarunas 2010 1939 The Year that Changed Everything in Lithuania s History Rodopi pp 257 361 ISBN 978 90 420 2762 6 a b Snyder Timothy Brandon Ray 2014 Stalin and Europe Imitation and Domination 1928 1953 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 994558 0 Bernd Wegner 1997 From peace to war Germany Soviet Russia and the world 1939 1941 Berghahn Books p 74 ISBN 1 57181 882 0 Zbigniew Golab The Origin and Etymology of Old Russian Krivici International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics 31 32 1985 Festschrift H Birnbaum 167 174 page 173 Bremer T 2008 04 01 Religion and the Conceptual Boundary in Central and Eastern Europe Encounters of Faiths Springer ISBN 9780230590021 pale n 1 OED Online Oxford University Press September 2016 Retrieved October 24 2016 The Pale was the part of medieval Ireland controlled by the English government Lukowski Jerzy 2014 06 17 The Partitions of Poland 1772 1793 1795 Routledge ISBN 9781317886938 Rafal Zebrowski Rocznica wydania ukazu o ustanowieniu strefy osiedlenia dla Zydow in Polish Retrieved 2016 01 07 On the anniversary of the institution of the Pale of Settlement W dodatku Kresy Wschodnie II Rzeczypospolitej byly najbiedniejszym regionem kraju Polska ludnosc kresowa rodowod liczebnosc rozmieszczenie Piotr Eberhardt page 21 Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN 1998 Historia gospodarcza Polski Andrzej Jezierski page 269 2006 Jak odrodzila sie wolna Polska 4 November 2009 Retrieved 2 July 2016 a b c Richter Klaus 2020 04 02 Fragmentation in East Central Europe Poland and the Baltics 1915 1929 Oxford University Press pp 86 87 ISBN 978 0 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polskie Kresowe odmiany polszczyzny Archived from the original on 30 June 2016 Retrieved 2 July 2016 USA Translation Services Polish Translation Polish Dialects Retrieved 2 July 2016 Bibliography editBeauvois Daniel Trojkat ukrainski szlachta carat i lud na Wolyniu Podolu i Kijowszczyznie 1793 1914 University of Maria Curie Sklodowska Lublin 2005 2011 and 2016 in Polish Maly rocznik statystyczny 1939 Central Statistical Office of Poland Warsaw 1939 in Polish External links editKresy pl The Biggest Polish Kresy Portal Commonwealth of Diverse Cultures Poland s Heritage Eastern Borderlands of Poland in English Polish maps of present day Western Ukraine and Belarus 1930s Virtual Commonwealth Eastern Borderlands Virtual Tour of Kresy Archived 2018 02 26 at the Wayback Machine Volhynia in the Interwar Period An extensive digital collection of Kresy oriented historic publications MojeKresy pl The newest Polish Kresy Portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kresy amp 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