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Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia

The Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia was a punitive action against the Ukrainian minority in Poland, carried out by police and military of the Second Polish Republic from September until November 1930 in reaction to a wave of sabotage and terrorist attacks perpetrated by Ukrainian nationalists.[nb 1][1][2][3][4]

Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia
Prosvita society reading room demolished during Pacification in September–October of 1930. Knyahynychi, today Rohatyn Raion
LocationEastern Galicia
Date16 September − 30 November 1930
Attack type
Mass searches, arrests, destruction of property, food
PerpetratorsPolish Sanation regime
MotiveResponse to Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists terrorist campaign
Eastern Lesser Poland / Eastern Galicia: Lwów (Lviv), Tarnopol (Ternopil) and Stanisławów (Stanyslaviv, now Ivano-Frankivsk) Voivodeships - territories inhabited by the Ukrainian minority in the Second Polish Republic and affected by the pacification in 1930

It took place in 16 Polish counties of three southeastern voivodeships. This area was in the interbellum part of the so-called Eastern Lesser Poland province. Therefore, in Ukrainian and Polish literature this event is called "Pacification in Eastern Galicia" (Ukrainian: Пацифікація у Східній Галичині) and "Pacification of Eastern Galicia" (Polish: Pacyfikacja Galicji Wschodniej) or "Pacification of Eastern Lesser Poland" (Polish: Pacyfikacja Małopolski Wschodniej), respectively.

Background edit

Eastern Galicia, with the ethnic composition of about two thirds Ukrainians and one third Poles,[nb 2][5] east of the Curzon line, was incorporated into the Second Polish Republic after Austria-Hungary's collapse and the defeat of the short-lived West Ukrainian People's Republic.[1] After the war, in 1920–1921, approximately 100,000 Ukrainians were interned in concentration camps[6][better source needed] by the Polish government, where they were often denied food and medicine; some of them died from starvation, disease or suicide. The victims included not only soldiers and officers but also priests, lawyers and doctors who had supported the Ukrainian cause.[7] The death toll at these camps from diseases was estimated at 20,000 people (during the war, the Ukrainian government[clarification needed] had interned 25,000 Poles).[8]

Many Ukrainian organizations continued close contact with the Weimar Republic, later Nazi Germany, while others kept in contact with the new Soviet government to the east. The Ukrainian language was banned in government agencies in 1924 and support was steadily withdrawn from Ukrainian schools. Polish-Ukrainian relations deteriorated during the Great Depression, leading to much economic disruption, hitting hard, particularly the rural areas. In this atmosphere, radical Ukrainian nationalists propagating active resistance to Polish domination found a ready response from Ukrainian youth.[9]

In July 1930, activists of the extremist Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) began sabotage actions, during which warehouses and cereal fields owned by Poles were burned, Polish homes were destroyed, bridges were blown up, state institutions, rail lines and telephone connections were damaged.[1][10] The organizer of the action was Yevhen Konovalets.[11] Financing was provided and weaponry was illegally smuggled with Weimar German support.[citation needed]

The main reason behind the sabotage campaign was the mainstream Ukrainian parties' decision to participate in the Polish elections, coupled with Józef Piłsudski's policy of tolerance, which threatened the OUN's position in Ukrainian society.[1][12] The organization reacted by adopting a tactic designed to radicalize Ukrainian public opinion and block any form of compromise with Polish authorities.[1][10][11] The OUN used terrorism and sabotage in order to force the Polish government into reprisals so fierce that they would cause the more moderate Ukrainian groups ready to negotiate with the Polish state to lose support.[13] OUN directed its violence not only against the Poles but also against all Ukrainians wishing for a peaceful settlement of the Polish-Ukrainian conflict.[14]

Over time, local Ukrainians, many of whom saw the Poles as occupiers of their land, joined the action. Offices of the Polish paramilitary Riflemen's Association were burned, as were the stands of the popular trade fairs in Lwów (Lviv). Government offices and mail trucks were attacked. This situation lasted until September, with some sporadic incidents happening as late as November. The terror action was limited to Galicia, and did not take place in Volhynia.[1]

In response, Polish authorities decided to pacify the turbulent province. The decision to carry out the action was made by Marshal Józef Piłsudski in his capacity as Prime Minister of the Second Polish Republic. Recognizing that terrorist actions carried out by the OUN did not amount to an insurrection, Piłsudski ordered a police action, rather than a military one, and deputized the Minister of Interior, Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski with its organization. Sławoj Składkowski in turn ordered regional police commanders to prepare for it in the Lwów Voivodeship, Stanisławów Voivodeship and Tarnopol Voivodeship. The commander of the planned action was Lwów Voivodeship's chief of police, Czesław Grabowski.[citation needed]

Before the action commenced, around 130 Ukrainian activists, including a few dozen former Sejm (Polish parliament) deputies were arrested.[15] The action itself began on 14 September 1930, in several villages of Lwów Voivodeship, where the 14th Jazlowiec Uhlan Regiment was directed, even though the detailed plan for the action was not established until 18 September.[citation needed]

Forces involved edit

From 20 to 29 September, 17 companies of police (60 policemen each) were used. Of these, 9 came from the police academy in Mosty Wielkie (Velyki Mosty), 3 from Lwów Voivodeship, 2.5 from Stanisławów Voivodeship, 2.5 from Tarnopol Voivodeship (a total of 1,041 policemen and officers). The main operations with the participation of military units took place in the first half of October.

Overall, the action affected:

  • Lwów Voivodeship: police action - 206 places in 9 different counties, military action - 78 places in 8 different counties.
  • Stanisławów Voivodeship: police action - 56 places in 2 counties, military action - 33 places in one county
  • Tarnopol Voivodeship - police action - 63 places in 4 counties, military action - 57 places in 5 counties.

Or in total 494 villages. Timothy Snyder and other sources give the figure of 1000 policemen used in the operation, affecting 450 villages.[1]

Nature of the action edit

The operation was carried out in three stages. First, a basic edict was issued authorizing a particular action. Second, police units were brought in. Third units of the regular army carried out "operational maneuvers".[citation needed]

The pacification involved the search of private homes as well as buildings in which Ukrainian organizations (including the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church) were based. During the search, the buildings, belongings, and property of Ukrainians were destroyed and the inhabitants were often beaten and arrested. Several Ukrainian schools (in Rohat, Drohobycz, Lwów, Tarnopol and Stanisławów) were closed and the Ukrainian Youth Scout organization Plast was outlawed. On 10 September, five deputies of Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance were arrested.[citation needed]

The pacification was carried out by first surrounding a village with police units, then calling out the village elder or an administrator of the village. He in turn was informed about the purpose of the operation and was ordered to give up any weapons or explosives hidden in the village. All villagers were to remain in their houses. Subsequently, the houses of those suspected of cooperation with Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists were searched, which included the tearing up of floors and ceilings. During the course of the search, the furniture and property inside the houses were often destroyed.[16] Policemen found about 100 kilograms of explosives and weapons (1287 rifles, 566 revolvers, 31 grenades).[1] Also, during the searches, physical force was used and many people were beaten.[16] According to Polish historian Władysław Pobóg-Malinowski, there were no fatalities,[17] while, according to Ukrainian historian and an OUN member, Petro Mirchuk, 35 Ukrainian civilians died during the pacification. Stephan Horak estimates the number of victims at 7.[18] Additional punishments included levying special "contributions" on the villages and stationing regiments of cavalry in the village, which had to be fed and quartered by the villages.[citation needed]

Ukrainian nationalists lodged an official complaint regarding the "pacification" action to a committee of the League of Nations, which in its response disapproved the methods used by the Polish authorities, but also put blame on the Ukrainian extremist elements for consciously provoking this reaction from the Polish government. The committee concluded that the pacification did not constitute the governmental policy of persecution of the Ukrainian minority.[9][19]

Effects of the action edit

One of the unintended consequences of the action, from the point of view of Polish authorities, was that previously allegedly "moderately oriented" Ukrainians became radicalized, and even those who had previously felt loyalty to the Polish state began supporting separation.[20] The OUN continued its terroristic activities and engaged in numerous assassinations. Some of those murdered by the OUN after the Pacification included Tadeusz Hołówko, a Polish promoter of Ukrainian/Polish compromise, Emilian Czechowski, Lwów's Polish police commissioner, Alexei Mailov, a Soviet consular official killed in retaliation for the Holodomor, and most notably Bronisław Pieracki, the Polish interior minister. The OUN also killed moderate Ukrainian figures such as the respected teacher (and former officer of the Ukrainian Galician Army of the West Ukrainian People's Republic) Ivan Babij.[21]

According to Ukrainian-Canadian historian, Orest Subtelny, "collective punishment" meted out on thousands of "mostly innocent peasants" resulted in the exacerbation of animosity between the Polish state and the Ukrainian minority.[9]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Snyder writes: "In July 1930, Ukrainian nationalists began sabotage actions in Galicia, destroying Polish properties and homes throughout the region in hundreds of terrorist actions. In September, Piłsudski ordered the pacification of Galicia, sending a thousand policemen to search 450 villages for nationalist agitators... "In 1930, as the OUN terrorized the Galician countryside...Volhynia remained comparatively peaceful..."[1]
  2. ^ According to the 1921 Polish census in Eastern Galician voivodeships: 29.9% Poles, 58.2% Ukrainians. According to the 1931 Polish census: 36% Poles, 54.3% Ukrainians. This includes territories of Lwów voivodship west of the Curzon line.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Snyder, Timothy (2007). Sketches from a Secret War: A Polish Artist's Mission to Liberate Soviet Ukraine. Yale University Press. pp. 75–76, 157. ISBN 978-0300125993.
  2. ^ Lucyna, Kulińska (2009). Działalność terrorystyczna i sabotażowa nacjonalistycznych organizacji ukraińskich w Polsce w latach 1922-1939 [Activities of terrorism and sabotage by Ukrainian nationalist organizations in Poland in the years 1922-1939] (in Polish) (1st ed.). Kraków: Księgarnia Akademicka. p. 212. ISBN 9788371881473. OCLC 613214866.
  3. ^ Pisuliński, Jan (2003). "Pacyfikacja w Małopolsce Wschodniej na forum Ligi Narodów". Zeszyty Historyczne (in Polish) (144). Instytut Literacki: 110. ISSN 0406-0393.
  4. ^ Ostanek, Adrian Adam (2017). "Stosunki polsko‑ukraińskie a bezpieczeństwo II Rzeczypospolitej w kontekście wydarzeń 1930 roku w Małopolsce Wschodniej". Studia Historica Gedanensia (in Polish). VIII: 164.
  5. ^ Foreign Relations of the United States. United States. Department of State U.S. Government Printing Office. 1934. p. 790.
  6. ^ Concentration camps Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Originally published in Encyclopedia of Ukraine, vol. 1 (1984). University of Toronto Press.
  7. ^ Myroslav Shkandrij. (2015) Ukrainian Nationalism: Politics, Ideology, and Literature, 1929-1956. New Haven: Yale University Press pg. 19 Cited passage states "After the war, in 1920-1921, Polish concentration camps held over one hundred thousand people. In many cases prisoners were denied food and medical attention. Some starved; others died of disease or committed suicide. Among the interned were Jews and others of other nationalities who supported Ukrainian independence, and Jews figured among the witnesses who described the murder and abuse."
  8. ^ Jochen Böhler. (2019). Civil War in Central Europe, 1918-1921: The Reconstruction of Poland. Oxford University Press, pg. 81 "100,000 Ukrainians were subsequently interred in the camps of the ultimately victorious Polish Army. One fifth of them fell to infectious diseases."
  9. ^ a b c Subtelny, Orest (1994). Ukraine. A history. University of Toronto Press. pp. 429–431. ISBN 978-0802071910.
  10. ^ a b Lagzi, Gábor (2004). "The Ukrainian Radical National Movement in Inter-War Poland. The Case of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN)". Regio - Minorities, Politics, Society - English Edition. VII (1): 201. Burning and damaging property owned by Poles, according to the logic of the perpetrators, maintained the Ukrainians' "revolutionary attitude" and strengthened the OUN's position in Ukrainian society
  11. ^ a b Mazur, Grzegorz (2001). "Problem Pacyfikacji Małopolski Wschodniej w 1930 r.". Zeszyty Historyczne (in Polish) (135). Instytut Literacki: 4–5. ISSN 0406-0393.
  12. ^ Bulutgil, H. Zeynep (2016). The Roots of Ethnic Cleansing in Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-1107135864.
  13. ^ Crampton, R. J. (1994). Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century – And After. Routledge. p. 50. ISBN 978-0415053464.
  14. ^ Hann, C. M.; Magocsi, Paul R., eds. (2005). Galicia: A Multicultured Land (1st ed.). University of Toronto Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0802037817.
  15. ^ Paczkowski, Andrzej; Cane, Jave (2003). The Spring Will Be Ours: Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom. Penn State University Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-0271023083.
  16. ^ a b Teich, Mikuláš; Porter, Roy, eds. (1993). The National Question in Europe in Historical Context. Cambridge University Press. p. 309. ISBN 978-0521367134.
  17. ^ Motyka, Grzegorz (2006). Ukraińska partyzantka, 1942-1960: działalność Organizacji Ukraińskich Nacjonalistów i Ukraińskiej Powstańczej Armii (in Polish). PAN. p. 57. ISBN 83-7399-163-8.
  18. ^ Brandon, Ray; Lower, Wendy, eds. (2008). The Shoah in Ukraine: History, Testimony, Memorialization. Indiana University Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-025335084-8.
  19. ^ Piotrowski, Tadeusz (2000). Genocide and Rescue in Wolyn. McFarland. p. 226. ISBN 0-7864-0773-5.
  20. ^ Cordell, Karl, ed. (2000). Poland and the European Union. Routledge. p. 187. ISBN 978-0415238854.
  21. ^ Alexander Motyl. (1985). Ukrainian Nationalist Political Violence in Inter-War Poland, 1921-1939. East European Quarterly, 19:1 (1985:Spring) p.45

pacification, ukrainians, eastern, galicia, punitive, action, against, ukrainian, minority, poland, carried, police, military, second, polish, republic, from, september, until, november, 1930, reaction, wave, sabotage, terrorist, attacks, perpetrated, ukrainia. The Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia was a punitive action against the Ukrainian minority in Poland carried out by police and military of the Second Polish Republic from September until November 1930 in reaction to a wave of sabotage and terrorist attacks perpetrated by Ukrainian nationalists nb 1 1 2 3 4 Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern GaliciaProsvita society reading room demolished during Pacification in September October of 1930 Knyahynychi today Rohatyn RaionLocationEastern GaliciaDate16 September 30 November 1930Attack typeMass searches arrests destruction of property foodPerpetratorsPolish Sanation regimeMotiveResponse to Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists terrorist campaign Eastern Lesser Poland Eastern Galicia Lwow Lviv Tarnopol Ternopil and Stanislawow Stanyslaviv now Ivano Frankivsk Voivodeships territories inhabited by the Ukrainian minority in the Second Polish Republic and affected by the pacification in 1930 It took place in 16 Polish counties of three southeastern voivodeships This area was in the interbellum part of the so called Eastern Lesser Poland province Therefore in Ukrainian and Polish literature this event is called Pacification in Eastern Galicia Ukrainian Pacifikaciya u Shidnij Galichini and Pacification of Eastern Galicia Polish Pacyfikacja Galicji Wschodniej or Pacification of Eastern Lesser Poland Polish Pacyfikacja Malopolski Wschodniej respectively Contents 1 Background 2 Forces involved 3 Nature of the action 4 Effects of the action 5 Notes 6 ReferencesBackground editEastern Galicia with the ethnic composition of about two thirds Ukrainians and one third Poles nb 2 5 east of the Curzon line was incorporated into the Second Polish Republic after Austria Hungary s collapse and the defeat of the short lived West Ukrainian People s Republic 1 After the war in 1920 1921 approximately 100 000 Ukrainians were interned in concentration camps 6 better source needed by the Polish government where they were often denied food and medicine some of them died from starvation disease or suicide The victims included not only soldiers and officers but also priests lawyers and doctors who had supported the Ukrainian cause 7 The death toll at these camps from diseases was estimated at 20 000 people during the war the Ukrainian government clarification needed had interned 25 000 Poles 8 Many Ukrainian organizations continued close contact with the Weimar Republic later Nazi Germany while others kept in contact with the new Soviet government to the east The Ukrainian language was banned in government agencies in 1924 and support was steadily withdrawn from Ukrainian schools Polish Ukrainian relations deteriorated during the Great Depression leading to much economic disruption hitting hard particularly the rural areas In this atmosphere radical Ukrainian nationalists propagating active resistance to Polish domination found a ready response from Ukrainian youth 9 In July 1930 activists of the extremist Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN began sabotage actions during which warehouses and cereal fields owned by Poles were burned Polish homes were destroyed bridges were blown up state institutions rail lines and telephone connections were damaged 1 10 The organizer of the action was Yevhen Konovalets 11 Financing was provided and weaponry was illegally smuggled with Weimar German support citation needed The main reason behind the sabotage campaign was the mainstream Ukrainian parties decision to participate in the Polish elections coupled with Jozef Pilsudski s policy of tolerance which threatened the OUN s position in Ukrainian society 1 12 The organization reacted by adopting a tactic designed to radicalize Ukrainian public opinion and block any form of compromise with Polish authorities 1 10 11 The OUN used terrorism and sabotage in order to force the Polish government into reprisals so fierce that they would cause the more moderate Ukrainian groups ready to negotiate with the Polish state to lose support 13 OUN directed its violence not only against the Poles but also against all Ukrainians wishing for a peaceful settlement of the Polish Ukrainian conflict 14 Over time local Ukrainians many of whom saw the Poles as occupiers of their land joined the action Offices of the Polish paramilitary Riflemen s Association were burned as were the stands of the popular trade fairs in Lwow Lviv Government offices and mail trucks were attacked This situation lasted until September with some sporadic incidents happening as late as November The terror action was limited to Galicia and did not take place in Volhynia 1 In response Polish authorities decided to pacify the turbulent province The decision to carry out the action was made by Marshal Jozef Pilsudski in his capacity as Prime Minister of the Second Polish Republic Recognizing that terrorist actions carried out by the OUN did not amount to an insurrection Pilsudski ordered a police action rather than a military one and deputized the Minister of Interior Felicjan Slawoj Skladkowski with its organization Slawoj Skladkowski in turn ordered regional police commanders to prepare for it in the Lwow Voivodeship Stanislawow Voivodeship and Tarnopol Voivodeship The commander of the planned action was Lwow Voivodeship s chief of police Czeslaw Grabowski citation needed Before the action commenced around 130 Ukrainian activists including a few dozen former Sejm Polish parliament deputies were arrested 15 The action itself began on 14 September 1930 in several villages of Lwow Voivodeship where the 14th Jazlowiec Uhlan Regiment was directed even though the detailed plan for the action was not established until 18 September citation needed Forces involved editFrom 20 to 29 September 17 companies of police 60 policemen each were used Of these 9 came from the police academy in Mosty Wielkie Velyki Mosty 3 from Lwow Voivodeship 2 5 from Stanislawow Voivodeship 2 5 from Tarnopol Voivodeship a total of 1 041 policemen and officers The main operations with the participation of military units took place in the first half of October Overall the action affected Lwow Voivodeship police action 206 places in 9 different counties military action 78 places in 8 different counties Stanislawow Voivodeship police action 56 places in 2 counties military action 33 places in one county Tarnopol Voivodeship police action 63 places in 4 counties military action 57 places in 5 counties Or in total 494 villages Timothy Snyder and other sources give the figure of 1000 policemen used in the operation affecting 450 villages 1 Nature of the action editThe operation was carried out in three stages First a basic edict was issued authorizing a particular action Second police units were brought in Third units of the regular army carried out operational maneuvers citation needed The pacification involved the search of private homes as well as buildings in which Ukrainian organizations including the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church were based During the search the buildings belongings and property of Ukrainians were destroyed and the inhabitants were often beaten and arrested Several Ukrainian schools in Rohat Drohobycz Lwow Tarnopol and Stanislawow were closed and the Ukrainian Youth Scout organization Plast was outlawed On 10 September five deputies of Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance were arrested citation needed The pacification was carried out by first surrounding a village with police units then calling out the village elder or an administrator of the village He in turn was informed about the purpose of the operation and was ordered to give up any weapons or explosives hidden in the village All villagers were to remain in their houses Subsequently the houses of those suspected of cooperation with Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists were searched which included the tearing up of floors and ceilings During the course of the search the furniture and property inside the houses were often destroyed 16 Policemen found about 100 kilograms of explosives and weapons 1287 rifles 566 revolvers 31 grenades 1 Also during the searches physical force was used and many people were beaten 16 According to Polish historian Wladyslaw Pobog Malinowski there were no fatalities 17 while according to Ukrainian historian and an OUN member Petro Mirchuk 35 Ukrainian civilians died during the pacification Stephan Horak estimates the number of victims at 7 18 Additional punishments included levying special contributions on the villages and stationing regiments of cavalry in the village which had to be fed and quartered by the villages citation needed Ukrainian nationalists lodged an official complaint regarding the pacification action to a committee of the League of Nations which in its response disapproved the methods used by the Polish authorities but also put blame on the Ukrainian extremist elements for consciously provoking this reaction from the Polish government The committee concluded that the pacification did not constitute the governmental policy of persecution of the Ukrainian minority 9 19 Effects of the action editOne of the unintended consequences of the action from the point of view of Polish authorities was that previously allegedly moderately oriented Ukrainians became radicalized and even those who had previously felt loyalty to the Polish state began supporting separation 20 The OUN continued its terroristic activities and engaged in numerous assassinations Some of those murdered by the OUN after the Pacification included Tadeusz Holowko a Polish promoter of Ukrainian Polish compromise Emilian Czechowski Lwow s Polish police commissioner Alexei Mailov a Soviet consular official killed in retaliation for the Holodomor and most notably Bronislaw Pieracki the Polish interior minister The OUN also killed moderate Ukrainian figures such as the respected teacher and former officer of the Ukrainian Galician Army of the West Ukrainian People s Republic Ivan Babij 21 According to Ukrainian Canadian historian Orest Subtelny collective punishment meted out on thousands of mostly innocent peasants resulted in the exacerbation of animosity between the Polish state and the Ukrainian minority 9 Notes edit Snyder writes In July 1930 Ukrainian nationalists began sabotage actions in Galicia destroying Polish properties and homes throughout the region in hundreds of terrorist actions In September Pilsudski ordered the pacification of Galicia sending a thousand policemen to search 450 villages for nationalist agitators In 1930 as the OUN terrorized the Galician countryside Volhynia remained comparatively peaceful 1 According to the 1921 Polish census in Eastern Galician voivodeships 29 9 Poles 58 2 Ukrainians According to the 1931 Polish census 36 Poles 54 3 Ukrainians This includes territories of Lwow voivodship west of the Curzon line References edit a b c d e f g h i Snyder Timothy 2007 Sketches from a Secret War A Polish Artist s Mission to Liberate Soviet Ukraine Yale University Press pp 75 76 157 ISBN 978 0300125993 Lucyna Kulinska 2009 Dzialalnosc terrorystyczna i sabotazowa nacjonalistycznych organizacji ukrainskich w Polsce w latach 1922 1939 Activities of terrorism and sabotage by Ukrainian nationalist organizations in Poland in the years 1922 1939 in Polish 1st ed Krakow Ksiegarnia Akademicka p 212 ISBN 9788371881473 OCLC 613214866 Pisulinski Jan 2003 Pacyfikacja w Malopolsce Wschodniej na forum Ligi Narodow Zeszyty Historyczne in Polish 144 Instytut Literacki 110 ISSN 0406 0393 Ostanek Adrian Adam 2017 Stosunki polsko ukrainskie a bezpieczenstwo II Rzeczypospolitej w kontekscie wydarzen 1930 roku w Malopolsce Wschodniej Studia Historica Gedanensia in Polish VIII 164 Foreign Relations of the United States United States Department of State U S Government Printing Office 1934 p 790 Concentration camps Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Originally published in Encyclopedia of Ukraine vol 1 1984 University of Toronto Press Myroslav Shkandrij 2015 Ukrainian Nationalism Politics Ideology and Literature 1929 1956 New Haven Yale University Press pg 19 Cited passage states After the war in 1920 1921 Polish concentration camps held over one hundred thousand people In many cases prisoners were denied food and medical attention Some starved others died of disease or committed suicide Among the interned were Jews and others of other nationalities who supported Ukrainian independence and Jews figured among the witnesses who described the murder and abuse Jochen Bohler 2019 Civil War in Central Europe 1918 1921 The Reconstruction of Poland Oxford University Press pg 81 100 000 Ukrainians were subsequently interred in the camps of the ultimately victorious Polish Army One fifth of them fell to infectious diseases a b c Subtelny Orest 1994 Ukraine A history University of Toronto Press pp 429 431 ISBN 978 0802071910 a b Lagzi Gabor 2004 The Ukrainian Radical National Movement in Inter War Poland The Case of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN Regio Minorities Politics Society English Edition VII 1 201 Burning and damaging property owned by Poles according to the logic of the perpetrators maintained the Ukrainians revolutionary attitude and strengthened the OUN s position in Ukrainian society a b Mazur Grzegorz 2001 Problem Pacyfikacji Malopolski Wschodniej w 1930 r Zeszyty Historyczne in Polish 135 Instytut Literacki 4 5 ISSN 0406 0393 Bulutgil H Zeynep 2016 The Roots of Ethnic Cleansing in Europe Cambridge University Press p 103 ISBN 978 1107135864 Crampton R J 1994 Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century And After Routledge p 50 ISBN 978 0415053464 Hann C M Magocsi Paul R eds 2005 Galicia A Multicultured Land 1st ed University of Toronto Press p 148 ISBN 978 0802037817 Paczkowski Andrzej Cane Jave 2003 The Spring Will Be Ours Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom Penn State University Press p 48 ISBN 978 0271023083 a b Teich Mikulas Porter Roy eds 1993 The National Question in Europe in Historical Context Cambridge University Press p 309 ISBN 978 0521367134 Motyka Grzegorz 2006 Ukrainska partyzantka 1942 1960 dzialalnosc Organizacji Ukrainskich Nacjonalistow i Ukrainskiej Powstanczej Armii in Polish PAN p 57 ISBN 83 7399 163 8 Brandon Ray Lower Wendy eds 2008 The Shoah in Ukraine History Testimony Memorialization Indiana University Press p 148 ISBN 978 025335084 8 Piotrowski Tadeusz 2000 Genocide and Rescue in Wolyn McFarland p 226 ISBN 0 7864 0773 5 Cordell Karl ed 2000 Poland and the European Union Routledge p 187 ISBN 978 0415238854 Alexander Motyl 1985 Ukrainian Nationalist Political Violence in Inter War Poland 1921 1939 East European Quarterly 19 1 1985 Spring p 45 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia amp oldid 1220982158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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