Posted on 08/01/2014 2:27:51 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
In 1944, Polands political situation grew increasingly precarious as Soviet forces moved into eastern Poland. In the West, unbeknownst to the Poles, the Allies had agreed to give Joseph Stalin a free hand in eastern Europe after the war. In Poland itself, the brutality of the German occupation continued unabated, with thousands dying every day in camps, summary executions and street round ups.
Polish resistance forces were unified under the aegis of the Armia Krajowa, or Home Army (AK, pronounced Ahh-Kah). (The only exceptions were the miniscule Communist movement and a small group on the right, the ONR.) This underground force was large and well-organized, but lacked sufficient weapons. Only 1 in 10 fighters had a firearm of any sort and heavy weapons were almost non-existent. This organization prepared for an uprising that would strike back at the hated occupiers.
With the tacit approval of the government in exile, the Home Army prepared Operation Burza or Storm. As the Red Army advanced, the underground would rise up, defeat the retreating Germans and greet the Soviets as master of their own country. In the summer of 1944, as the Soviets approached Warsaw, the Poles decided to retake their capital city. Their goal was to drive out the Nazis and welcome the Soviets as masters of their own house, forestalling any effort to impose a Soviet-style puppet regime. In Wilno (Vilnius), the AK played a major role in ousting the Germans from the city and helping the Red Army. The Soviet reciprocated by executing the leaders of the Polish resistance and conscripting the rank and file into the Red Armys Polish units. This was an ominous beginning, but the real test would be in Warsaw.
On the evening of 1 Aug 1944, shots rang out across the city of Warsaw as some 40,000 poorly armed citizen soldiers, including teenagers, men, and women, backed by almost the entire population, attacked the well-equipped, well-fortified German garrison. The first European capital captured by Adolf Hitlers armies was fighting back.
Fierce fighting broke out across the city by the late afternoon of 1 Aug. Only 1 in 10 Polish fighters had a weapon, but many went into action hoping to use captured arms from the Germans, or from their own fallen comrades. Units of Boy Scouts and Girl Guides, some as young as 12 or 13, attacked Nazi panzers armed only with bottles of gasoline. The Poles seized large sections of the city, but failed to take many key fortified strong points, including the bridges across the Vistula River. Losses were heavy, but the Polish citizen soldiers quickly learned from their mistakes.
Hitlers reaction was furious. He ordered the completed destruction of the city and death of all its inhabitants. Heinrich Himmler confidently predicted Warsaw will be liquidated; and this city . . . that has blocked our path to the east for seven hundred years . . . will have ceased to exist. The Nazi command sent SS police, units of former Soviet soldiers who had deserted to the Nazi cause, and the sweepings of German military prisonsmurderers, rapists, child molesters, and thieves. Behind them came tanks, aircraft, and heavy artillery. Many Nazi units were sent into purely civilian areas where they murdered, raped, and pillaged for days on end, killing men, women, and children without mercy. German and ex-Soviet troops rampaged through hospitals, even maternity wards, killing every living soul.
Although murdering helpless civilians came easily to the German command, retaking the city did not. Units that were skilled in slaughtering the innocent proved less effective against armed citizenry. Nazi forces seized buildings during the day, only to find that the Poles retook them during the night. Fighting raged house to house, room to room. Julian Kulski, a teenager fighting in the citys northern suburb, recalled how his unit tricked the Germans into thinking their position was unoccupied: The Germans approached our building and, after passing it, started the attack on the barricade. . . . Then came the long awaited order to fire. We put the muzzles of our rifles, Sten guns, and machine guns forward through the windows and poured murderous fire down on the Germans who were taken completely by surprise. In addition to this, the detachment at the Health Center lost no time in firing on the enemy from the other side and launching an attack. One after another, the Germans were struck down by our bullets. Normally, the Poles spared their ammunition under the slogan, one bullet, one German, but when it came to the SS, a different policy was practiced: Positioned immediately under the window from which I was firing was an SS police machine gun squad. At the first burst from Cadet-Officer Zawadas Sten gun a machine gunner was shot down. Although he was badly wounded, he tried to retreat, spitting blood and leaving a deadly red trail on the pavement. A rifle shot finished him off. . . . We did not spare ammunition when shooting at the SS policementhe men who had been responsible for the slaughter in the Ghetto, for the executions, the street hunts, and the wanton murders. In the ruins of the Jewish Ghetto, a unit of Polish volunteers, using a captured tank, smashed through the walls of the Goose Farm death camp, routing the Nazi guards and freeing about 400 Jewish prisoners. Although small, it was the first Nazi death camp to be liberated by Allied forces. Amid scenes of joy, the Polish officer who led the attack saw a file of men standing at attention. A former prisoner stepped forward, saluted, and announced Jewish volunteer company ready for action! The former prisoners were enlisted in the ranks. As the officer later recalled the Jewish volunteers were exceptionally brave, ingenious, and faithful people.
As the city fought desperately and the Germans began to bring in reinforcements, the reaction of the Soviets was silence. Soviet forces, which had advanced confidently throughout the summer, stopped within miles of Warsaw. When Allied planes sought to use Soviet airbases to airdrop supplies to the Polish resistance, the Soviets refused. Allied supply planes were forced to make a dangerous return trip and Allied planes that strayed into Soviet-controlled areas were shot at from the ground or even attacked by Red Air Force fighters. Despite the dangers many American, British, Polish and South African aircrews volunteered for this mission.
After the first weeks of failing to retake the city, the Germans began to remove some of the more thuggish police units and bring in regular combat units backed by dive bombers, tanks, artillery, and railroad artillery. The infamous Kaminski brigade made up of Soviet deserters, responsible for the mass murder of tens of thousands of civilians was relocated to the Kampinos Forest outside the city. On the night of September 2, local AK forces slipped into the brigades compound and tossed hundreds of grenades and petrol bombs into their barracks, virtually annihilating the unit.
Denied re-supply from the east, the insurgents were driven back by overwhelming German firepower, and forced to rely on capturing weapons or making their own in secret workshops. To escape German detection, the resistance turned to the citys sewers, using them to move undetected from place to place. This was often highly dangerous, and even skilled guides could become lost or fall into German booby traps.
Although forced onto the defensive, the Poles continued to mount attacks on Nazi positions. On 20 Aug, the Home Army attacked the State Telephone Exchange, one of Warsaws few skyscrapers. Special sapper units made up of young womencalled minerkiled the attack, detonating homemade explosives in the lower part of the building, driving the defenders into the upper floors. Then teams armed with homemade flamethrowers set the building ablaze. Most of the Nazis inside jumped to their deaths to avoid the flames, shot themselves, or were killed trying to fight their way back down the staircases.
The most savage fighting occurred in the Old Town, Warsaws historic heart. German heavy weapons smashed building after building, driving the defenders back into an ever smaller area. Civilians were used as human shields for German tanks. The struggle raged around the fifteenth-century cathedral of St. John the Baptist. Its medieval walls resisted even point blank fire from tanks. Assault after assault on the church was thrown back with heavy losses. Nazi commanders, certain that the church was garrisoned by some elite commando unit, packed a small remote-control tank full of explosives and rammed it into the building. The explosion collapsed the walls. As the smoke cleared, the bodies of the defenders could be seen lying amidst the rubble, still wearing their Boy Scout uniforms.
As the Germans closed in on the Old Town, the defenders made a daring escape. Thousands of freedom fighters and civilians slipped away single file through miles of sewers beneath the Germans feet. The wounded were carried through the muck. Some went mad confined in the stinking darkness, others got lost, drowned in sewage, or killed by German booby traps.
As the people of Warsaw fought and died amid the rubble, the Soviets stood by. Stalin was content to let his former ally, Hitler, get rid of the non-Communist resistance movement. The Western Allies, who had already secretly agreed to Soviet hegemony over eastern Europe, saw the naked lust for power of their Soviet comrades. Although in public, they maintained a façade of good relations, for many Western leaders Stalins promises and his good will could no longer be trusted. In the eyes of many historians, the struggle for Warsaw was the first battle of the Cold War.
On 2 Oct, after 63 days of fighting, the defenders of Warsaw, abandoned by their allies and left to face the Nazi army alone, capitulated. The freedom fighters were treated as regular POWs under the Geneva Conventiona concession that showed how badly the Germans wanted to end the Uprising. The civilians were to be evacuated without reprisals.
On Hitlers personal orders, Warsaw was systematically leveled, block by block, street by street. By the wars end, one of the great capitals of Europe was a field of rubble, with not a building left standing for miles.
On the Polish side 15,200 insurgents killed and missing, 5,000 wounded, 15,000 sent to POW camps. Among civilians 200,000 were dead, and approximately 700,000 expelled from the city. Approximately 55,000 civilians were sent to concentration camps, including 13,000 to Auschwitz. Zygmunt Berlings Polish Communist Army losses were 5,660 killed, missing, or wounded in an unsupported effort to cross the Vistula. Material losses were estimated at 10,455 buildings, 923 historical buildings (94 percent), 25 churches, 14 libraries including the National Library, 81 elementary schools, 64 high schools, Warsaw University and Polytechnic buildings, and most of the monuments. Almost a million inhabitants lost all of their possessions. During World War 2, 85% of Warsaw's left bank buildings were destroyed: 25% in the course of the Warsaw Uprising, 35% as the result of systematic German actions after the Uprising, the rest as a combination of the war in Sep 1939 and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Between the war, occupation and Holocaust, Warsaw lost more people than all U.S. and British casualties. German losses in the Uprising were 16,000 killed and missing, 9,000 wounded. Up to 2,000 Germans were captured by insurgents, 1,000 returned after the Uprising (most of the remained were killed by the heavy bombing and shelling). Material losses included three airplanes (two outside the city in the Kampinos forest ); 310 tanks, self-propelled artillery, armored cars; 4 rocket launchers, 22 artillery pieces (caliber 75mm), and 340 trucks and cars.
As the Uprising ended, Soviet propagandists and their Western apologists began to sing a different tune: the people of Warsaw were led by fascists who had betrayed them to the Germans. In time, the Soviets would seek to blank the Warsaw Rising from historical memory, and many Western scholars would go along with this version of events. Many histories of World War 2 in English lavish fulsome praise on the Soviet leadership but ignore the Warsaw Rising. Yet, the Rising destroyed whatever shred of legitimacy the Communists might have had over their new eastern European possessions. For all their anti-Nazi rhetoric, they had allied themselves with Hitler at the start of the war, and then stood by while the Nazis killed off the cream of a generation. However, the Soviet failure to help the resistance destroyed any chance of a legitimate Communist regime being established in Poland. The Uprising remained the ultimate symbol of Communist betrayal and bad faith for Poles. Decades later, its memory helped to fuel the non-violent Solidarity movement that would play an important role in toppling Soviet power.
Sources: Rising 44, Travellers History of Poland, Warsaw Uprising.
Warsaw Uprising Interactive Map
(MAP-AT-LINK)
Warsaw Uprising Timeline
1 Aug 1944 Soviet 1st Byelorussian Front under Konstantin Rokossovsky arrived in the suburbs of Warsaw, Poland. Seeing the arrival of friendly forces, the Polish Home Army rose up against German occupation troops.
20 Aug 1944 Members of the Armia Krajowa attacked the State Telephone Exchange high-rise building in Warsaw, Poland.
25 Aug 1944 The headquarters of NKVD rear guard troops of Soviet 3rd Byelorussian Front ordered Soviet troops to disarm and detain all Polish Home Army troops who were attempting to pass through Soviet lines toward Warsaw, Poland.
14 Sep 1944 Soviet troops reached the suburbs of Warsaw, Poland and began air dropping supplies to the Armia Krajowa.
27 Sep 1944 2,000 fighters of the Armia Krajowa surrendered in Warsaw, Poland.
2 Oct 1944 The Warsaw Uprising ended in failure after 63 days of fighting largely due to lack of food and ammunition. 15,200 insurgents and 20,000 civilians were killed, while the German occupation forces suffered 16,000 killed. Many buildings were destroyed in the fighting.
“Warsaw” by Johnny Klegg and Savuka
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iv4wtU9cU_w
Can there not be any doubt that the reckless, evil disregard for basic morality exists today in the hearts and minds of the average Democrat politician and most assuredly in the hearts and minds of Democrat leadership?
Can there also not be any doubt that those who have made money their god in the GOP-E by allowing themselves to be bought and sold by the Chamber of Cronyism (Commerce) are on the same path as the Soviets in this story?
Thanks for the reminder
I saw the other night the film “Remembrance” (original tile Die Verlorene Zeit) which took place during this time period. It is playing now on Netflix and is worth seeing.
Die Verlorene Zeit (Remembrance) depicts a remarkable love story that blossomed amidst the terror of a German concentration camp in 1944 Poland. This impossible passion fuels the courage of a Polish prisoner who manages to rescue his Jewish girlfriend. Against all odds, they escape the camp and survive a treacherous journey to freedom. But during the chaos of the end of the war, they are forcibly separated and each is convinced that the other has died. More than thirty years later in New York, the happily married 52-year-old woman accidentally finds out that her former Polish lover is still alive. And she has to see him again.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1728620/
Mila 18 by Leon Uris
“Mila 18 by Leon Uris”
Excellent book.
“Kanal” was a horrifying film about the war underground in Warsaw as mentioned in the article.
Also, one of the top leaders of the Free Polish Army was Stefan Korbonski, a late friend of mine. He was the only Polish military leader who sent arms into the Warsaw Ghetto so that the Jews could defend themselves from the Nazis.
He was later awarded Israel’s highest medal for a non-Jewish person, as a “Righteous Gentile”, for his support of Poland’s Jews.
In person, he was a mild-mannered man who looked like a tailor, but he was one helluva freedom fighter (and friend of the great Jan Karski, another Polish leader). I was honored to sit at many luncheons with a genuine hero and humanitarian.
What an outstanding history and comments. Thank you (and those adding in the comments) so much for posting.
bump
Bfl
Hundreds of thousands of the Warsawers spontaneously fled to the streets all across the city to commemorate 70th anniversary of the uprising, chanting "Honor and glory to the heroes" and singing the national anthem as the clock struck 5 p.m. sharp - the Hour "W".
Well, actually they flocked to the streets instead of... (LOL)
Lao Che - Godzina W
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_d7DtcmhVE
I’m riding the tram to war, in the section which is only meant “for Germans”,
With 1st of August sweat on my brow, I’m in a cold barrel along with my Visa in my pant leg.
Axe, hoe, saw, cup,
my white-red armband - an insurgent armband.
With fear in my pocket, coat of arms and rolled tobacco
I’m not cracking, I’m heading for death just like that - on a short shirt.
Under ground soldiers - Aye!
Battalion “Hacky Sack” Aye!
Battalion “Fist” Aye!
Battalion “Broom Stick” Aye!
“Watch 49”, “Umbrella Group”!
‘And so my dear son you left with black weapons at night,
And you felt the uprising when - evil - times called.
Before you fell, you said your goodbye’s to the dirt with your hand,
Was it a bullet my son, or did your heart burst?’
Burst? Burst?
‘It’s for the beard - It’s fantastic.’
‘We the Poles have the Romantic opinion.’
‘We have one charge - (to charge) up into heaven,
And we have one order - (to have a) cross over our graves.’
‘One charge - (to charge) up into heaven,
One order - (to have a) cross over our graves.’
‘And so my dear son you left with black weapons at night,
And you felt the uprising when - evil - times called.
Before you fell, you said your goodbye’s to the dirt with your hand,
Was it a bullet my son, or did your heart burst?’
Burst? Burst?...
Stain’s mask comes all the way off.
Actually, a good English translation is impossible as the Polish lyrics have been written in a prewar Warsaw slang, sometimes to us, regular contemporary Poles, hard to understand. But then again, all that happened in the Warsaw of 1944.
Godzina “W” anniversary bump!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.