Etos oficerski w warunkach skrajnych na podstawie wybranych postaw oficerów WP osadzonych w KL Auschwitz
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Dębski, Jerzy
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 139, Studia Historica 14 (2013), s. [199]-212
Język: pl
Słowa kluczowe:
Auschwitzaresztowania i represje
oficerowie WP
Auschwitz
arrests and repressions
officers of the Polish Armed Forces
Data: 2013
Metadata
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
All types of police, preventive, and retaliatory actions towards Poles became a part of the occupational
everyday life. In the common historical awareness of Poles, they are embodied by Warsaw street
roundups. However, in the occupational reality, they were a part of everyday life, just like a loaf of dark
bread bought for ration coupons after spending long hours in the queue. That is why it is worth reminding
that, for example in April 1940, before the famous Aktion A-B in General Government, two large-scale
preventive actions took place in the areas incorporated by the Third Reich, namely Regierungsbezirk
Kattowitz and Regierungsbezierk Zichenau. They led to imprisonment of a considerable number of the
members of the Polish local elites.
Repression activities of Kommandeur der Sicherheitspolizei und des Sicherheitsdienstes für den
Distrikt from the middle of April 1942 became a part of those events. During a repressive action that
took place in the late afternoon of 16th April 1942 in the café Plastyków at 3 Łobzowska Street in Cracow,
numerous Cracow artists and other citizens who happened to be in the café were arrested. Moreover,
in the night from the 16th to 17th April numerous reserve officers as well as active duty officers and
retired officers were arrested. 198 persons from among those arrested and incarcerated at the prison at
Montelupich Street were transported to the concentration camp in Auschwitz on the 25th and 26th April
1942. 69 officers were among the people deported in these transports to Auschwitz. On 26th May 1942,
60 of them were executed in front of the Execution Wall in Auschwitz I.