Kombatanci w systemie politycznym PRL 1944–1972: na przykładzie województwa śląskiego i Lubelszczyzny
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Bednarski, Łukasz
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 132, Studia Politologica 10 (2013), s. [113]-130
Język: pl
Data: 2013
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In 1948, Polish Socialist Party and the Polish Worker’s Party were merged and created the
Polish United Workers Party. The event led to a gradual centralization of the social and political
life which resulted in the imposition of unification of the eleven combatant organizations
that were operating in the People’s Poland. In consequence, a combatant organization called
Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy was created.
In the time of the so-called “cult of personality”, combatants, those originating form the
Home Army in particular, were persecuted by the security authorities of the Polish People’s
Republic. They were not admitted to the Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy. If it
happened that a soldier of the Home Army was a member of the Society he was sidelined by
the influential activists of the Polish United Worker’s Party who belonged to the Society and
originated from the People’s Army and the People’s Guard.
The socio-political crisis that took place in 1956 considerably contributed to the change of
the combatants’ situation in the political system of the People’s Republic of Poland. Many
former soldiers of the Home Army left prisons, general liberalization of the political system
took place. The soldiers of the Home Army started to demand political rehabilitation. The
episode in the Lublin branch of the Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy can serve
as an example of their rebirth after 1956. When the Lublin Society was reactivated on the
basis of the former soldiers of the Home Army, the activists of the left-wing provenience were
expelled from its voivodship boards.
The 1960s were called the “Moczar’s period.” It was a period in the history of the combatants
and the Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy in Poland when one of the most
important fractions of the Polish United Worker’s Party (so-called “partisans”) started using
combatants for the perty’s own political goals. Mieczysław Moczar was aware that he would
not gather real support in the party. As the president of the Society of Fighters for Freedom
and Democracy and the chairman of the Leading Council he gained the favour of combatant
circles by, among others, increasing the number of benefits. It made easier for Moczar to fight
for the leadership in the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers’ Party.