On this date, April
13, 1943, the discovery of mass graves of Polish prisoners of war killed by
Soviet forces in the Katyń Forest Massacre is announced, causing a diplomatic
rift between the Polish government in exile in London from the Soviet Union,
which denies responsibility.
I will post
information about the Katyń Forest Massacre from Wikipedia and other links.
Scene
from the 2007 Movie ‘Katyn’
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The
Katyn massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska, mord katyński, "Katyń crime"; Russian: Катынский
расстрел Katynskij ra'sstrel, "Katyn shooting") was a
series of mass executions of Polish nationals carried out by the People's
Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD),
the Soviet secret police, in April and May 1940. Originally the term
"Katyn massacre", also known as the Katyn Forest massacre,
referred to the massacre at Katyn Forest, which was discovered first and was
the largest execution of this type.
The
massacre was prompted by NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria's proposal to execute all captive members of the Polish Officer
Corps, dated 5 March 1940, approved by the Soviet Politburo, including its
leader, Joseph Stalin.
The number of victims is estimated at about 22,000. The victims were executed
in the Katyn
Forest in Russia, the Kalinin and Kharkiv prisons, and elsewhere. Of the total
killed, about 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the 1939
Soviet invasion of Poland, another 6,000 were police officers, and
the rest were arrested Polish
intelligentsia the Soviets deemed to be "intelligence agents,
gendarmes, landowners, saboteurs, factory
owners, lawyers, officials and priests".
The
government of Nazi Germany announced the discovery of mass graves in the Katyn
Forest in 1943. When the London-based Polish government-in-exile asked for an
investigation by the International Red Cross, Stalin immediately severed
diplomatic relations with it. The USSR claimed the victims had been murdered by
the Nazis in 1941, and continued to deny responsibility for the massacres until
1990, when it officially acknowledged and condemned the perpetration of the
killings by the NKVD, as well as the subsequent cover-up by the Soviet
government.
An
investigation conducted by the Prosecutor General's Office of the Soviet Union
(1990–1991) and the Russian Federation (1991–2004) confirmed
Soviet responsibility for the massacres, but refused to classify this action as
a war crime or an act of genocide. The investigation was closed on the grounds
that the perpetrators of the atrocity were already dead, and since the Russian
government would not classify the dead as victims of Stalinist repression, formal
posthumous rehabilitation was deemed inapplicable.
In
November 2010 the Russian State Duma approved a declaration blaming Stalin and
other Soviet officials for having personally ordered the massacre.
Polish prisoners of war captured by the Red
Army after the Soviet invasion of Poland.
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Background
On
1 September 1939, Germany invaded Poland.
Consequently, Britain and France, obligated by the Polish-British
Common Defence Pact Polish-British CDP and Franco-Polish
Military Alliance to attack Germany in the case of such an invasion,
demanded that Germany withdraw. On 3 September 1939, after it failed to do so, France,
Britain, and most countries of the British Empire declared war on Germany but
provided little military support to Poland. They took minimal military action
during what became known as the Phoney War.
The
Soviet Union began
its own invasion on 17 September, in accordance with the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. The Red Army advanced quickly
and met little resistance, as Polish forces facing them were under orders not
to engage the Soviets. About 250,000–454,700
Polish soldiers and policemen were captured and interned by the Soviet
authorities. Some were freed or escaped quickly, but 125,000 were imprisoned in
camps run by the NKVD. Of these, 42,400
soldiers, mostly of Ukrainian and Belarusian ethnicity serving in the Polish
army who lived in the former Polish territories now annexed by
the Soviet Union, were released in October. The 43,000 soldiers born in western
Poland, then under German control, were transferred to the Germans; in turn the
Soviets received 13,575 Polish prisoners from the Germans.
In
addition to military and government personnel, other Polish citizens suffered from repressions. Since Poland's
conscription system required every nonexempt university graduate to become a
military reserve officer, the NKVD was able to round up a significant portion
of the Polish educated class. According to estimates by the Institute
of National Remembrance (IPN), roughly 320,000 Polish citizens were deported
to the Soviet Union (this figure is questioned by some other
historians, who hold to older estimates of about 700,000–1,000,000). IPN
estimates the number of Polish citizens who died under Soviet rule during World
War II at 150,000 (a revision of older estimates of up to 500,000). Of the
group of 12,000 Poles sent to Dalstroy camp (near Kolyma) in 1940–1941, most POWs, only 583 men survived,
released in 1942 to join the Polish
Armed Forces in the East. According to Tadeusz Piotrowski,
"during the war and after 1944, 570,387 Polish citizens had been subjected
to some form of Soviet
political repression".
As
early as 19 September, head of the NKVD Lavrentiy Beria ordered the secret police to create the Administration for Affairs of Prisoners of War and
Internees to manage Polish prisoners. The NKVD took custody of
Polish prisoners from the Red Army, and proceeded to organise a network of
reception centers and transit camps and arrange rail transport to
prisoner-of-war camps in the western USSR. The largest camps were located at Kozelsk (Optina Monastery), Ostashkov (Stolbnyi Island on Seliger Lake near Ostashkov) and
Starobelsk. Other camps were at Jukhnovo
(rail station Babynino), Yuzhe
(Talitsy), rail station Tyotkino 90 kilometres/56 miles from Putyvl), Kozelshchyna, Oranki,
Vologda (rail station Zaonikeevo),
and Gryazovets.
Kozelsk
and Starobelsk were used mainly for military officers, while Ostashkov was used
mainly for Polish boy scouts, gendarmes, police and prison officers. Some
prisoners were members of other groups of Polish intelligentsia, such as
priests, landowners, and law personnel. The approximate distribution of men
throughout the camps was as follows: Kozelsk, 5,000; Ostashkov, 6,570; and
Starobelsk, 4,000. They totaled 15,570 men.
According
to a report from 19 November 1939, the NKVD had about 40,000 Polish POWs: about
8,000–8,500 officers and warrant officers, 6,000–6,500 police officers, and
25,000 soldiers and non-commissioned officers who were still being held as
POWs. In December, a wave of arrests resulted in the imprisonment of additional
Polish officers. Ivan Serov
reported to Lavrentiy Beria on 3 December that "in all, 1,057 former
officers of the Polish Army had been arrested". The 25,000 soldiers and
non-commissioned officers were assigned to forced
labor (road construction, heavy metallurgy).
Once
at the camps, from October 1939 to February 1940, the Poles were subjected to
lengthy interrogations and constant political agitation by NKVD officers such
as Vasily Zarubin. The prisoners assumed that
they would be released soon, but the interviews were in effect a selection
process to determine who would live and who would die. According to NKVD
reports, if the prisoners could not be induced to adopt a pro-Soviet attitude,
they were declared "hardened and uncompromising enemies of Soviet
authority".
On
5 March 1940, pursuant to a note to Joseph Stalin from Beria, six members of
the Soviet Politburo—Stalin, Vyacheslav Molotov,
Lazar Kaganovich, Kliment Voroshilov,
Anastas Mikoyan, and Mikhail Kalinin—signed an order to execute
25,700 Polish "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries" kept at camps
and prisons in occupied western Ukraine and Belarus. The reason for the
massacre, according to historian Gerhard Weinberg, was that Stalin wanted to
deprive a potential future Polish military of a large portion of its talent:
It has been suggested that the motive for this terrible step [the Katyn massacre] was to reassure the Germans as to the reality of Soviet anti-Polish policy. This explanation is completely unconvincing in view of the care with which the Soviet regime kept the massacre secret from the very German government it was supposed to impress. ... A more likely explanation is that ... [the massacre] should be seen as looking forward to a future in which there might again be a Poland on the Soviet Union's western border. Since he intended to keep the eastern portion of the country in any case, Stalin could be certain that any revived Poland would be unfriendly. Under those circumstances, depriving it of a large proportion of its military and technical elite would make it weaker.
In
addition, the Soviets realized that the prisoners constituted a large body of
trained and motivated Poles who would not accept a Fourth Partition of Poland.
The first page of Beria's
notice (oversigned by Stalin and other high-ranking Politburo members), to
kill approximately 25,000 Polish officers and intellectuals in the Katyn
Forest and other places in the Soviet Union.
English: The
accepted proposal of Lavrentiy Beria to execute former Polish army and
police officers in NKVD prisoner of war camps and prisons. March 1940.
TOP SECRET
From the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to comrade STALIN
In the NKVD
POW camps and in the prisons of the western oblasts of Ukraine and Belorussia
there is currently a large number of former officers of the Polish army, former
Polish police officers and employees of intelligence agencies, members of
Polish nationalist c-r (counterrevolutionary) parties, participants in
underground c-r rebel organizations, defectors and so on. All of them are
implacable enemies of Soviet power and full of hatred for the Soviet system.
POW officers
and policemen located in the camps are attempting to continue c-r work and are
leading anti-Soviet agitation. Each of them is simply waiting to be freed so
they can have the opportunity to actively join the fight against Soviet power.
NKVD agents
in the western oblasts of Ukraine and Belorussia have uncovered a number of c-r
rebel organizations. In each of these c-r organizations the former officers of
the former Polish army and former Polish police officers played an active
leadership role.
Among the
detained defectors and violators of the state-
(Signatures:
In favor - Stalin,
Voroshilov, Molotov, Mikoyan)
(In margin: Comrade Kalinin - In favor. Comrade Kaganovich - In favor.)
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Executions
The
number of victims is estimated at about 22,000, with a lower limit of confirmed
dead of 21,768. According to Soviet documents declassified in 1990, 21,857
Polish internees and prisoners were executed after 3 April 1940: 14,552 prisoners
of war (most or all of them from the three camps) and 7,305 prisoners in
western parts of the Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs. Of them 4,421 were from
Kozelsk, 3,820 from Starobelsk, 6,311 from Ostashkov, and 7,305 from
Byelorussian and Ukrainian prisons. Head of the NKVD POW department, Maj.
General P. K. Soprunenko, organized "selections" of Polish officers
to be massacred at Katyn and elsewhere.
Those
who died at Katyn included an admiral, two generals, 24 colonels, 79 lieutenant
colonels, 258 majors, 654 captains, 17 naval captains, 3,420 non-commissioned
officers, seven chaplains, three landowners, a prince, 43 officials, 85
privates, 131 refugees, 20 university professors, 300 physicians; several
hundred lawyers, engineers, and teachers; and more than 100 writers and
journalists as well as about 200 pilots. In all, the NKVD executed almost half
the Polish officer corps. Altogether, during the massacre the NKVD executed 14
Polish generals: Leon Billewicz
(ret.), Bronisław
Bohatyrewicz (ret.), Xawery Czernicki (admiral), Stanisław Haller
(ret.), Aleksander
Kowalewski (ret.), Henryk Minkiewicz (ret.), Kazimierz
Orlik-Łukoski, Konstanty Plisowski
(ret.), Rudolf Prich (murdered in Lviv),
Franciszek
Sikorski (ret.), Leonard Skierski (ret.), Piotr Skuratowicz, Mieczysław
Smorawiński and Alojzy Wir-Konas (promoted posthumously).
Not all of the executed were ethnic Poles, because the Second Polish Republic
was a multiethnic state, and its officer corps included Belorussians,
Ukrainians, and Jews. It is estimated that about 8% of Katyn massacre victims
were Polish Jews. 395 prisoners were spared from
the slaughter, among them Stanisław
Swianiewicz and Józef Czapski. They were taken to the
Yukhnov camp and then to Gryazovets.
Up
to 99% of the remaining prisoners were subsequently murdered. People from the
Kozelsk camp were executed in the Katyn forest; people from the Starobelsk camp
were murdered in the inner NKVD prison of Kharkiv and the bodies were buried
near the village of Piatykhatky;
and police officers from the Ostashkov camp were murdered in the internal NKVD
prison of Kalinin (Tver) and buried in Mednoye.
Detailed
information on the executions in the Kalinin NKVD prison was provided during a
hearing by Dmitry
Tokarev, former head of the Board of the District NKVD in Kalinin.
According to Tokarev, the shooting started in the evening and ended at dawn.
The first transport, on 4 April 1940, carried 390 people, and the executioners
had difficulty killing so many people in one night. The following transports
held no more than 250 people. The executions were usually performed with
German-made 9×19mm Walther Modell 2 pistols supplied by
Moscow, but Soviet-made 7.62×38mmR Nagant M1895 revolvers were also used. The
executioners used German weapons rather than the standard Soviet revolvers, as
the latter were said to offer too much recoil, which made shooting painful
after the first dozen executions. Vasily Mikhailovich Blokhin, chief executioner for the NKVD—and quite possibly
the most prolific executioner in history—is reported to have personally shot and
killed 7,000 of the condemned, some as young as 18, from the Ostashkov camp at
Kalinin prison over a period of 28 days in April 1940.
The
killings were methodical. After the personal information of the condemned was
checked and approved, he was handcuffed and led to a cell insulated with stacks
of sandbags along the walls and a heavy, felt-lined door. The victim was told
to kneel in the middle of the cell, was then approached from behind by the
executioner and immediately shot in the back of the head or neck. The body was
carried out through the opposite door and laid in one of the five or six
waiting trucks, whereupon the next condemned was taken inside and subject to
the same fate. In addition to muffling by the rough insulation in the execution
cell, the pistol gunshots were also masked by the operation of loud machines
(perhaps fans) throughout the night. Some post-1991 revelations suggest that
prisoners were also executed in the same manner at the NKVD headquarters in
Smolensk, though judging by the way the corpses were stacked, some captives may
have been shot while standing on the edge of the mass graves. This procedure
went on every night, except for the public May Day holiday.
Some
3,000 to 4,000 Polish inmates of Ukrainian prisons and those from Belarus
prisons were probably buried in Bykivnia and in Kurapaty
respectively. Lieutenant Janina Lewandowska,
daughter of Gen. Józef Dowbor-Muśnicki, was the only woman
executed during the massacre at Katyn.
Discovery
Soviet
actions
Western
response
At
the Nuremberg trials
Cold
War views
Revelations
Official
investigations
Further
court hearings
Polish-Russian
relations
Memorials
In
art and literature
The
Katyn massacre is a major element in many works of film, literature, and the
fine arts. The first book in English, titled "The Katyn Wood
Murders", was published by Polish émigré Józef Mackiewicz
in 1951 in New York. It is central to the plot in the W.E.B. Griffin novel The Lieutenants,
which is part of the Brotherhood
of War series. The cover-up of the massacre by the Allies is a
central plot point in Robert Harris's
novel Enigma and
the 2001 film of the same name.
Philip Kerr's 2013 novel A Man Without
Breath, the ninth in his successful Bernie Gunther series, has Gunther
investigating the massacre with Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau in and around
occupied Smolensk in 1943. James R. Benn's Rag and Bone (Billy Boyle
series) uses the Katyn Massacre as a central plot element. Polish poet Jacek Kaczmarski has dedicated one of his sung poems to this event. In a bold
political statement during the height of the Cold War, Serbian film director
and screenwriter Dušan Makavejev
used original Nazi footage in his 1974 film Sweet Movie. The Polish composer Andrzej Panufnik wrote an orchestral score
in 1967 called "Katyn Epitaph" in memory of the massacre.
In
2000 U.S. filmmaker Steven Fischer
produced a public
service announcement titled Silence of Falling Leaves
honoring the fallen soldiers, consisting of images of falling autumn leaves
with a sound track cutting to a narration in Polish by the Warsaw-born artist
Bożena Jędrzejczak. It was honored with an Emmy nomination.
The
1999 Academy Honorary
Award recipient, Polish film director Andrzej Wajda, whose father, Captain Jakub
Wajda, was murdered in the NKVD prison of Kharkiv, made a film depicting the
event, Katyn. It
focuses on the fate of some of the mothers, wives and daughters of the Polish
officers killed by the Soviets. Some of the Katyn Forest executions were
re-enacted. The screenplay is based on Andrzej Mularczyk's book Post
mortem—the Katyn story. The film was produced by Akson Studio, and released
in Poland on 21 September 2007. It was nominated for an Academy Award in 2008 for the Best Foreign
Language Film.
In
2008 British historian Laurence Rees
produced a six-hour BBC/PBS
television documentary series entitled World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the
Nazis and the West. The Katyn massacre was a central theme of
the series.
21,768
murdered in Katyn massacre by the Soviet NKVD - April 1940 - Joseph Stalin
Lavrentiy Beria
Uploaded
on Mar 12, 2010
The Katyn
massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska,
'Katyń crime'), was a mass murder of thousands of Polish prisoners of war
(primarily military officers), intellectuals, policemen, and other public
servants by the Soviet NKVD, based on a proposal from Lavrentiy Beria to
execute all members of the Polish Officer Corps. Dated March 5, 1940, this
official document was then approved (signed) by the entire Soviet Politburo
including Joseph Stalin and Beria. The number of victims is estimated at about
22,000, the most commonly cited number being 21,768. The victims were murdered
in the Katyn Forest in Russia, the Kalinin (Tver) and Kharkov prisons and
elsewhere. About 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the 1939 Soviet
invasion of Poland, the rest being Poles arrested for allegedly being "intelligence
agents, gendarmes, saboteurs, landowners, factory owners, lawyers, priests, and
officials." Since Poland's conscription system required every unexempted
university graduate to become a reserve officer, the Soviets were able to round
up much of the Polish intelligentsia, and the Jewish, Ukrainian, and Belarusian
intelligentsia of Polish citizenship.
Nazi
Germany announced the discovery of mass graves in the Katyn Forest in 1943. The
revelation led to the end of diplomatic relations between Moscow and the
London-based Polish government-in-exile. The Soviet Union continued to deny the
massacres until 1990, when it finally acknowledged the perpetration of the
massacre by the NKVD. as well as the subsequent cover-up. An investigation by
the Prosecutor's General Office of the Russian Federation has confirmed Soviet
responsibility for the massacres, yet does not classify this action as a war
crime or an act of genocide. This acknowledgement would have made necessary the
prosecution of surviving perpetrators, which is what the Polish government had
requested. The Russian government also does not classify the dead as victims of
Stalinist repression, which bars formal posthumous rehabilitation.
Executions:
After 3 April, 1940, at least 22,436 POWs and prisoners were executed: 15,131 POWs (most or all of them from the three camps) and at least 7,305 prisoners in western parts of Belarus and Ukraine. A 1956 memo from KGB chief Alexander Shelepin to First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev contains incomplete information about the personal files of 21,857 murdered POWs and prisoners. Of them 4,421 were from Kozielsk, 3,820 from Starobielsk, 6,311 from Ostashkov, and 7,305 from Belarusian and Ukrainian prisons. Shelepin's data for prisons should be considered a minimum, because his data for POWs is incomplete (he mentions 14,552 personal files for POWs, while at least 15,131 POWs "sent to NKVD" are mentioned in contemporary documents).
After 3 April, 1940, at least 22,436 POWs and prisoners were executed: 15,131 POWs (most or all of them from the three camps) and at least 7,305 prisoners in western parts of Belarus and Ukraine. A 1956 memo from KGB chief Alexander Shelepin to First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev contains incomplete information about the personal files of 21,857 murdered POWs and prisoners. Of them 4,421 were from Kozielsk, 3,820 from Starobielsk, 6,311 from Ostashkov, and 7,305 from Belarusian and Ukrainian prisons. Shelepin's data for prisons should be considered a minimum, because his data for POWs is incomplete (he mentions 14,552 personal files for POWs, while at least 15,131 POWs "sent to NKVD" are mentioned in contemporary documents).
Discovery:
The Germans assembled and brought in a European commission consisting of twelve forensic experts and their staffs from Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, Croatia, the Netherlands, Romania, Sweden, Slovakia, and Hungary. After the war, all the experts, save for a Bulgarian and a Czech, reaffirmed their 1943 finding of Soviet guilt. The Katyn Massacre was beneficial to Nazi Germany, which used it to discredit the Soviet Union. Goebbels wrote in his diary on 14 April 1943: "We are now using the discovery of 12,000 Polish officers, murdered by the GPU, for anti-Bolshevik propaganda on a grand style. We sent neutral journalists and Polish intellectuals to the spot where they were found. Their reports now reaching us from ahead are gruesome. The Fuehrer has also given permission for us to hand out a drastic news item to the German press. I gave instructions to make the widest possible use of the propaganda material. We shall be able to live on it for a couple weeks." The Germans had succeeded in portraying the dark side of the Soviet government to the world and briefly raised the spectre of a communist monster rampaging across the territories of Western civilization; moreover, General Sikorski's unease threatened to unravel the alliance between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union.
The Germans assembled and brought in a European commission consisting of twelve forensic experts and their staffs from Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, Croatia, the Netherlands, Romania, Sweden, Slovakia, and Hungary. After the war, all the experts, save for a Bulgarian and a Czech, reaffirmed their 1943 finding of Soviet guilt. The Katyn Massacre was beneficial to Nazi Germany, which used it to discredit the Soviet Union. Goebbels wrote in his diary on 14 April 1943: "We are now using the discovery of 12,000 Polish officers, murdered by the GPU, for anti-Bolshevik propaganda on a grand style. We sent neutral journalists and Polish intellectuals to the spot where they were found. Their reports now reaching us from ahead are gruesome. The Fuehrer has also given permission for us to hand out a drastic news item to the German press. I gave instructions to make the widest possible use of the propaganda material. We shall be able to live on it for a couple weeks." The Germans had succeeded in portraying the dark side of the Soviet government to the world and briefly raised the spectre of a communist monster rampaging across the territories of Western civilization; moreover, General Sikorski's unease threatened to unravel the alliance between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union.
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