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The Politics of Ethnic Cleansing: The P.P.R., The P.Z.Z. and Wielkopolska's Nationalist Revolution, 1944–1946
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
“… all of society is caught up in a hatred of Germany … [this] creates a serious possibility of uniting all of society into one entire national front.”
Władysław Gomułka
Three costly revolutions began in Poland between spring 1944 and summer 1946. The first two were primarily state-sponsored political and socioeconomic revolutions initiated by a minority comprising the Moscow-appointed and -controlled Polish Workers' Party (Polska Partia Robotnicza, P.P.R.) and their allies. Although they dominated the commanding heights of regional and national politics and administration, the P.P.R. and its supporters faced fierce opposition and waged these revolutions with only partial success, relying heavily on fraud and force. These ongoing state-sponsored transformations established an uneven hold on Polish society and depended upon the police power of the new Polish state and, ultimately, the Soviet Union. When the Soviet Union was no longer willing to support its satellites in Eastern Europe by force of arms and the Polish people dismantled their regime's coercive power, much of the laboriously developed political and socioeconomic superstructure of the People's Republic of Poland collapsed.
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References
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120. Protocol Number 1: From a Meeting of the Presidium of the Governing Board of the PZZ on 15 June, 1946,” WAPP PZZ 596, pp. 2–4.Google Scholar
121. See for example a P.Z.Z. poster for the referendum (AAN MZO 283, p. 3) which calls for a vote of “three times yes” to answer “all of the enemies of our borders on the Oder, Neisse and the Baltic.”Google Scholar
122. “Report on the Activities of the Administrative Circle of the PZZ in Poznań in 1946, WAPP PZZ 586, p. 300.Google Scholar
123. The Poznań Circle 1945 and The Report on the Activities of the Administrative Circle of the PZZ in Poznań in 1946, WAPP PZZ 586, pp. 130, 291. This was part of a larger, nationwide drop in P.Z.Z. membership in 1946. Though the Union eventually recovered (and even expanded) from these losses, the new members were often registered en masse and evinced little interest in the activities or ideas of the Union. Musielak, Polski Zwia̦zek Zachodni, pp. 97–108.Google Scholar
124. Report on the Activities of the Administrative Circle … for 1946, WAPP PZZ 586, p. 291.Google Scholar
125. Ibid., p. 300.Google Scholar
126. Coutouvidis, and Reynolds, , Poland, pp. 253–254.Google Scholar
127. An Evaluation of the People's Vote in the Province of Poznań, WAPP WUIiP 26 Secret Correspondence, p. 39. The significant margins of error in the Ministry of Information and Propaganda's tally may be attributed to local information on the extent of administrative fraud. Actual results were even lower than the above: according to Paczkowski in Wielkopolska the no vote on the first and second questions was 83.1% and 58%, respectively, whereas the third question received a yes vote of 81% (from a total of 521,668 valid votes cast). Some (but not all, given the heavily falsified pro-regime results of the voting in Ziemia Lubuska) of the discrepancy can be accounted for by the use in the Poznań Ministry of Information's report of results from Ziemia Lubuska. Even these assessments cannot be regarded as completely accurate, given the prevalence of fraud at the site of the voting prior to any count. Paczkowski, , Referendum, pp. 11–12, 97.Google Scholar
128. Władysław Raczkiewicz and General Władyslaw Anders were leaders of the Polish government-in-exile in London who did not return to Poland after the war; Churchill gained the ire of many Poles for his increasingly critical stance towards Poland's postwar territorial gains. The NSZ (Narodowe Siły Zbrojne, National Armed Forces) and WiN (Wolność i Niepodległość, Freedom and Independence) were anti-regime insurgencies that had all but been destroyed by the spring of 1946. Kersten, , The Establishment of Communist Rule, pp. 229, 325.Google Scholar
129. Minutes of the Provincial Meeting of Active Members in Poznań on 9 July, 1946, WAPP KW PPR 51, pp. 97–99.Google Scholar
130. Czarnecka, Ewa and Fiut, Alexsander, Conversations with Czeslaw Milosz (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1981), p. 53.Google Scholar
131. Musielak, , Polski Zwia̦zek Zachodni, pp. 164–167, 252–255.Google Scholar
132. By 1948, of the 3,020 (mostly Protestant) churches in the Recovered Territories, the regime had turned over 2,895 to the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church also gained additional confiscated Protestant church properties in areas of former German settlement within pre-war Poland, especially Wielkopolska. “Church Property in the Recovered Territories in 1948 According to Confession,” AAN MZO 50, p. 236.Google Scholar
133. Oșkowski, , Społeczenstwo Polski, pp. 173–174, 189–193.Google Scholar
134. Museilak, , Polski Zwia̦zek Zachodni, pp. 109–110.Google Scholar
135. Jankowiak, Stanisław, Wielkopolska w Okresie Stalinizmu 1948–1956 (Poznań: Wydawnictwo Poznańskie, 1996), pp. 155–156.Google Scholar
136. Musielak, , Zachodni, Polski Zwia̦zek, in Wiceniewska and Dymek, 40-Lecie Powrotu Ziem Zachodnich, p. 161.Google Scholar
137. The ongoing importance of anti-German imagery in officially sanctioned art as late as the 1970s can be seen in Kubik's analysis of the play The Song of Wavel. Kubik, Jan, The Power of Symbols against the Symbols of Power: The Rise of Solidarity and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), pp. 75–102.Google Scholar
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