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<!--The others include the massacres in Małkowice, Wola Krzywiecka, Zawadka Morochowska, [[Brzuska]], Piskorowice or Wierchowiny.<ref>http://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/672/158/24426/</ref>-->
<!--The others include the massacres in Małkowice, Wola Krzywiecka, Zawadka Morochowska, [[Brzuska]], Piskorowice or Wierchowiny.<ref>http://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/672/158/24426/</ref>-->


On September 4, 1945 after interrogation, Józef Biss was sentenced to seven years imprisonment for involvement in anti-Communist activities and evasion of a military service.<ref>[http://www.rodaknet.com/rp_wycislak_3.htm Józef Biss story]</ref> for his part in the massacre of Ukrainians in this village.
On September 4, 1945 after interrogation, Józef Biss was sentenced to seven years imprisonment for involvement in anti-Communist activities and evasion of a military service.<ref>[http://www.rodaknet.com/rp_wycislak_3.htm Józef Biss story]</ref>


The Ukrainian church in which the Ukrainian villagers were murdered was destroyed by the Roman Catholic parishioners of the village in 1965. Part of the bell tower remains.<ref>http://www.gazeta.lviv.ua/articles/2005/06/16/6201/</ref> The Ukrainian cemetery was transformed into a dump yard.<ref>http://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/672/158/24426/</ref>
The Ukrainian church in which the Ukrainian villagers were murdered was destroyed by the Roman Catholic parishioners of the village in 1965. Part of the bell tower remains.<ref>http://www.gazeta.lviv.ua/articles/2005/06/16/6201/</ref> The Ukrainian cemetery was transformed into a dump yard.<ref>http://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/672/158/24426/</ref>

Revision as of 10:13, 26 February 2012

The monument commemorating the Ukrainian civilians murdered on 3 March 1945 in Pawłokoma by local Polish self-defence units and an Armia Krajowa detachment

Pawłokoma massacre refers to the murder of Ukrainian civilians by Poles at the end of World War II in Pawłokoma 40 km west of Przemyśl in Poland, on March 3, 1945. The village of Pawlokoma was first mentioned in documents dating back to 1441. Documents from 1585 note that Byzantine rite churches functioned there. In the period before the outbreak of World War II there were 1370 residents having 1190 Ukrainians, 170 Poles and 20 Jews. [citation needed]

Prelude

According to Canadian historian Petro Potichny.[1] From 1938-41 after the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact the village was located in the Drohobych oblast and annexed to the Ukrainian SSR. During the Soviet occupation 16 villagers were arrested. During the subsequent German occupation, nine Ukrainians were arrested and 193 were deported as Ostarbeiter to Germany. Among those murdered by the Poles in 1943 was the active community leader, teacher and bandurist Mykola Levytsky.[2]

One story [citation needed] reports that on January 21, 1945 a unit of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army appeared in the village and kidnapped seven Poles and one pro-Polish Ukrainian woman, including the commune leader of Pawłokoma - Kacper Radoń. They never returned to the village, and were assumed to have been killed. The Polish community is trying to discover their place of burial from the Ukrainians. However there was no response. Poles from nearby Dynow and from Pawłokoma appealed to the mayor of Powiat to send troops to extract information about the missing people. These meetings turned into anti-Ukrainian demonstrations. Retaliation occurred.[3]

According to another story reported by Polish-Ukrainian historian Eugeniusz Misiło, the Poles who were kidnapped and murdered in Pawłokoma by UPA, were actually kidnapped by the Soviets NKVD, in an attempt to start a series of retaliations[4] n Pawłokoma and unspecified number of Poles killed by UPA in neighbouring villages.

Massacre

On 2–3 March 1945, approximately 366 (or 150 according to Zdzislaw Konieczny) Ukrainian and a few Polish[citation needed] inhabitants of Pawłokoma were murdered, by a former[5]Armia Krajowa unit,[6] commanded by Józef Biss "Wacław" aided by Polish self-defense groups from nearby villages. The victims were held in a local church, interrogated (some were possibly tortured[citation needed]) and then taken to a local cemetery where they were executed.[6] Only women with small children (below 10 years old) survived.[7]

The massacre was believed to be an act of retaliation for an earlier alleged murder by Ukrainian Insurgent Army of 9 (or 11) Poles.

Aftermath

The Ukrainian insurgents launched a retaliatory action against the Polish civilians in Pawłokoma and Borowica villages (approximately 77 Poles were killed), and burned Borowica to the ground.[citation needed]

The Pawłokoma massacre is one of the better known examples of Ukrainian civilians murdered by different Polish groups in February–April 1945. Similar massacres followed in other nearby villages, including Łubna, Małkowice and Piskorowice.[8]

On September 4, 1945 after interrogation, Józef Biss was sentenced to seven years imprisonment for involvement in anti-Communist activities and evasion of a military service.[9]

The Ukrainian church in which the Ukrainian villagers were murdered was destroyed by the Roman Catholic parishioners of the village in 1965. Part of the bell tower remains.[10] The Ukrainian cemetery was transformed into a dump yard.[11]

Several bodies of the victims were exhumed in 1952. The Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) has been conducting an investigation of the crime since 20 September 2001. The ongoing investigation is (as of May 2006) still inconclusive.

On May 13, 2006 Polish president Lech Kaczyński and Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko attended a ceremony at the site to pay tribute to the victims, and to encourage historical reconciliation between Poland and Ukraine. After celebrating a panychydy, the presidents also paid tribute to all Polish victims who died in Pawłokoma.

Controversy

While sources differ on specific issues like the number of the victims or details of the massacre, all agree that the Ukrainian villagers were murdered by Poles and that an Armia Krajowa unit either participated directly or assisted in the killings. The Pawłokoma Memorial places the number of victims at 365, the figure supported by IPN [2] and a number of Polish historians [12] It is, however, questioned by a Polish historian Zdzisław Konieczny, author of a book on the Pawłokoma massacre,[13] claiming that some 150 Ukrainian men suspected of UPA membership had been killed, while women and children were ordered to leave in the direction of Bircza and Sanok.[14]

Notes

  1. ^ "One of the key figures involved in the research is Peter J. Potichnyj. Born in a Ukrainian family in a village in what was then eastern Poland, Potichnyj experienced the horrors of the war firsthand. Soviet Secret Police executed his father. Poles massacred most of the people in his village. In 1945, at the age of 14, he joined the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, or UPA, and fought against the Soviets until 1947. He eventually became a historian at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and helped edit 77 volumes about the Ukrainian underground." [in:] In Ukraine, a movement to honor members of the WWII underground sets off debate. The Washington Post. January 8, 2010
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Zdzisław Konieczny, Był taki czas. U źródeł akcji odwetowej w Pawłokomie, Przemyśl 2005, ISBN 83-88172-26-3
  4. ^ (Misiło, Pawłokoma ..., p. 20)
  5. ^ Ak was disbanded 19 January 1945
  6. ^ a b Jan Maksymiuk: Ukraine, Poland Seek Reconciliation Over Grisly History in Radio Free Europe NEWS article, May 12, 2006
  7. ^ Misiło, Pawłokoma ..., p. 13
  8. ^ Misiło, Pawłokoma ..., pp.19,20
  9. ^ Józef Biss story
  10. ^ http://www.gazeta.lviv.ua/articles/2005/06/16/6201/
  11. ^ http://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/672/158/24426/
  12. ^ Sowa, Stosunki ..., p. 286
  13. ^ Konieczny, Był taki czas ...
  14. ^ Maksymiuk, Ukraine...

References

  • Jan Maksymiuk: Ukraine, Poland Seek Reconciliation Over Grisly History in Radio Free Europe NEWS article, May 12, 2006
  • Template:Pl icon Lucyna Kulińska: "Pawłokoma" in Dziennik Polski nr 103, Kraków 2006
  • Template:Pl icon Misiło, Eugeniusz (2006). Pawłokoma 3 III 1945 r. (in Polish). Warszawa: Ukar. ISBN 83-60309-02-7.
  • Template:Pl icon Sowa, Andrzej L. (1998). Stosunki polsko-ukraińskie 1939-1947. Kraków. OCLC 48053561.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Template:Pl icon Konieczny, Zdzisław (2000). Był taki czas. U źródeł akcji odwetowej w Pawłokomie. Przemyśl.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

See also