By
Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
In
North America, too little is known about the eastern front
in World War II, including the tragic fate of Poland, caught
between Nazi Germany and the Communist Soviet Union.
When
Poland was conquered and partitioned in September 1939, many
Polish military personnel escaped, and would join the Allied
forces in Great Britain.
In
the east, though, Polish troops that had surrendered to the
Soviets were placed in prisoner of war camps, while Russia
and Germany remained de facto allies under the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.
At
least 22,000 officers and soldiers from the Polish Army were
executed by the Soviets in April-May 1940 in the Katyn
forest, near Smolensk, by the Soviet NKVD.
With
the Nazi invasion of the USSR on June 22, 1941, the Soviets
suddenly found themselves on the same side as Britain and
Poland. This allowed the Polish government-in-exile to sign
the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement of July 30, as a result of
which a Polish army was to be formed in the territory of the
Soviet Union.
Joseph
Stalin, desperate to obtain help from the western allies,
agreed to declare all previous pacts with Nazi Germany to be
null and void, invalidating the September 1939 Soviet-German
partition of Poland.
Tens
of thousands of Polish citizens held in Soviet forced labor
camps were released under a so-called “amnesty.” Their
recruitment into a new Polish army under General Wladyslaw
Anders began.
Initially numbering some 40,000 men, the
Anders Army was loyal to the Polish government-in-exile in
London.
Anders
had commanded a cavalry brigade fighting German forces in
the Nazi invasion of Poland in September 1939, but when the
Russians invaded from the east he retreated south.
Intercepted by Soviet forces and captured, he would remain a
prisoner until Adolf Hitler’s attack on Russia.
After
much pressure on Moscow, Anders managed to get his troops
evacuated to Iran, where they were equipped by the British
and became the Polish II Corps. About 77,000 combatants and
41,000 civilians, all former Polish citizens, left the USSR.
For
the next three years the Anders Army would travel from
central Asia, through the Middle East, and North Africa, to
eventually confront the Germans in Italy in one of the most
crucial battles of the war. By March-April 1942, the force
had made its way through Iran to Palestine.
Leaving
Palestine at the end of 1943, the Corps took part in the
campaign in Italy. From January 17 to May 19, 1944 the
Anders Army played a crucial role in defeating the Germans
in the battle of Monte Cassino.
This
hard-fought victory -- Polish losses amounted to about 10
per cent of the Corps-- allowed the Allied forces to capture
Rome and later, the whole of southern Europe.
Another
decisive battle fought by the Anders Army was the Battle of
Ancona, in which Polish troops took over a strategic
Adriatic port. On June 17, 1944, Anders was given command of
the Adriatic sector of the Italian theatre, and one month
later Polish troops entered the city. The operation
contributed to the breaking of the Gothic Line and
subsequent surrender of the Axis forces in Italy.
There
is also a Jewish aspect to the story of this long-neglected
Polish force. The Anders Army included thousands of Polish
Jews. Zionist leaders in Palestine were in close
correspondence with Jewish Polish troops under Anders as
soon as they reached the British military camps of Iran and
Iraq in 1942.
When
they arrived in Palestine, Anders turned a blind eye to
desertions by many of the army’s Jewish soldiers, who left
the force to join Jewish military organizations fighting for
the independence of Israel. According to Anders, 3,000 out
of some 5,000 Jews deserted.
“The
Jews are fighting for their freedom and I do not intend to
stand in their way,” Anders told a group of Polish officers.
“I gave precise instructions not to pursue the deserters. I
considered that the Jews who saw their first duty in the
struggle for Palestine’s freedom, had every right to that
view.”
This
mass release of Jewish soldiers was dubbed the “Anders
Aliya” and played an important role in the founding of the
State of Israel in 1948. Many were destined to become highly
trained members of Israel’s nascent military force.
Among
the soldiers was Mieczyslaw Biegun -- Menachem Begin, later
head of the Irgun underground, founder of Israel’s Likud
Party, and eventually Israel’s sixth prime minister after
1977. He personally asked to be released from his oath
before he left.
In
line with the Polish government in-exile, the Anders Army
also helped civilians of Jewish descent, including soldier
families, groups of Jewish children and war orphans, to
escape Soviet repression and travel safely to Palestine
against a British ban.
Polish
authorities circumvented the interdict by loading Jews on
ships and navigating them around the Arabian Peninsula.
Jewish children, on the other hand, are said to have been
clad in Catholic school uniforms and transported to
Palestine through Iraqi deserts by trucks.
By
the time the Polish army left Palestine at the end of 1943,
the one third of Jewish soldiers who remained with Anders --
850 soldiers and 126 Jewish officers, many of whom would be
decorated in battle -- went with him to Italy.
These soldiers stayed in Italy until the
end of the war, when the entire Anders Army, consisting of
55,780 men and approximately 1,500 women in auxiliary
services, was shipped to Britain for a new life as refugees.
No comments:
Post a Comment