Raid on Mittenheide
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In mid-August 1943 a Polish unit of the Uderzeniowe Bataliony Kadrowe (English: Striking Cadre Battalions, UBK), which was controlled by the right-wing organization Konfederacja Narodu, organized armed attack on East Prussian villages in the area of Johannisburg (now: Pisz). The attack was made as revenge for German genocide and atrocities committed against Polish population. The targets of the attack included devoted Nazis, members of NSDAP and inhabitants engaging in brutality against Polish population. According to Polish sources, some 70 Germans were killed and 40 German farms were razed to the ground, while an eyewitness reports 13 killed people, including a woman and two children, and two people wounded. The attack, commanded by Colonel Stanislaw Karolkiewicz, was a revenge for German atrocities, committed in Bezirk Bialystok. The revenge attack caused shock among Prussian Germans and caused them to rethink their genocidal tactics against Polish population[1]
Background
Under Soviet Occupation
Following Nazi and Soviet aggression on Poland in September 1939, the Second Polish Republic was divided by the two allied powers under the terms of the Ribbentrop-Molotov pact. The area of Białystok became part of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, and was annexed by the Soviet Union. Thousands ethnic Poles, and also Belarusians and Jews, were forcibly deported to Siberia. Among the deported Poles were civil servants, judges, police officers, professional army officers, factory owners, landlords, political activists, leaders of cultural, educational and religious organisations, and others activists in the community. All of them were dubbed enemies of the people.[2]
Polish resistance against the Soviets in the area of Białystok (especially along the swampy Biebrza river) began immediately after the September Campaign and in mid-1940 there were conspirational organizations in 161 towns and villages in the future area of Bezirk Bialystok.[3] Skirmishes with the NKVD were common, mostly around Jedwabne, where the anti-Soviet feelings were the strongest.
Under Nazi Occupation
On June 22, 1941, Nazi Germany invaded Soviet Union. The area of Białystok was attached to East Prussia and Soviet terror was replaced with Nazi terror. Both Nazis and Communists referred to the Polish insurgents and their relatives as bandits and bandit families, and treated them with similar barbarity.[4] As the years went by, German terror in Bezirk Białystok worsened and most atrocities on civilian population were committed by German units and police from neighboring East Prussia.[5]
On July 17, 1943, the Germans killed all 257 inhabitants of the village of Krasowo-Czestki, near Wysokie Mazowieckie, (including 83 under seventeen years of age), ransacked their belongings and burned the village.[5] In the following days several other massacres were committed: in the village of Sikory-Tomkowieta, German SS Kommando Mueller killed 49 people, in Zawada and Laskowce, 58 persons were killed, in Grzedy - 36, in Wnory-Wandy - 32. Altogether, in July 1943 alone, the Germans killed around 800 civilians in the western part of Bezirk Bialystok.[6] Polish resistance fighters decided to take revenge on the Germans.
The attack
In July 1943 Colonel Stanisław Karolkiewicz (nom de guerre Szczęsny) organized a unit of the Striking Cadre Battalions, which was part of the right-wing Konfederacja Narodu. Its members chose their noms de guerre from characters of Pan Tadeusz, an epic poem by Adam Mickiewicz. Since the Striking Cadre Battalions headquarters permitted retaliatory attacks, the Poles decided to make a raid on East Prussia, in the area of Johannisburg. The choice was not accidental - many German soldiers and administration workers in Bezirk Bialystok came from that part of the Third Reich.[5] There lived their families and there, the Germans felt safe.
Colonel Stanislaw Karolkiewicz and his unit of 28 well-armed men, avoiding German troops, started off from the Wysokie Mazowieckie County. They crossed the Narew and the Biebrza, reaching the northern part of the Lomza County. Karolkiewicz and his men were closely cooperating with local structures of the National Armed Forces, which was a dominant underground organization in this part of occupied Poland and whose members provided Karolkiewicz with vital information about the Prussian side of the border.
Karolkiewicz decided that the Poles would attack the village of Mittenheide and the forestership of Krummenheide.[7] Mittenheide (until 1938 Turoscheln, today Turośl), located 3 km north of the pre-war border. According to Kazimierz Krajewski, in 1943 the village was an armed settlement (each house was armed and the men were organised in paramilitary formation of Landwache) of 1000 people and an unknown number of escapees from western German cities, who had fled from Allied bombing.[8] According to official German statistics the village had 519 permanent inhabitants in 1939.[9] A police station was also located in the village. Among the residents of Mittenheide, there was SA Standartenführer Herman Upitz (or Herbert Opitz[10]), a special envoy of Heinrich Himmler delegated to fight against Polish existence in the area, known for his hostile attitude towards Polish and Russian slave workers.[11] Other targets included houses of devoted Nazis, members of the Nazi party and inhabitants that engaged in brutality against Polish population[1]
The objectives of the attack were:
- to destroy the police station,
- to destroy households of Nazi party members and those Germans who participated in massacres of Poles,
- to kill Herman Upitz.
Karolkiewicz and his men, supported by a patrol of the National Armed Forces under Antoni Zdunczyk “Olowek” (seven soldiers) crossed the border on August 14, 1943, at 22:00 hours. The date of the attack - August 15, was chosen deliberately, as this is the official day of the Polish Army, to commemorate the Miracle at the Vistula.
After reaching Mittenheide, the Poles split into five groups and cut off telephone lines. The attack began before midnight on the solitary Forester's house of Herbert Opitz. Opitz, the Forester of Mittenheide, his wife, 6-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son were killed[10]. The Partisans captured several weapons inside the Forester's Office, a car and a motorcycle.[10] Then they entered the village to attack the Police station, facing tough resistance from the Germans. Within around two hours, some 40 German households were destroyed, 69 civilians and 3 policemen, as well as Upitz, were killed.[7]
In contradiction to these numbers, an eyewitness, Irma Bartlick, reports that apart from the Opitz family, 7 additional persons were immediately killed and 4 wounded, of which 2 died later on. In total 13 people lost their lives.[10] Some of the victims were killed by the OST-Arbeiters, who used the raid to take their revenge.[5] The Poles deliberately spared the house of Hildegard von Krauss, a widow, whose husband, an officer of the Wehrmacht, died on the Eastern Front. She was known for her humane attitude towards the Poles and Karolkiewicz himself talked to her that night, explaining the reasons for the attack.[5] The raid ended at 2 a.m., after Karolkiewicz fired a green flare. The Poles escaped to the nearby Pisz Wilderness, together with their booty - a submachine gun, 30 carbines, 14 pistols, a large quantity of ammunition as well as uniforms and boots. Parts of the equipment was later handed to the local units of the Home Army and the National Armed Forces. Also, together with Karolkiewicz’s men, five OST-Arbeiters fled - four Poles and one Lithuanian. Polish losses were minimal.[5]
The aftermath
This raid was a shock to the local community. Its echoes reached Berlin and Heinrich Himmler himself was vividly interested in the investigation, which was carried out by the police authorities from Allenstein. However, nobody was caught and the unit, after hiding for three days in the forest, left East Prussia, heading towards Nowogrodek. On May 3, 2006 Stanislaw Karolkiewicz was promoted to Brigade General, by President Lech Kaczyński.[12]
References
- 1 2 Polacy atakują Prusy - Akcja "Szczęsnego" SZOK W REICHU, Rzeczpospolita 12.06.04 Nr 136
- ↑ Michael Hope: Polish deportees in the Soviet Union
- ↑ Doctor Marek Wierzbicki of Institute of National Remembrance. Review of a book anti-Soviet conspiracy along the Biebrza, X 1939 - VI 1941 by Tomasz Strzembosz
- ↑ Marek Jan Chodakiewicz Communist and Nazi Occupation Policies in Jedwabne, 1939-49
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kazimierz Krajewski, Shock in the Reich, Rzeczpospolita Daily
- ↑ Interview with Stanislaw Karolkiewicz
- 1 2 Bernhard Chiari, Die polnische Heimatarmee, page 349
- ↑ http://www.rzeczpospolita.pl/specjal_040612/specjal_a_8.html
- ↑ verwaltungsgeschichte.de (German)
- 1 2 3 4 Irma Bartlick, Pochodze ze wsi Turosl ( I’m from Turosl), in "Znad Pisy", No. 7(1998), p. 79 – 83
- ↑ Życie i myśl: Wydania 9-12, Instytut Zachodni, page 162, 1971
- ↑ Ministry of Defence, news brief, May 3, 2006
See also
Coordinates: 53°31′00″N 21°35′54″E / 53.516539°N 21.598215°E