June 14th: 80th Anniversary of the First Transport of Poles to German Nazi KL Auschwitz
“A train to hell”
On June 14th, 1940, the first transport of 728 Polish prisoners departed from Tarnów (Poland) to Konzentrazionslager (KL) Auschwitz. This date is considered the beginning of operation of KL Auschwitz. The Germans deported primarily young men there: boy scouts, pupils, students, underground freedom fighters, military men who fought defending Poland in 1939.
We must not forget!
KL Auschwitz was created for the purpose of exterminating Poles.
On the 80th Anniversary of the First Transport, let us all honor the Victims of Auschwitz.
June 14th is the National Day of Remembrance of Victims of the German Death and Concentration Camps.
On June 14th, let us fly the Polish Flag.
More details, including the full list of names of those Poles who were in this First Transport to KL Auschwitz
The “June 14th Project” (Projekt 14 Czerwca)
Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of the Katyn Massacre, as submitted originally to New Jersey Senators Bob Menendez and Cory Booker
RESOLUTION
Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of the Katyn Massacre
Whereas, following the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of August 23, 1939 with the secret protocol to divide Poland between themselves,[1] Nazi Germany and the Soviet Russia invaded Poland;
Whereas, upon defeating Poland, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Russia partitioned Poland and signed Treaty on Friendship and the Border with a secret supplemental protocol to inform each other and closely collaborate in ‘liquidating” any Polish resistance “in embryo[2]”;
Whereas, the Soviet Russia and the Third Reich cooperated closely in the aftermath of the invasion of Poland. At a conference in Brest-Litovsk on November 27, 1939, representatives of NKVD and SS discussed the methods of cooperation in liquidating Polish people and destroying Poland. The NKVD and SS continued this cooperation at subsequent conferences held in Lwów, Zakopane and Kraków. In March 1940 both aggressors implemented parallel genocidal operations against the Poles: Katyn Operation on the Soviet side of the partition line and Special Pacification Operation known as Action AB on the German side;
Whereas, on March 5, 1940 the Soviet Politburo issued an order that directed the NKVD to carry out a mass killing of 14,736 officers “more than 97% Polish by nationality” who were held as prisoners of war, and 11,000 Polish civilians arrested on the territory conquered by the Soviet Union;
Whereas, in April and May 1940 the Soviet Russia carried out systematic mass murders of Polish officers held as POWs and patriotic elements of the Polish society in numerous locations throughout the Soviet Union. Only one such location was discovered soon after the crime and became known to the world as the Katyn Massacre. Those murdered in other locations were identified only after the demise of the Soviet Union, some have not been identified to this day;
Whereas, in April 1940 the NKVD deported families of the murdered Poles to Kazakhstan pursuant to March 2, 1940 Resolution of the Soviet Political Bureau of the VKP(b). This was just one of four mass deportations of Polish people from the conquered Polish territory into the depths of the Soviet Union conducted between February 1940 and June 1941, impacting about one million people according to the Polish sources[3]. Mass deportations of the Polish people constituted an integral part of the Soviet 1939-1941 genocidal actions undertaken against ethnic Poles, hereinafter called “Katyn Operation”;
Whereas, the Katyn Operation was one of several mass extermination operations conducted against ethnic Poles by the Soviet Russia during the Stalinist era. In the 1937 Polish Operation, the Soviets sentenced 139,835 Soviet citizens of Polish descent, summarily executed 111,091 Poles, and resettled thousands of them pursuant to NKVD Order No. 00485 of August 9, 1937. It was the largest ethnic murder and deportation operation during the Great Purge, and the largest extermination of ethnic Poles in history outside of an armed conflict;
Whereas, the Soviet Union continued the genocidal policy towards ethnic Poles after World War II. In July of 1945, Soviet forces conducted the Augustów Operation in north-east Poland, rounding up 2,000 people. About 600 of them disappeared without a trace. They are presumed to have been murdered and buried in an unknown location in present-day Russia or Belarus. Their remains have not been located to this day;
Whereas, the manifest pattern of similar conduct aimed at destroying the Polish national group, as such, is evident in the Polish Operation of 1937, Katyn Operation of 1940, and Augustów Operation of 1945;
Whereas, in December 1949 Raphael Lemkin, who formulated the crime of genocide, invoked the Katyn crime as an example of the crime of genocide.[4] In 1950, Judge Gunther testifying at a hearing before the Senate Subcommittee on the International Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide submitted a statement from the President of the Polish American Congress that described the Katyn forest massacre as “one of the most heinous genocides of modern times.” Hon. Gunther also reported that “millions of Poles throughout the world are still mourning the losses of those who were victims of Nazi (Germany) genocide in Auschwitz and of Soviet genocide in Katyn”[5];
Whereas, in the 1951 Written Statement on the Reservations to Convention on Prevention and Punishment of Crime of Genocide, the United States declared that “the Roman persecution of the Christians, the Turkish massacres of Armenians, the extermination of millions of Jews and Poles by the Nazis are outstanding examples of the crime of genocide”[6];
Whereas, on September 18, 1951, the United States Congress established the Select Committee to Conduct an Investigation and Study of the Facts, Evidence, and Circumstances of the Katyn Forest Massacre. In its July 2, 1952 Report, the Committee recognized the Katyn massacre as one of the most barbarous international crimes in world history and recommended that the Soviets be tried before the World Court of Justice for the crime of “Katynism” that is a definite and diabolical totalitarian plan for world conquest;
Whereas, in 1993 the Committee of Experts of the Main Military Prosecutor’s Offices of the Russian Federation concluded that the Katyn crime was an act of genocide under international law.[7] The August 2, 1993 statement signed by all members of the Committee read: “The murder . . . of Poles has all the characteristics of genocide, the responsibility for which lies with Stalin, Beria, Molotov, Voroshilov, Mikoyan, Kalinin, Kaganovich, Merkulov, Kobulov, Bashtakov and other individuals who committed the murder in practice”;
Whereas, the government of the Russian Federation refused to declassify and disclose all of its official records pertaining to the Katyn crime and release complete lists of the victims and perpetrators. Instead, the policy of minimizing, distorting and justifying the Katyn crime was implemented;
Whereas, in 2011 Hon. Dennis Kucinich, member of US House of Representatives, stated that Katyn was aimed at eliminating “the very idea of Poland … to exterminate the people and the memory of the people…” Hon. Kucinich reminded us that “Katyn presents a moral crisis to this day” because the moral calculus with respect to Katyn has not been worked out. “We look back at Katyn as a marker in human history that has not yet been fully inscribed”, he said[8];
Whereas the Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act of 2018 (Public Law 115–441) establishes that atrocities prevention represents a United States national interest, and affirms that it is the policy of the United States to pursue a United States Government-wide strategy to identify, prevent, and respond to the risk of atrocities by “strengthening diplomatic response and the effective use of foreign assistance to support appropriate transitional justice measures, including criminal accountability, for past atrocities”;
Whereas, to this day Katyn remains the crime without punishment. Impunity encourages the killers and poses risk of new massacres occurring once the killers realize that the outside world does not care;
Whereas, Poland and her people were the faithful allies of the United States during World War II;
Whereas, thousands of families of the Katyn victims have since made their homes in this country. Approximately 10 million of US citizens are of Polish ancestry, millions of our citizens have close ties with the families of the victims, and Katyn monuments accentuate the landscape of several American cities.
Now, therefore, be it
Resoved that:
(1) honors the lives and legacies of the approximately 22,000 Polish prisoners-of-war and civilians brutally murdered by the Soviet NKVD, and thousands of their family members and other Polish civilians deported in the most inhumane conditions to the depths of the Soviet Union in the Katyn Operation 80 years ago;
(2) recognizes that Katynism poses enormous danger to the world community because it represents a template for annihilation of a people and annihilation of the historical truth. If ignored, Katynism poses danger that such grave atrocity may occur again;
(3) recognizes that the systematic mass murders of the Polish people, conducted pursuant to the order of March 5, 1940 issued by the Soviet Politburo and implemented in conjunction with 1940-1941 mass deportations of the Polish people from lands conquered by the Soviet Union, raise to the level of the crime of genocide that requires appropriate transitional justice measures under the Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act of 2018;
(4) urges the Government of the Russian Federation to fully declassify and disclose all official records pertaining to the Katyn genocide and stop denying, distorting and justifying this grave international crime;
(5) recognizes that it is in the national interest of the United States to assure proper international recognition of the Katyn genocide, to support disclosure of the full truth and the establishment of a comprehensive historical record of this grave atrocity;
(6) calls on the Government of the United Sates to analyze political and moral ramifications of the denial of justice to the Katyn victims, including the impact of impunity for the Katyn genocide on the modern-day international peace and security, and implement appropriate measures in order to protect the truth, seek justice, and prevent the crime of Katynism from reoccurring;
(7) encourages education and public understanding of the facts and circumstances of the Katyn genocide, including the Katyn crime, Katyn lie, cover up, and conspiracy of silence;
(8) calls for protection of memorials and monuments honoring the memory of the Katyn victims.
[1] Secret Additional Protocol to Treaty of Nonaggression Between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics of August 23, 1939. https://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/addsepro.asp
[2] German-Soviet Treaty on Friendship and the Border dated September 28, 1939 with Secret Supplemental Protocol, https://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/sesupp1.asp; See also: “Katyn, A Crime without Punishment,” Anna Cienciala ed., Yale University Press, 2007, p. 59-62.
[3] Piotr Szubarczyk, Czerwona Apokalipsa, AA s.c., 2014, s. 229-230.
[4] Anton Weiss-Wendt, (2019) “When the End Justifies the Means: Raphaël Lemkin and the Shaping of a Popular Discourse on Genocide,” Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: Vol. 13: Iss. 1: 173-188. Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol13/iss1/15.
[5] United States Senate, The Genocide Convention: Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations, 81st Congress, 2nd Session, January 23, 24, 25, and February 9, 1950 (Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1950), 136, 540.
[6] Reservations to Convention on Prevention and Punishment of Crime of Genocide, Advisory Opinion, Written Statement of the United States of America, 1951 I.C.J. 25 (May 28).
[7] The Committee of Experts included lawyers, Boris Topornin (member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, director of its Institute of Law and the State) and Aleksandr Yakovlev (head of the Department of Criminal Law and Criminology at the Institute), as well as representatives of other disciplines, Inessa Yazhborovska (historian), Valentina Parsadanova (historian), Yuriy Zoria (military sciences) and Lev Belayev (medical sciences). The text of this decision is available in Anna Dzienkiewicz ed. “Rosja a Katyn,” Karta, (2010), pp, 48–108. See also: Karol Karski, “The Crime of Genocide Committed Against the Poles by the USSR Before and During World War II: An International Legal Study,” Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law,·Vol. 45·2013, p. 719; https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1078&context=jil
[8] Dennis J. Kucinich, Speech Presented at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, February 4, 2011. See: M. B. Szonert ed., “Katyn: State-Sponsored Extermination, Collection of Essays,” Libra Institute, Inc. 2012.
CPA Urges Senators to amend the language in S. Res. 566 on the Katyn Massacre
CPA welcomes the resolution commemorating the victims of the Katyn Massacre, but we urge the Senators to amend inappropriate wording in the proposed Resolution, which introduces historically false and offensive statement that minimizes the gravity and changes the character of the Katyn crime…
Remembering Jersey City Councilman Michael Yun
On April 6th, 2020, Jersey City Councilman Michael Yun lost his battle with coronavirus. The news saddened us greatly.
We remember how he stood with Polish Americans, together with Councilman Rich Boggiano, demanding that the Katyń Memorial remains forever on Exchange Place in Jersey City; how passionately he argued for the cause, understanding that educating future generations, warning them not to repeat atrocities of war, is the reason why monuments are erected, and that this function is more important than temporary profits. He showed us how to find new friends and forge alliances. We remember that we could always count on his wise advice, help and support for a noble cause. RIP, Councilman Yun.
Endorsement for Mr. Andrzej Duda in presidential election in Poland
The Board of the Coalition of Polish Americans at its meeting on April 2, 2020 decided to support Dr. Andrzej Duda, the current President of the Republic of Poland, in the upcoming presidential election. It is our conviction that the election should take place before expiration of President Duda’s current term. We support voting by mail as a safe solution under the current circumstances. We expect that the global crisis caused by the virus epidemic will not exclude Polonia from participation in the elections in Poland.
Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of the Katyn Massacre at The Woodrow Wilson Center
A panel discussion was held at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars on February 25th, 2020. Professor Andrzej Nowak of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland, and Aleksander Gurianov of Memorial in Moscow, Russia, were the main speakers. Recent renewed attempts at rewriting the history prove how important it still is to remind everyone the well-established historic facts, about which contemporary historians agree.
Watch: short documentary about the Katyn Massacre
Visit the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars or other interesting material.
Statement
At meeting today, the Board of Coalition of Polish Americans expressed deep concern over new attempts to attribute the perpetration of the Katyn massacre to Germany. We condemn the content provided on this topic by the Russian agency RIA in the article of March 5, 2020. The Katyn massacre was committed on the explicit order of Joseph Stalin’s of March 5, 1940. We appeal to the Polish authorities to take a position on this matter.
Statement
January 11, 2020
Considering the symbolism of the Polish Sejm resolution which defend the historical truth regarding the invasion of Poland by Soviet Russia in September 1939, in cooperation with Hitler’s Germany, we strongly oppose the act of political vandalism by a senior MP, Janusz Korwin-Mikke. We believe that those who deny the aggression of Poland by Soviet Russia in 1939, act against the Polish right of state, and therefore do not belong in public space. MP Korwin-Mikke should be expelled from The Confederation. We call upon the Confederation to support positive changes introduced in Poland since 2015.
Statement on recent Russian attempts to rewrite history of the 2nd World War
Coalition of Polish Americans is very troubled by the array of recent statements by high Russian officials that aim to rewrite history, put blame for the outbreak of the 2nd World War on Poland and hide the fact that Soviet Union was an ally of Nazi Germany when both countries ignominiously attacked Poland in September of 1939.
Subsequently, these two totalitarian states attacked much of continental Europe. Soviet Union’s aggression did not end with helping Germany conquer Poland in September 1939, but later it also attacked Finland, Romania and the Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. The close economic and political cooperation between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union is well documented. For example, England seriously considered bombing the Baku oil fields in spring of 1940 because Soviet oil from these fields was seen by the Allies as crucial for the German war effort against France and England.
The accusations of anti-Semitism against Poland is also a long-standing Soviet tradition. In 1946 the pogrom of Jews conveniently happened in Kielce, and was used to blame the local Poles, despite that Soviet Army units were stationing there and did nothing to help. There are virtually no known examples of Jewish pogroms on Polish soil when Poland was under self-rule. To the contrary, the two ethnic groups peacefully coexisted for centuries and Jews found save heaven in Poland when other European countries persecuted them.
In fact, this is also directly in contrast with the fate of Jews in Poland under Russian rule in 18th-20th centuries when pogroms happened frequently, often abated by the local Russian authorities. For centuries Poland was the best place in Europe for the Jews to live. We strongly protest the Russian attempts to blemish the Polish nation with accusations of anti-Semitism.
If Russia is sincerely planning to be regarded as a trustworthy member of the family of nations and cooperate peacefully with the world, it cannot reverse back to the Stalinist era propaganda. We demand a retraction of the defamatory statements about Poland made recently by high Russian officials, including President Putin.
Respectfully,
Coalition of Polish Americans
December 28, 2019
Congratulations to Minister Jan Dziedziczak
December 21, 2019
Mr. Minister Jan Dziedziczak,
On behalf of myself and of the CPA Board, I congratulate you cordially on your appointment, by the Prime Minister of Poland, Mr. Mateusz Morawiecki, to the position of Government Plenipotentiary for Polonia and Poles Abroad.
We wish you every success in your new job. We remember with gratitude our numerous meetings and exchange of ideas, information and opinions in the recent past, and we look forward to similar and fruitful cooperation in the future.
We would also like to equally cordially wish you a peaceful, healthy and merry Christmas, and all the best for the coming New Year.
— Stanisław Śliwowski
President of the CPA