Kazimierz Moczarski


Kazimierz Damazy Moczarski was a Polish writer and journalist, officer of the Polish Home Army. Kazimierz Moczarski is primarily known for his book Conversations with an Executioner, a series of interviews with a fellow inmate of the notorious UB secret police prison under Stalinism, the Nazi war criminal Jürgen Stroop, who was soon to be executed. Thrown in jail in 1945 and pardoned eleven years later during Polish October, Moczarski spent four years on death row, and was tried three times as an enemy of the state while in prison.

Biography

Born on July 21, 1907 in Warsaw, Moczarski was the son of Jan Damazy, teacher and school principal, and Michalina Franciszka née Wodzinowska, also a teacher. Kazimierz began studying law at Warsaw University in October 1926. During his studies, he was drafted to Reserve Infantry Battalion No.9 and served at Bereza Kartuska in 1929–1930 for 10 months. Following his graduation in December 1932, he continued his studies in France at the Institute of Higher International Studies of Paris University. In 1935, he returned to Warsaw and became an advisor to the Ministry of Labor and Social Services, specializing in Polish and international law. He was also a member of the “Youth Legion,” and a member of the progressive organization “Labor Club Maurycy Mochnacki.” In 1937, he took part in the setting-up of the Democratic Club of Warsaw. Their first meeting took place at his own Warsaw apartment.

World War II

During the 1939 Polish-German September campaign, Moczarski commanded a platoon subordinate to the 30th Infantry Division. He saw combat during the Siege of Warsaw. After the Fall of Poland, Moczarski remained an active member of the clandestine Democratic Alliance. He also joined the Polish Resistance and became an officer in the Polish Home Army under the nom de guerre of "Rafał". Until the fall of 1943, he was assigned to the "Bureau of Intelligence and Propaganda" for the AK's Warsaw District.
In May 1944, under the new pseudonym "Maurycy", Moczarski took the post of the Head of Department of Personnel Sabotage. His assignment, at which he excelled, was to assassinate members of the Gestapo, collaborationists, and Gestapo informers in the AK's ranks. It was his idea to rescue on June 11, 1944 Polish prisoners incarcerated by the Gestapo at Warsaw's :pl:Szpital Świętego Jana Bożego w Warszawie|Jan Boży Hospital.
from 15 July 1943 informing about the death of general Władysław Sikorski and pronouncing a national day of mourning
Shortly before the Warsaw Uprising by the underground resistance, Moczarski was given a new post as the head of the radio and telegraph services of Home Army’s headquarters. During the uprising, Moczarski was directing one of the insurgent's radio stations, "Rafał" located in Warsaw’s district Śródmieście-Północ. In September 1944, he moved to another station, "Danuta" located at 16 Widok street. At the same time, he was editor-in-chief of
Wiadomości Powstańcze, which was a daily regional addition to the Home Army’s Biuletyn Informacyjny''. On September 14, 1944, he was promoted to the post of reserve Lieutenant.
After the collapse of the Warsaw Uprising on October 7, 1944, he left the city with a group of coworkers from BiP along with the evacuees of the Red Cross, and stopped in Pruszków, but returned shortly afterwards, to help with the escape of Jan Stanisław Jankowski, the delegate of Polish Government in exile. He was appointed head of the Home Army’s Information and Propaganda office BiP on October 26, 1944. Destroyed during the uprising, the office was reinstated in Częstochowa. Moczarski continued his underground activities there, changing his nickname to "Grawer".

Postwar

The Polish Home Army was disbanded by High Command on January 19, 1945 as peace in Poland took hold. Moczarski was promoted to captain of the reserve team. Meanwhile, in place of the AK a new organization was formed by General Anders against the communist takeover, called the Armed Forces Delegation for Poland. Moczarski remained the head of BiP, using a new pseudonym "Borsuk". Together with Włodzimierz Lechowicz and Zygmunt Kapitaniak, he co-authored a memorandum to his headquarters which stipulated that a new order must be made out to all underground soldiers in the field about laying down arms in the name of reconstruction. Their proposal was accepted and on July 24, 1945 an order was issued by the Head of DSZ, Colonel Jan Rzepecki, entitled "To former soldiers of Home Army" which stated:

Imprisonment

On August 11, 1945, five days after the Delegation for Poland officially dissolved, Moczarski was arrested by Ministry of State Security headed by Gen. Romkowski and put on political trial. On January 18, 1946 Moczarski was sentenced to 10 years in prison by a military court in Warsaw. Even though his penitentiary sentence was shortened to five years in February 1947, he was not released from the notorious Mokotów Prison upon his sentence’s fulfillment four years later. The darkest years of Stalinism in Poland were yet to come. Interrogated by Romkowski's subordinates from January 9, 1949 till June 6, 1951, Moczarski endured 49 different types of torture later described in his memoir. Beatings included truncheon blows to bridge of nose, salivary glands, chin, shoulder blades, bare feet and toes, heels, cigarette burns on lips and eyelids and burning of fingers. Sleep deprivation, resulting in – meant standing upright in a narrow cell for seven to nine days with frequent blows to the face – a hallucinatory method called by the interrogators "Zakopane". General Romkowski had already told him on November 30, 1948, that he had personally requested this "sheer hell".
Beginning March 2, 1949, as means of psychological torture, Moczarski was locked up for nine months with two German SS-men: SS-Untersturmführer of BdS Krakau Gustav Schielke and SS-Gruppenführer Jürgen Stroop. Stroop was responsible for the annihilation of the Warsaw Ghetto after the 1943 uprising. His crimes resulted in the death of over 50,000 people. A committed Nazi, arrogant and unremitting until the very end, he was put on trial on July 18, 1951 for the war crimes committed in Poland and executed on 6 March 1952.
Also in 1952, a brand new Stalinist trial of Kazimierz Moczarski opened on counterrevolutionary charges falsified on site by MBP. On November 18, 1952 – by the decision of Warsaw’s District Court – he was sentenced to death as an enemy of the state. The following October, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, but he was not informed about it. He thought to have remained on death row until January 1955, awaiting execution at a moment's notice until someone finally informed him of the verdict.

Rehabilitation suit

During the massive anti-Stalinist upheaval known as the Polish October thaw, Kazimierz Moczarski was retried for the last time, pronounced innocent and released from prison on June 24, 1956. He was cleared of all trumped-up charges against him and fully rehabilitated in December 1956, at the end of Stalinist terror in Poland.
After his release, Moczarski rejoined the Democratic Party of Poland. He worked as a journalist at the Kurier Polski newspaper, being responsible for contacts with readers. He was also active in the anti-alcohol movement, and for some time he was editor-in-chief of a Problemy Alkoholizmu magazine.

''Conversations with an Executioner''

Immediately after his release Moczarski began writing down notes about Stroop. In 1971 he turned them to a full-length book, verifying what facts he could in publications, court transcripts and archive materials. In April 1972, the first installment of his Rozmowy z katem was published by the Odra monthly. The story continued to run in parts until February 1974, ending with an interview with Moczarski about its origin. Rozmowy z katem was published in book form in 1977 by the Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy with various details censored by the regime. Moczarski did not witness the publication of his book. He died on September 27, 1975, in Warsaw.
The unabridged edition, with a foreword by Andrzej Szczypiorski and followed by Moczarski's biography and a glossary of German names and terms by Andrzej Krzysztof Kunert, was published after the collapse of Commmunism by the Polish Scientific Publishers PWN in 1992.
The book was published in English, "edited by Mariana Fitzpatrick", in 1981 by Prentice-Hall. Prominent translations include German, published by Droste in 1978; French by Gallimard, in 1979; Hebrew by Loḥame ha-Geṭaʼot, in 1979–80; Czech by Mladá fronta in 1985 ; and Ukrainian, by Černìvcì in 2009, among several others. Moczarski's biography written by Kunert was published in 2006 with foreword by Władysław Bartoszewski.

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