Anatol Fejgin

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Anatol Fejgin
Ministry of Public Security (UB)

Anatol Fejgin (25 September 1909 – 28 July 2002) was a Polish

Ministry of Public Security of Poland,[1] in charge of its notorious Special Bureau (the 10th Department).[2] During the Polish October revolution of 1956, his name – along with a number of others including his colleague Col. Józef Różański, and Minister Jakub Berman – came to symbolize communist terror in postwar Poland.[3]

Fejgin was born into a middle-class

Ludowe Wojsko Polskie
.

The interrogator

In October 1949, Fejgin was moved to the

Ministry of Public Security of Poland (MBP and UB), where he was appointed director of the Special Bureau (renamed in 1951 as the 10th Department), which was formed for protecting the Party from provocateurs (in reality, the murderous persecution of political opponents and army officers from Polish Underground State).[4] Suspended after the 1953 defection of deputy director Józef Światło (Izaak Fleischfarb) who incriminated him and other Stalinists, Fejgin was fired from UB during the Polish political thaw and arrested on 23 April 1956, along with his own boss, vice-minister Roman Romkowski.[2][5]) He was brought to trial at the end of the Stalinist period, and on 11 November 1957 sentenced to 12 years in prison for violations of human rights law and abuse of power. Charged along with co-defendants, Romkowski and Józef Różański, Fejgin was found guilty of torturing 28 named victims during interrogations, including innocent women and Polish United Workers' Party members. His sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court in 1958. Fejgin was kept in Racibórz. He was pardoned and released from prison on 1 October 1964, having served 8 years.[2]

In 1985 Fejgin became a member of the state-controlled veterans association, the

Supreme Administrative Court of the Republic of Poland, but his claim was rejected. The court emphasized that Fejgin's post-World-War-Two activities were harmful to the Polish nation and the Polish legal system, and as such ought to be condemned. At the time of his death in 2002, Fejgin was still the subject of investigation by the Institute of National Remembrance for the crimes he committed as an interrogator.[1]

References