Syndicalist Organization "Freedom"
Syndicalist Organization "Freedom" | |
Syndykalistyczna Organizacja „Wolność” | |
Predecessor | Union of Trade Unions |
---|---|
Founded | 1940 |
Dissolved | December 1945 |
Location | |
Members | Several hundred |
Publication | Polska dla Ludu |
Affiliations | Polish resistance movement |
The Syndicalist Organization "Freedom" (Polish: Syndykalistyczna Organizacja „Wolność”, SOW) was a Polish resistance organization founded in 1940 in Warsaw. The organization was established on the basis of the anarcho-syndicalist wing of the pre-war Union of Trade Unions (ZZZ) and part of the Union of Polish Democratic Youth (ZPMD).[1] In 1941, the SOW made contact with the Polish Union for the Fight for Freedom of Nations (PZWWN).[2]
History
The chairman of the Central Committee of SOW was Wiesław Protschke. The management of the organization was: Zofia Hajkowicz-Brodzikowska, Wiesław Protschke and Jerzy Leszczyński. The first external manifestation of their activity was the publication of the periodical Polska dla Ludu in the spring of 1940. SOW members fought in the PZWWN partisan unit in the Kielce region, which was merged with the Home Army in 1943–1944.[2]
SOW was an organization with probably several hundred sworn members in
Combat activity took on the greatest dimensions in Kielce, where the partisan unit of the SOW commanded by Stanisław Janyst carried out attacks on trains and gendarmerie posts. In May 1943, the
Warsaw Uprising
Members of the SOW and the
At the end of August, a
On October 5, 1944, the uprising capitulated, so the soldiers of Jewish origin were hidden in a well-masked bunker, and the rest went into captivity. On January 18, 1945, they revealed themselves to the Red Army that captured the Pruszków camp where they were held. In December 1945, the civil leadership of the ZSP called on its members to reveal themselves to the communist authorities, which most of them did, although some overpaid it with imprisonment.[1]
Ideology
SOW criticized the Union of Polish Syndicalists (ZSP) and argued for the creation of the Social Republic, a grassroots federation of workers and local self-governments, which were to replace the existing functions of the state and completely liquidate political power. However, as Rafał Chwedoruk wrote: “The programs were only a bit more radical than the ZSP”.[4] The SOW ideology combined the slogans of national and social liberation.[5] Point 10 of the declaration stated: "We put the struggle for national independence as an indispensable condition for a just and free life of peoples as well as striving for social liberation ... Without the social liberation of the working classes, there is no true freedom of the people, there is no freedom of the people in national bondage." Politically, point 8 announced: ["working masses fighting for a libertarian system"] "the state as an organization emerging from a class system of social relations, corresponding to the interests of the owning classes and expressing the centralist violence of a privileged minority over the majority, the liberation aspirations of the working classes, implementing the idea of cooperation and mutual assistance - the Republic of Poland - the Union of Free Associations”.[6]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Górski, Rafał (7 October 2008). "Z dziejów anarchosyndykalizmu w Polsce" (in Polish). Workers' Initiative. Archived from the original on 12 September 2019. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
- ^ a b Maciągowski, Marek (10 February 2011). "Henryk Janyst uśmiecha się na słowo bohater" (in Polish). Echo Dnia Świętokrzyskie. Archived from the original on 12 September 2019. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
- ^ "Podziemna działalność polskich anarchosyndykalistów podczas okupacji hitlerowskiej" (in Polish). Centrum Informacji Anarchistycznej. 25 August 2012. Archived from the original on 12 September 2019. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
- OCLC 793339882.
- OCLC 927375424.
- ^ "Deklaracja SOW-y".[dead link]