Historical calendar: the anniversary of the start of protests against the Gomulk Chamokomun. judaic communists were peculiarly active in the process.
Today, in our calendar, we will look at factions in the PZPR, their broad geopolitical background and the effects.
In 1967, Israel's conflict with Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Iraq broke out. The Communist bloc supported the arabian states, which became the origin of attacks by state propaganda on “Zionists” and “revisionists”. On June 19, 1967, Władysław Gomulka gave a speech in which he put the thesis on the existence of a Zionist V column in the PRL.
As part of the ordered cleaning, Jews were removed from the army and state administration. General Wojciech Jaruzelski led their expulsion from the ranks of the army. In total, tens of thousands of people, previously perfect communists – Stalinists, lost their positions. respective 1000 of them went to exile. There, erstwhile UB executioners presented themselves as being destroyed by dissident authorities. They frequently became fierce enemies of russian communism, Poland and Poland.
The anti-Jewish Purity facilitated the strengthening of the "partisans" (so-called chamocomunas) faction in the authorities of the PZPR.
The second crucial event was the Czechoslovak crisis, the alleged Prague Spring. At the beginning of 1968, Alexander Dubček was the president of the Communist Party, who began to introduce free reforms, mainly in the economy. Of course, it did not like the russian Union, which implemented Brzeżniewowska The doctrine of limited sovereignty, he brought his troops into Czechoslovakia.
The operation was besides attended by armies of another members of the Warsaw Pact: PRL, GDR, Bulgaria and Hungary. Dubček was listed as Gustáv Husák, and the russian army permanently occupied the country.
Anti-Jewish Purity in the Polish People's Republic caused the remaining Jews to decision to opposition to the strategy and fight it, mainly in the field of culture and art. Gomulku fiercely destroyed these environments due to the fact that he considered them a transmission belt of Western corruption and consumerism. In this way (as the actual opposition – the right-wing opposition was cut almost to the leg) the conflict with the strategy to grow freedom of speech took leftist movements.
As early as 1964, the dispute intensified in connection with the alleged "list 34", in which thirty-four representatives of the planet of culture protested against exacerbating censorship and regulating the allocation of paper to publications. Non-formal student organizations, including the alleged "commandos" community at the University of Warsaw, were besides active. The commandos were mostly children of erstwhile members of the KPP, Stalinists and recently removed from state positions, officers of judaic origin.
This environment was created by people specified as Adam Michnik, Seweryn Blumsztajn, Jan Lityński, Aleksander Smolar, Jadwiga Staniszkis, Jan Tomasz Gross, Henryk Szlajfer and Barbara Toruńczyk. These people began to fight censorship and distortions of russian communism. On the another hand, around Jack Kuronia and Karol Modzelewski, a group (often working with commandos) joined the system, which began to protest from the position of extremist Marxism, including trockism.
Jewish communist and Trotsky youths demanded, among another things, the introduction of democratic voting in workplaces, which was to be a realization of the perfect of the dictatorship of the proletariat. For the Trotsky deviation, Kuron and Modzelewski were expelled from the PZPR and thrown into prison. Both Michnik's group of commandos and Kuronia's Trockists were part of the laity left-wing current. It was part of a larger full and began gradually to dominate among Western European socialist activists.
The bitterness spelled the ban on Adam Mickiewicz's “Dziads” due to the fact that this work contained anti-Russian elements, interpreted by the authorities as anti-Soviet. Jews and Trotskyists decided to usage this to mobilise little aware situations of Poles.
On January 30, 1968, the students conducted a demonstration entitled "We want culture without censorship". It was brutally shattered by the regime's services. Many participants were arrested, and major ringleaders specified as Adam Michnik were expelled from the university. Organized in defence of the students' rally, he was driven by the ZOMO.
On March 8, a large rally took place at the University of Warsaw. The rebellion expanded to academic centers across the country. The authority reacted with propaganda attacks and the organization of workers' support rallies for Gomulka, searching for student activities of the "Zionist V column". This was partially justified, since in fact many active participants were Jewish.
Special slogans have been created on the occasion of the rallies, e.g. “students for science, pen writers, Zionists for Zion” or the celebrated “Sionists for Zion”. These slogans were besides primitive to convince the Gomułkowski rations of average Polish students, or even more cunning activists of the lay Left, Trockists and Maoists.
The decline in the prestige of the Gomulkowska squad in the country coincided in time with the fall of trust in Moscow to the 1st Secretary of the PZPR himself. Gomulku did not want to grow the dense sector to the degree that was desired. The Kremlin besides disliked his reaction, nationalist deviation and excessive anti-Zionism. In anticipation of the outbreak of genuine riots in the future (indicated by reports of SB from the Polish coast), it was decided to replace the management of the Polish organization as part of the controlled crisis. The same was launched in 1970.
March 1968 ended with a fresh wave of judaic emigration from Poland. They went abroad with all their wealth, beaten in Poles. There, utilizing a typical hypocrisy, they presented themselves as oppressed by communist oppositionists. They didn't admit to their crimes in Stalinist times.
Importantly, during the 1968 protests, not a single individual was killed, contrary to the lies of current president Andrzej Duda, who reminded of alleged "victims" of March 1968 in the Filożydowski exultation.
Previous entry from our calendar is available Here..