Death of Polish editor Deutsche Welle. It's inactive 1 of the secrets of the Cold War

natemat.pl 1 month ago
It's 1 of the dark mysteries of the Cold War. Polish editor Deutsche Welle is not coming home. The police are hunting his body out of the lake, but from the beginning the authoritative version of the events raises doubts.


It is October 9, 1975. Thursday.

Cologne is cloudy and cold. The sun only looks like an hr from behind the clouds, and it will rain.

The Polish Editorial Deutsche Welle is working on an evening radio broadcast. Young editor Andrzej Krause works in the same area as 49-year-old Aleksander Milewski. He respects him. Milewski, a handsome brunette with a long face, always elegant, introduces him to the ark of the profession. He's demanding and bossy. And he's highly nervous.

After the 17th hour, Andrzej wants to work on a longer text, but – to his surprise – he will hear from Alexander: "Please go home. You can finish tomorrow."

Andrzej Krause will remember that on that day Alexander was very anxious and answered any calls. – He seemed depressed, and he said to me, "Happy birthday, Mr. Andrew!". It was strange, as if he knew his destiny – he recalls.

She is the last individual from the editorial board to see Alexander Milewski alive.

Deputy Chief Editor


The public radio station Deutsche Welle in Cologne Aleksander Milewski goes to May 1964, although he is not a journalist. He has a loud voice, good diction, fluent in 5 languages. After a fewer years, he is promoted to deputy editor of the Polish-language radio service, Margitty Weber, and during her frequent absence he actually directs the editorial office.

He's not popular. He thinks he's distant. He smokes a lot, he's not very social, but he's not a recluse. He is most frequently surrounded by an editorial colleague who will be suspected of dealing with German counterintelligence. They go to the cafeteria together, and Alexander helps a colleague work on texts. – There was barely anyone at home, but this friend – yes. And this is rather frequently – says Milewski's daughter. He immediately remembers his name.

In the editorial board, Aleksander avoids his colleagues erstwhile they bring guests from Poland, he is reluctant to pose for photos. – He was peculiar – says Jolanta Tischlik, erstwhile talker and editor at the Polish Editorial Deutsche Welle.

Not all Alexander will tell about his past. All the more so – about your double life.

Chaplain to the U.S. Army


It is the penultimate year of war – 1944. Milewski is eighteen years old. The Germans drive him out of Płock for forced labour to the Reich. He works in a mine in Ruhra Basin, but he spends the last months of the war in a hospital. According to medical records, he was diagnosed with a weakness in his heart muscle and then his rib was removed.

He's not going back to Poland. He is graduating at the Polish junior advanced school in Lippstadt, in the British business zone. In 1947, he joined the Polish Seminary in Paris. He's studying at the Sorbonne. Six years later the Archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Feltin, gives him a priestly ordination at Notre Dame Cathedral.

Alexander is sent to pastoral work as chaplain in the Polish defender Company with American business troops in France and Germany. He's getting a captain's degree. Polish troops in the U.S. Army are then employed units and are not subject to the Polish authorities. They service in the protection of military facilities, warehouses, warehouses, ports, but besides camps or prisons for German war criminals. Aleksander will compose short articles for the Polish paper "The Catholic Word – Polish Faithful" published in Paris for 2 years.

"He loved her above all else"


Bonn, February 2024.

Aleksandr Milewski's daughter is looking at a photograph of her father in a sutanna. She had never seen specified a photograph, but she knew the ones in the American uniform and heard that he was captain in the American army. She didn't know where he was stationed. According to the church records, he first works in Bruchmühlbach-Mesau, close Ramstein Base, where until present the largest ammunition depot of the American army outside the US is located. He then moves to Vassincourt, France, another major U.S. military logistics base in Europe.

When Alexander's life is over, his daughter is thirteen. He recalls that after his father's death, he goes with his parent to Paris. Ingrid's gathering individual and picking up any papers. She's not talking about her daughter's details. She doesn't say her father went to Sorbonne.

Ingrid and Alexander will meet in the late 1950s in the south of Germany. He is then a parish priest in the Polish Catholic Mission in Bavarian Weissenburg. She – a Slave with German roots – works in Caritas in Zirndorf close Nuremberg and helps refugees from Poland and another communist countries.

They fall in love, and in January 1961 Alexander made a written resignation from the priesthood. This justifies "the efforts to get civilian employment and the anticipation of concluding a civilian matrimony contract" – it follows from the files preserved in the archive of the Polish Catholic Mission in Germany. They are married in April 1961 and shortly decision to Oberursel close Frankfurt am Main.

Oberursel is simply a peculiar place. This is the largest U.S. military intelligence base in Europe. Here, among others, the origin of future West German intelligence, the alleged Gehlen Organization, was created.

A daughter is born in the spring of 1962. She's their only child. – Alexander loved her and loved her above all else – says Andrzej Krause. This is confirmed by another inactive surviving colleagues of Milewski: the daughter was his eye.

The female who rented the Milevsky flat in Oberursel will remember Alexander as "a very good man", a calm but besides closed within herself. “It was a good, harmonious marriage, they treated each another tenderly,” he will say about the Milewskis. In time, however, there will be features on the relation and it will no longer be perceived as happy. “It’s like something is weighing on their relationship,” says Milewski’s daughter.

Death in the Lake


"Colonia, October 15, 1975. Alexander Milewski, editor of the radio station, Catholic, residing in Cologne (...) died between October 9, 1975 at 6:30 p.m. and October 10, 1975 at 14:29 p.m. in Cologne, Lake Fühlinger". "It was made on the basis of a written study from the Cologne Crime Police," noted an authoritative on the death certificate.

Milewski's thirteen-year-old daughter learns about her father's death on the day the body was fished, October 10, 1975. Mom was sad. She always told me that he died of a heart attack – she says.

Ingrid tells his daughter that his father had "stone in his pockets" and that he kept calling and asking questions about him. – He is not here – Ingrid answers. – Good – he will hear on the another side of the phone.

– These calls caused me a fear,” says the daughter. She is reminded of another scene after her father died. In the parking lot in front of the house, he sees men wearing suits, dark coats and hats watching their home for days. Who's that? “They are making certain everything is all right,” Ingrid said.

This feeling of being watched becomes a daughter to this day.

It's like he's gone.

In the archive of the Cologne Police and the D.A.'s office, we do not find traces of an investigation to find the origin of Alexander Milewski's death. If specified an investigation was conducted, according to the law the files could have been destroyed after 30 years – we hear in the prosecutor's office. papers would only behave if 3rd parties were to be active – due to the fact that execution is not subject to statute of limitations.

Was suicide routinely seen in Alexander’s case? We are able to find that, after the body has been caught, the police do not question Deutsche Welle's associates. Isn't he trying to reconstruct the last hours of the life of the editor of the Polish service?

Milewski's body goes to the Institute of Judicial medicine at the University Clinic in Cologne and is not subjected to any treatment. Only the individual data form was retained. There are no reports, no medical records. "The body was clearly delivered without further instructions, only for safekeeping, until it was received after the prosecution's approval," informs the Cologne Institute.

Then the body was burned – although in the 1970 ’ s in West Germany it is inactive a uncommon form of burial – only sixteen percent of deaths are involved. But cremation completely excludes the detection of toxic substances.

Aleksander Milewski besides disappears from the records of graves in Cologne. His name does not appear in any database – the Administration of Cemetery in Cologne checks on our request. The registry is only deceased in 2011 Ingrid. It has been noted that he rests in a double grave, but lacks information about the second individual buried. It's like Alexander doesn't exist. – And he should be there – says a amazed official.

"Woes drowned him in the lake"


The grave Alexander shares with his wife is humble. Only names will be engraved on the stone disc – Ingrid and Alexander. From the second plate with a relief depicting a pieta separates it from a way of stone. It looks like a river that ripped a stone in half.

No name, no dates – so wanted the daughter of the Milewskis who takes care of the grave. Earlier – during the life of Ingrid – Alexander's tombstone contained his name and dates – birth and death. The second – let us remember – on October 10, 1975.

In the Polish Editorial Office Deutsche Welle, the suicide act of Milewski raises doubts. Shortly after his death, they hear that the "wrecks drowned him in the lake." Andrzej Krause will remember that he heard a akin rumor from an older colleague from the German DW editorial board Friedrich-Wilhelm Schlomann. Schlomann is simply a writer specialising in spy subjects and author of many books on the subject. Anyone who knows him knows that he has large contacts in the German Intelligence circles. According to his source, Milewski was to be a double agent.

In January 1976, an article appears in the diary "Die Welt" about "the mysterious death of the editor". "The suicide of writer Alexander Milewski (...), undetected by the public, alarmed Western intelligence services. They believe that a Pole, a German citizen since 1964, has been driven into death by Polish agents," writes "Die Welt".

We're following that lead.

Operation Canonnik


In the archive of the Institute of National Memory (IPN), we find a folder recruited in 1968 by a secret collaborator named "Ergo" – Alexander Milewski – and respective tapes with recordings of his conversations with leading officers from 1969 to 1975.

Since the early 1960s, military counterintelligence PRL – Military interior Service (WSW) – has been trying to find and scope Milewski for 5 years, which must be of peculiar importance to them. The case is dealt with by the Head Office of the Military interior Service (SWSW), which is the Warsaw office of the WSW.

Operation "Canonnik" needs to be modified continuously, due to the fact that another agents study failures. "Suspective", "with a taxing look", "type of any police officer", "had features of any interrogation in itself", "very bright, highly intelligent and this intelligence makes an impression of an unpleasant, repulsive man", "fearing contact with Poles" – TW "Bogdan" reports in 1965. He concludes that Alexander is an active intelligence worker and suggests spending his leave with him outside the German national Republic and "in a secret way to bring into conversation even through violence".

It is only with the aid of TW "Karola" – brother of Alexander Milewski.

TW "Karol"


Janusz is 3 years older than Alexander. The brothers have no contact for twenty-four years. Olek – as in the household his name is Alexander – only correspondences with his parent and sister in Płock. Janusz did not want to talk to his brother, "because they differed in political views and ways of life from the time of the occupation," an intelligence officer will note in the memo. The older brother is simply a associate of the PZPR and a convinced communist. He's barely got a degree. He revives contact with Olek only on the command of Polish intelligence and will do so "with full commitment".

He is the president of the "Ton" Cooperative in Warsaw, dealing with the production and export of musical instruments. Under specified cover he will be able to travel abroad and meet Alexander.

The first gathering with his brother occurs in Cologne late in the spring of 1968. Janusz is allegedly passing through Cologne on his way to the music fair in Luxembourg. According to a pre-prepared plan, he "runs his train" and calls his brother, asking for accommodation.

Alexander is surprised, but besides joyful. Janusz reminds him of Poland, which he has not seen since 1944. They revive household memories. Brothers talk till late tonight. Janusz recalls that they could meet again in Vienna. Alexander clearly senses that his brother’s words have a second bottom. – We will see more of each another now – he throws goodbye.

"Karol" reports everything to his powers. In September 1968, the head of the WSW General Teodor Kufel approved the plan for a verbund gathering in Vienna. On 6 October from Vienna, an encryptogram comes to the headquarters: "The 'Canon' is proceeding correctly. He set up the ‘K’ well. The conversation is honest, determined. I'll make a deal with him." The cipher is signed by Colonel Stanisław Stępień. He'll be the officer moving Ergo.

In his later memo, Stępień will note that "Karol" "in the presence of a 4th officer convinced the "E"(rgo) to cooperate with the KPR authorities", and at the request of "Ergo", the brother is to watch over the conspiracy of his contact with Polish services and represent his individual interests. Janusz provides only auxiliary functions in the main-brother communication strategy from the beginning.

In the 1968 Verbund Form Stępień will point out that Aleksander Milewski is the deputy head of the Polish section of Deutsche Welle and that he has collaborated with American intelligence. The occupation for the SWSW is "for patriotic reasons".

Camp King


Seven years earlier, in mid-1961, Aleksander Milewski goes to the American military base Camp King in Oberursel. He begins working at the German Military Intelligence office of the United States (CIC). From the US authorities' declassified act of alleged Clearance, or admission to work at the CIC, it is clear that he worked there as an investigator (interogator), interrogating refugees from the Polish People's Republic.

Mike B. – American of Polish origin, serving in an American military interview in Germany. Aleksandra must have more to connect with him, since Mike is simply a witness at a wedding with Ingrid, and his wife Maria becomes the godmother of Milewski's daughter. In conversations with SWSW officers, he's covering it up. Our daughter tells us that the families were in contact with each another even after Alexander died.

At the U.S. base, Milewski works until the spring of 1964 – until taking up work at Deutsche Welle. But even later, due to the fact that in 1965, in the office of the CIC officer in Camp King Alexander – so far stateless – receives a German passport issued to him. He talks about this a fewer years later to a Polish intelligence officer.

Why does Milewski get a German passport from the Americans erstwhile he's no longer officially working for them? Or is he playing 2 fronts?

Names, names, contacts


Staff, organization of work, way of developing intelligence and interviewed persons at Camp King Alexander Milewski will tell PRL intelligence officers in item for the first time at a conspiracy gathering in Yugoslavia in 1969.

When he says those words, the American military intelligence base in Oberursel no longer exists. The Americans are moving her to Munich. another military units are moving into the centre close Frankfurt. Alexander besides talks about the base in Vassincourt. There are no Americans there either. Interestingly, he does not say a word about Bruchmühlbach-Mesau. This base exists to this day, it is believed that Americans besides stored atomic weapons there.

Milewski tells about his work at Deutsche Welle, describes staff, contacts, reports on contacts with Poles. He talks about editorial policy and the links between any employees and German counterintelligence. It besides provides analyses of the main directions of operation of the station, the policy of another language editorials and plans to connect the Polish section of Deutsche Welle to the Deutschlandfunk station. Sometimes it provides publically available information and political analyses.

Already early, in early 1971, Polish intelligence asked Milewski to establish the subject of Jerzy Pawłowski – the sablist, the stars of Polish sport, the Olympic champion and the planet champion, who contacts Stanisław Szczerbicki, who is liable for the editorial athletics of Milewski.

Ambitious Tasks


The situation changes in 1973 erstwhile "Ergo" passes "to contact" to the Management Board of the II General Staff, or military intelligence. The interview has been directed by an ambitious colonel, later general and head of the Ministry of Interior, Czesław Kiszczak since the beginning of 1973. He's very acquainted with Ergo. From 1966 to 1972, he was a deputy head of WSW, or military counterintelligence. A number of papers concerning Alexander show his signature.

Now, as the chief of military intelligence of the Polish People's Republic, Kiszczak orders his subordinates to "present a proposal to use" TW "Ergo". Kiszczak's officers are formulating very ambitious intelligence tasks. Kiszczak sets priorities: "collecting political and military information from the ruling and opposition parties, as well as the ruling factors of the NRF through the authoritative workplace (Deutsche Welle), reaching out to those highly placed in the Bundeswehr and the MON in order to appoint, make and recruit candidates to cooperate with us and organize a fresh agent network on the NRF site". The NRF is popular at the time short for "German national Republic".

Kiszczak's officers are getting to work. They make "dead boxes" in Germany to transmit reports and materials by "Ergo". They shoot and describe everything.

In early 1974, the Management Board of the Second General Staff asked SWSW to supply details of the communication with "Ergo. However, Milewski does not meet his expectations. He avoids meetings. Explains the death of the mother-in-law, the illness of the hand. The PRL intelligence officers get suspicious and scope to a tried-out average – they send their brother.

In a ellipse of suspects


In late May 1974, a dramatic gathering takes place in Paris. Alexander tells his brother that he is being followed. – If the boss does something like this, it's for your sake – Janusz tries to calm him down. No success. A tense Alexander swears he doesn't work for Americans. For the only time on the tapes preserved in the IPN you can hear the brothers talking – as if they were recorded from hiding. To what end?

“Ergo” on the Management Board of the Second General Staff, Colonel Klewiado notes after this meeting: “I think that ‘Ergo’ is curious in the KW there and can stay at their service.” Another officer, Col. Mrówczyński, notes: “Ergo behaves suspiciously. I think it is very likely that he will cooperate with the NFC bodies."

In October 1974, the case “Ergo” and “Karola” is “retained to be explained by counterintelligence authorities”. In reports on the intelligence situation in West Germany, “Ergo” is listed on the list of “agency eliminated from the network” in 1974.

Janusz's telephone has been tapped since April 1974. Brothers from co-workers become operational targets. The evidence records individual reports from the brothers' telephone calls.

“Ergo” returns “to contact” to SWSW. “We return” – is noted by individual from the intelligence management. Subsequent meetings are already held with “Karol” and officer leading with SWSW, Colonel Stanislaw Stępń. The latter, after a gathering in December 1974, seeks to dispel the doubts of his colleagues in the interview. Or to the end?

Mysterious gathering with the boss


The last gathering with PRL officers Aleksander Milewski is held in September 1975 in Italy. There is besides “Karol”, and Colonel Stępień. Alexander crosses the border to Yugoslavia. There is simply a “control meeting” with the head of the WSW, General Theodore Kufl. “It is absolutely unique for the chief of specified powerful service to meet with a private agent,” says 1 of the historians associated with IPN.

The cup's not good. In 1979, he will leave for a diplomatic mission to West Berlin. 2 years later, he will be recalled and released from active work and expelled from the organization for abuse. That's what happened back then. "Despite that he was a low-flight man, very much, he had around him, it was later from Kiszczak that I learned, people who were besides large for him, and at the same time acted as evil spirits" – said Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, in the 1970s the head of the MON and the head of Kufl.

"There was no more."


Almost all meetings with “Karol”, any with the participation of the leading officer, are held abroad – including in Yugoslavia, Romania, the Netherlands, Austria, France, Italy. “We have travelled a lot,” says Alexander’s daughter. It wasn't average erstwhile I was comparing myself to my friends. At least twice a year abroad, no vacation in the area. Very frequently holidays with Janusz and his wife.

In communication with office in Warsaw, “Ergo” uses contractual signs, ciphers, secret writing and radio. Twice a week at the appointed time, the radio communications shall be listened to and the information shall be provided. “At home he had his workroom, and I was not allowed to go in there.” For all trip, my father takes with him the same black radio receiver.

Alexander likes costly things, good food, good cognac. With Ingrid, he's eager to watch American shows, listens to American music. Their heart didn't beat for communism. The United States was their longing country. In the house, there was small talk about Poland – the daughter reports. But he remembers his father sending money to his parent in Płock.

She's touched erstwhile we first talk to her about her father. “It’s like years later individual unlocks something,” he says.

For the last 50 years, her father's image has come back to her sometimes. He remembers that they had good relationships, that he frequently played with her – like a radioman – in imitating different voices. In time, however, he became inaccessible, under pressure, and much out of the house. “There was more and more of him – physically, but besides in spirit,” says the daughter. The scene comes back erstwhile she comes from school and he's in the bedroom. It's like he doesn't have the strength for anything.

Still, his daughter doesn't believe he's taken his own life. I'm asking myself that question, but it's all against. He hated water though he could swim. He knew I was going to that lake to have fun. I can't imagine that," she admits.

"If I'd been damned"


An editorial colleague recalls that Alexander is under force at the end of his life. He seems stressed, talking about a “term”.

During this time, loud spy scandals emerge. In April 1975, Polish counterintelligence arrests the celebrated swordsman Jerzy Pawłowski, who worked not only for Polish services but besides for the American CIA. Poles worked on Pawłowski for a long time, and asked “Ergo” about information.

A year earlier, Germany was shaken by the largest postwar spy scandal. In the immediate vicinity of Chancellor Willy Brandt, an agent of the East German Stasi Günter Guillaume is exposed and leads to the collapse of the government.

Do these spy scandals about which the media is ordering affect Alexander's intellectual health? During the gathering with Janusz in Paris he laments his brother for the “tragedy of his generation, which came between 2 fronts”: – I am morally very dubious for many people, both on 1 side and on the another side. due to the fact that any motherfuckers are gonna think I did it for profit, for money, and others are gonna say, "Well, he did it due to his brother, his mommy, his sister, he didn't want any trouble, and it's not known what kind of heart he has inside clean." He adds that it would be best for Ingrid and his daughter if “the way hit him”. “They would get 2,000 pensions and I wouldn’t worry,” he says in front of a drunken meeting, recorded secretly by a brother or another agent.

Organisation


What truly happened tonight, October 9, 1975, after Alexander left Deutsche Welle's editorial office?

In Janusz Milewski's work folder – “Karola” – we find receipt receipt of PLN 4,000 for fees for renewing the passport. Date: October 9, 1975, signature: Charles.

On the receipt there is information written on the following day – 10 October – by Col. Stępnia, that the sum of PLN 4,000 paid to “Karol” “in connection with the departure to the ceremony of TW ‘E’(rgo)”. "I made the calculation on 9.10.".

This means that preparations for going to the ceremony began in Warsaw erstwhile Alexander Milewski's body was inactive in the lake. Let us remind you: the German police did not fish them out until October 10, after 2:00.

Why did Warsaw know before? Did she order the execution of Milewski and make it look like suicide? Or maybe, as the German press thought, “it drove him to death”?

In the "Ergo" personnel file, we find a protocol for paper destruction. little than a period after Alexander Milewski's death, the services destruct respective papers related to the "Ergo" case. They wore dates from May 30 to October 31, 1975. 2 of them came from October 9.

The papers besides die in Płock. The bishop was formally subject to Alexander Milewski as a cleric and chaplain to the U.S. Army. On our request, the archivist of the diocese claims that there is no documentation, which, in his opinion, is strange.

They die suddenly


Alexander's obituary in “The Life of Warsaw” indicates the date of 9 October. “He died suddenly,” we read.

In Alexander's personnel files in the WSW Colonel. Streak records that “Ergo” died on October 10, 1975 “after having had a heart condition”. "He was treated for abrupt cardiac arrhythmias. Arrhythmia”, “died on the street after leaving the workplace”, he adds. It's unusual that the servants who spent years preparing to recruit an agent so crucial to themselves and scan all corner of his life, this time they don't check anything. Coincidence?

After Alexander's death, there will be no more duties for Janusz, since he was just a liaison with his brother. He reports in late 1976, erstwhile Ingrid and his daughter come to Warsaw for Christmas. “In accordance with the task of talking to her, TW ‘Karol’ has determined that no operational events have occurred. It was not indigo on the deceased husband, his political activity, connections with the Polish People's Republic, trips, meetings, etc." – the study reads.

The files “Ergo” and “Karola” are closed in 1977 and transferred to the SWSW archive. Their access for inspection was subject to the approval of the 2nd Branch of the Management Board of the 2nd SWSW in consultation with the KW officer the longest conducting the case, or Stanisław Stępniem. – These are very serious restrictions – the historian associated with IPN evaluates.

Janusz dies abruptly in April 1978. He's 55.

Questions Unanswered


German media do not compose about the death of editor Deutsche Welle. On the eve of the funeral, October 15, “Bild” states: “The editor of Deutsche Welle committed suicide (...) was to be transferred”. This is an indication of the planned merger of the Polish editorial squad Deutsche Welle with the Polish editorial board on Deutschlandfunk. However, we know that Milewski had a guaranteed occupation in the fresh structures. He besides had a proposal from Radio Free Europe.

Brief information in the January 1976 regular paper "Die Welt" indicates a possible participation of Polish intelligence. respective weeks after the death of Milewski, intelligence officers sent from Poland effort to recruit a Pole working on Radio Free Europe. They do so in Munich itself, “in the mouth of the lion”, contrary to the practice adopted by the PRL interview. Is this about distracting German services and media?

If so, it worked. The case of agents Butkiewicz and Wróbelewicz is echoing in Poland and Germany, and leads to turbulence in Polish-German relations.

And these happen to be in the relaxation phase. On 1 August 1975 in Helsinki, representatives of 35 countries, including the US, USSR, PRL, RFN and GDR, signed the final act of the Conference on safety and Cooperation in Europe. Both hostile blocks – Western and russian – commit, among others, to peaceful coexistence and respect for human rights.

A breakthrough gathering of the PRL leader Edward Gierek and German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt takes place a day earlier. Both agree to deepen cooperation. They talk about loans and damages for Polish victims of the Second planet War. Germany agrees to pay compensation to victims of medical experiments and to pay pension benefits to forced workers in the times of the 3rd Reich.

On the day of the disappearance of Alexander Milewski, on October 9, 1975, the head of the West German diplomacy Hans-Dietrich Genscher signs specified an agreement in Warsaw. Polish-German and East-West relations are entering a fresh phase.

Not everybody likes it. Could anyone from the PRL peculiar services have been curious in torpedoing the process of relaxing and improving relationships? Could it have been the execution of a writer and an uncomfortable agent? Did the West German service decide to sweep the substance under the carpet for fear of a deterioration?

In the IPN files we find no clear answer to these questions. possibly the mysterious death of Alexander Milewski can never be explained again. But uncertainty will remain.

Alexander Milewski's daughter is glad that individual was yet curious in her father's fate.

It's like he brought him back to life for a while.

Contribution: Katarzyna Domagala-Pereira, Bartosz Dudek


Read Entire Article