Tadeusz Płużański: Kielce provocation
05.07.2025 https://www.tysol.pl/a143203-Tadeusz-Pluzanski-Provocation-cup
Keletian tragedy – alleged information by Tadeusz Szturm de Sztrem, activist Polish Socialist organization – Freedom, Equality, Independence, can be found in the records of the post-war execution on the rtm. Witold Pilecki. Thanks to the couriers, the anti-Soviet group of Pilecki transferred it to the Second Polish Corps of General Władysław Anders in Italy.

Apartment home in Kielce at Planty 7 / Wikipedia CC BY 2,5 Grzegorz Pietrzak
Multiple provocations
The information on the alleged pogrom of Kielce on 4 July 1946 states, among others:
"From the full process, the initiative emerged from government factors that had actually lost the referendum [s]falsified by communists referendum "3 x YES”] thus creating an excuse to repress any opposition, attaching a “reaction” and anti-Semitic description to it. [...] It must be firmly stated that the Kielce events were not an anti-Semitic pogrom, but a revolutionary reaction of the crowd against the current panic government and class privileges.”
The storm de Sztrem continues that “a large part of Jews – residents of the Planty 7 street home – were secret agents of UB”“ In the following days, anti-Semitic events were attempted in respective another cities and settlements. [...] Rumors were spread in Częstochowa about “the abduction of children by Jews, the execution of a girl in life, the devotion of St. Sigismund's church to the synagogue” and specified nonsense.
The population, having found that someone's hand was working here to catch the alleged reactionaries, drove from the place of the provokers. In Częstochowa and the surrounding area, there were demonstration strikes in the factories against the issuing and execution of death sentences on “winovians and perpetrators of the Kielce pogrom”.
Storm de Sztrem
Tadeusz Sztrem de Sztrem, an independency activist of PPS, paid his cognition with a long-standing prison. To a large extent, it is the "deed" of a prominent ubek Adam Humer. This communist torturer tortured in the investigation besides Bishop Czesław Kaczmark. Why? The committee set up by the average of Kielce concluded that the “pogrom” of Kielce was truly a provocation of UB and even of NKVD. The arrest, torture and disgraceful trial of Bishop Kaczmark was just a punishment for Kielce. On his behalf a study was prepared, then submitted to the US Ambassador to Warsaw Arthur Bliss Lane. It reads: "The full Polish government press devoted smaller or larger passages to this fact, a compatible choir said that this was about prepared by underground organizations whose threads scope as far as General Anders, pogrom of Jews, that it was a fascist movement".
A fewer more sentences we have a diagnosis of Kielce provocation:
"The reasons for this general aversion [to the Jews] are widely known, in any case not due to racial reasons. Jews in Poland are the main promoters of the communist system, whose Polish people do not want, which is imposed on him by violence, against his will."
Propagandas of communist authorities and the usage of the convoy against Bishop Kaczmark defended... Tadeusz Mazowiecki. Earlier, the same Mazowiecki attacked the Unbreakable Soldiers. This may make it easier to realize why this "first non-communist" Prime Minister after 1989 led a thick line policy, the pillars of which were ministers: Czesław Kiszczak and Florian Siwicki, taking care of smoking an act of safety and expropriation of the nomenclature.
Anti-Polish propaganda
Back to the Keelek provocation. Apart from national repressions, it was besides expected to show the planet that Poles are anti-Semitic in their mass, so lights, progressive communist power must hold the dark Polish mob by the face. For this reason, the red usurpers falsified the said referendum "3 x YES" (30 June 1946) and the election to the Legislative Sejm (19 January 1947). Both of these actions were carried out by the russian squad of Colonel Aron Palkin. They were mostly possible thanks to propaganda calling the UB-NKWD Kielce provocation The pogrom.
"Kielecki pogrom took place in Poland, which was not free. In which communists ruled, against the will of Poles. And it is an alien, forced power, communist power, not Poland, that is primarily liable for this tragedy" – said prof. Piotr Gliński on the 70th anniversary of events in Kielce. He added: "Unfortunately, any Polish politicians and any media centres here in free Poland are trying to build their political position again to reheat the supposedly anti-Semitic image of our society and state".