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The Polish Underground, 1939–1947

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David Williamsons graphic account goes beyond the formal end of the Second World War, for Poland remained in a state of flux as a clandestine civil war was waged between the Communists and former members of the Home Army until the Communist regime took power in 1947. His study offers an absorbing insight into the plight of Poland during the war and into its immediate postwar history.

400 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2012

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About the author

David G. Williamson

26 books6 followers
David G. Williamson is the former head of history and politics at Highgate School.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Jeff Underwood.
28 reviews1 follower
July 4, 2018
A Story of a Doomed Polish Underground Fighting Nazism during WW2 and Russian Communism After the War

Great book for facts. names, dates, lists and thumbnail sketches of biographies of important players and methods of guerrilla combat and carrying out that combat. It however was much more academic in feel than I wanted. Indexes, glossaries, and definitions of terms and multiple acronyms wasn't what I needed. I am writing a book and my hero was going to be a Nazi and Communist guerilla fighter. I was looking for the human touch of personal stories. Not helpful AT ALL there. I have it three stars because it was well done academically on an obscure subject that needs to be told. More recent Polish history seems star-crossed. This book certainly heightened that impression. Hope this review helps.
Profile Image for Anna.
3,522 reviews196 followers
March 20, 2016
Dobre zagraniczne przedstawienie polskiego podziemia
Profile Image for Mal Warwick.
Author 32 books498 followers
February 5, 2025
THEY WERE EUROPE'S MOST EFFECTIVE ANTI-NAZI RESISTANCE

Millions of words have been published in English about the French Resistance. Readers, especially American readers, can get the impression that the French effort to resist the Nazis was the best (or even the only one) in Europe. But that’s not true. Underground armies in several other countries formed earlier, became larger, and were far better organized. The Russians, the Yugoslavs, and particularly the Poles mounted impressive operations that tied down hundreds of thousands of German troops for years on end.

Doubtless, there are countless books in European languages that tell their stories. But the literature available in English is limited. Historian David J. Williamson’s The Polish Underground, 1939-1947 is the most comprehensive I’ve found. In just 400 pages, he relates the experience of the Polish Resistance throughout the war and in both the German and Russian-occupied zones. Many historians regard it as Europe’s most effective anti-Nazi Resistance.

A STORY OF UNSURPASSED COURAGE AND TRAGIC ENDINGS

Unfortunately, so little about events in Poland has made its way into Americans’ understanding of World War II that many of us confuse or conflate two of the signature events of the period. The two have similar names.

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising took place in April and May 1943 when 700 Jewish fighters engaged in a heroic but doomed battle against the Nazi campaign to move all the ghetto’s 56,000 remaining inhabitants to the Treblinka death camp and the Majdanek concentration camp.

By contrast, the Warsaw Uprising that unfolded from August through October 1944 was an organized military operation undertaken by Poland’s Home Army. The country’s political and military leadership had planned from the outset to launch a nationwide uprising when it became clear that the Germans were on the retreat and Allied forces entering Poland to support local fighters. However, in Warsaw—alone at first, though later joined by the resistance in other cities—the Home Army’s 50,000-strong local corps rose up believing that the Red Army had reached the suburbs and would come to their aid. For reasons that remain controversial to this day, the Russians did not cross the river into the city as they had promised to do. 15,000 insurgents and 250,000 civilians died as a result. The Germans lost about 16,000 men.

AN HISTORIAN’S ACCOUNT FOCUSED ON POLAND’S MILITARY LEADERSHIP

Don’t pick up this book expecting a breathless account of courageous young soldiers fighting the Nazis against great odds. David Williamson’s story of the Polish resistance is squarely focused on the generals and, to a lesser extent, the Government-in-Exile in London. From the first moments of the Nazi invasion on September 1, 1939, the Polish General Staff began planning the organization of a nationwide insurgent army that would build its strength until the moment when the Germans inevitably began to lose momentum and started their retreat to their own borders. Then the local army would rise up as one and reclaim their country. Of course, from the outset, this plan was a fantasy.

CLASHING EGOS AND OPPOSING POLITICS

Williamson follows the generals’ contradictory plans, fierce political differences, and clashing egos as they set up first one structure for the underground army, then reject it in favor of another. Meanwhile, volunteers on the ground were acting on their own, ignoring orders from London or Warsaw to set up their own, usually small units to resist the Nazis in their own local communities.

In the end, however, as the general staff asserted its authority, organized training centers, and smuggled in large quantities of arms and ammunition across the borders, the Home Army emerged as by far the largest and best organized element of the resistance. Two other large operations took shape. The more prominent of these was the Communist “People’s Army” (Armia Ludowa), principally in eastern Poland that the USSR had occupied in September 1939.

A BOOK FOR WWII HISTORY BUFFS, NOT THE GENERAL READER

Polish patriots, military historians, and World War II history buffs will find The Polish Underground, 1939-1947 useful. Williamson relates in great detail the shifting leadership and evolving priorities of Poland’s Government-in-Exile throughout the war. However, neither Williamson or the series editor seems to have intended this book for the general reader. It’s slow going, and the author’s prose is often deadly.

Moreover, Williamson’s digression into the operations of the Polish Resistance elsewhere in Europe through Polish expats and forced laborers extended the story into France, Germany, Hungary, Russia, Czechoslovakia, and Romania. Perhaps those activities would have merited a book of their own.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David G. Williamson is a British military historian, author, and lecturer. He has written at least 22 books on the history of Germany, the history of diplomacy and international relations, and the military history of the Second World War.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews