https://www.blackbird9tradingposts.org/2018/12/05/talmudic-vision-killed-the-family-star-blackbird9/
Now I don’t want you getting all mizz but your correspondent
has been staring hard at the obviously out of phase reality of panzercontinuityUKplcabos and
the liberationtheologyZOMOscript prepared for them by their owners. Just insert
the town/city name nearest to you.
Polish Secret Police, The "Bezpieka" Pt. 1
Dossiers of Polish secret police functionaries from the
UB (pol. Urzad Bezpieczenstwa), MBP (Ministerstwo Bezpieczenstwa
Publicznego), and SB (pol. Sluzba Bezpieczenstwa):
Polish Secret Police in Krakow :
"If it is possible at all, that an image of evil can be
reflected in a human face, than perhaps, the faces of the 'bezpieka'
functionaries are its best example. For 45-years, the work in the Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa [UB] and Sluzba
Bezpieczenstwa [SB], was the most shameful profession in the entire
apparatus of the communist regime. This work was undertaken not only by those
who were weak enough to succumb to the temptation of inflicting violence with
impunity, but also by those insufficiently equipped to reject it, and those who
without any scruples could partake in the murderous enterprise of crime. They
were surrounded with preponderant fear, and also with a prevailing contempt -
even from within the ranks of their protectors, and willing collaborators. For
there aren't any more insulting words in the Polish language than those [used
to refer to them] like 'ubek', 'bezpieka', or 'esbek'" Excerpt
from the Preface to "The Faces
of the Krakow's Bezpieka", at al, Institute of National Remembrance,
Krakow, 2006
Polish Secret Police in Wroclaw :
"Throughout the forty-five post World War II years, the
apparatus of repression in Poland
guarded interest of the communist party, the PPR/PZPR. In
the course of duties assigned to it, it spied on, arrested, and liquidated
individuals considered undesirable by the [communist] regime. Under the
tutelage of Soviet special services, in which secret police, the Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa [UB] / Sluzba Bezpieczensta [SB], commonly known as 'bezpieka'
played an integral role, the apparatus of repression was greatly expanded and
modernized. During the 1944-1954 [the 'bezpieka'] operated within the 'Resort'
/ Ministry of Public Security. After its dismantlement, units under control of
former Ministry of Public Security were transferred to the newly formed
Ministry of Internal Affairs, Committee for Public Security [...] Because of
the character of its activities, its direct subordination to the [repressive
communist] government, the 'bezpieka' was an institution of terror sealed form,
and hostile to the to the society at large [...] The necessity of preserving
memory of victims of UB/SB terror brings to the forefront the question about
the identities of their tormentors. At last, the anonymity of the Wroclaw 's bezpieka men is stripped away by the publication
of the 'Faces of the Wroclaw 's
Bezpieka'. In addition to the information about organization, and personnel of
the Wroclaw's 'bezpieka', this publication also contains photographs, and
operational histories of nearly two hundred fifty functionaries [...] For the
first time, readers interested in the most recent history of Poland, will be able
to learn about people whose handiwork made its tragic imprint on the history of
Wroclaw, and on the lives of its many inhabitants". Excerpt from the
Preface to "The
Faces of the Wroclaw's Bezpieka", at al, Institute
of National Remembrance , Wroclaw , 2006, by
Kszysztof Szwagrzyk
Polish Secret Police in Bydgoszcz :
"[...] The interrogations were conducted by two
NKVD officers in uniforms, and by [Boleslaw] Halewski. During interrogations he
would say that the UB functionaries were learning interrogation methods from
the Russians. Halewski tortured me in the presence of the Russians. He was
hitting me on the face, and several times kicked me in the groin. After being
kicked I felt down from the pain, and the guards had to carry me out of the
interrogation room, and then tossed me into the cell. In the cell, I saw from a
close distance how Boleslaw Halewski, before the eyes of all prisoners, was
kicking one of the prisoners in the groin area. After [the prisoner] fell, he
first jumped on his chest, and then he was smashing his face with the heal of
his boot. I saw this from the distance of about two meters. I thought then,
that this prisoner, whose name I didn't know, died then [...] The UB had a
role of the political police, whose mission was to take over power in Poland , and to
maintain it in the hands of the communists. The process of organizing UB which
began in Summer, 1944, was primarily aided by the Soviet security services, and
by about two hundred Polish nationals trained as a part of the special courses
conducted by the NKVD at the Kuybishev training center. During the early 1950s,
the MBP had under its control number of security organizations: Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa Publicznego (UBP), Milicja Obywatelska (MO), Korpus
Bezpieczenstwa Wewnetrznego (KBW), Wojska Ochrony Pogranicza (WOP), Ochotnicza
Rezerwa Milicji Obywatelskiej (ORMO), Straz Przemyslowa, and Sluzba Wiezienna.
All together, the security apparatus had nearly 327 thousand functionaries and
soldiers at its disposal". Excerpt from the "The Sword of the
Revolution. Faces of the Bydgoszcz Bezpieka", at al, Institute of National
Remembrance , Gdansk ,
2006.
Polish Secret Police in Lodz :
"When a 'bandit' knew about other members of the gang,
or about the place where weapons were hidden, or stored, and refused to reveal
such information, I would allow to use interrogation methods that were not
sanctioned. Somehow, in this Urzad Bezpieczenstwa, and later in the Committee
for Public Security, we would laugh at laws. When someone reached for a Penal
Code book we would say that he wants to play the 'prosecutor' [...] If I am not
mistaken, perhaps from the junior investigator position up to the ministerial
level, this is what we thought [about the law ...]" Colonel Teodor
(Fiedol) Duda, Polish Secret Police functionary.
On January 20, 1945, a special operation group consisting of
84 individuals directed by the communist Armia Ludawa's Lublin District
commandant Mieczyslaw Moczar, "Mietek" arrived to Ludz. Moczar, a
native of Ludz became the first head of the WUBP (pol. abr. Wojewodzki Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa - Viovodeship Office for State Security). He remained in this position
until 1948. Noteworthy is the fact that the location of the new WUBP office was
chosen to be the former Nazi Gestapo building on the Anstadt street. In 1948,
the WUBP office in Ludz employed nearly 600 individuals (in 1954 it employed
1,150 individuals). In 1948, the regional county secret police offices employed
nearly 500 individuals. In 1954 this number grew to 640 individuals, among
them: field operatives, contract employees, that is secretaries, janitors, etc.
While the communist Sluzba Bezpieczenstwa (SB,) that superceeded Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa, was dismantled in 1990, after less than thorough vetting
process, many of its functionaries were hired by the present security services
of the Republic
of Poland . Thus,
paradoxically, a 'Democratic' [post-communist] nation, hired indiduals who
until recently were its very enemies to protect it from ... itself? Source:
"The Faces
of Ludz Bezpieka" at al, Institute
of National Remembrance , Lodz , 2006.
Polish Secret Police in Czestochowa :
The organs of the state security police were established in
a climate of marginal public support for the communist regime. Their leaders
were well aware of both the prevailing political climate, and the widespread
resistance against the new communist government. While it was possible for them
to reinforce their operational strength by employing front-line units to combat
the forces of Democratic Underground during 1944-1945, it was also clear, that
in order to maintain power, a full-fledged security organization had to be
established. It was Czestochowa ’s civil
administrative subordination to the Kielce Voivodeship that it was exactly in Kielce where two operational secret police groups were
established to create County (under command of Wincenty Podlubny) and City
(under command Wladyslaw Dziadosz) structures in Czestochowa . The operational group under
Capt. Dziadosz arrived in Czestochowa
on 17 January 1945 and established temporary office at 45 Washington Street (pol. ulica
waszyngtona), and then at 22
Slaska Street (pol. Ulica Slaska). This office was
also shared by the PUBP offices (pol. Powiatowy Urzad Bezpieczenstwa
Publicznego – County
Office for Public
Security) from where it was moved to 10
Kilinskiego Street (Ulica Kilinskiego). In April
1945, both City and County office were combined under a single name MUBP (pol.
Miejski Urzad Bezpieczenstwa Publicznego – City Office for Public Security).
More significant changes took place at the end of 1947 where the City (MUBP)
name is dropped and the office reopens under the name County Office
of Public Security (PUBP). During its 11 years of the existence, the county and
city Urzad Bezpieczenstwa structures in Czestochowa
were under command of 9 directors/heads. As a result of administrative changes
which took place in 1950, Czestochowa became part of the Katowice Voivodeship,
while no longer existing city and county structures of secret police were
subordinated to the WUBP (pol. abr. Wojewodzki Urzad Bezpieczenstwa Publicznego
– Voivodeship Office for State Security) in Katowice. As a “spiritual capital”
of Poland , the city of Czestochowa was of
particular interest to the “bezpieka” men. During 1958-1975, in addition to the
activities of the regular operational units of the SB, in Czestochowa
also operated the Group 5a of the Section III (beginning in 1962, Group 4,
Section IV) headquartered in Katowice .
This special-purpose field office was primarily responsible for conducting
surveillance operations against Polish Catholic Church. Source: "The Faces of Czestochowa
Bezpieka" at al, Regional Bureau of Public Education, Katowice .
Polish Secret Police in Bielsko-Biala , Cieszyn, Zywiec:
The work of the WUBP (pol. Wojewodzki Urzad
Bezpieczenstwa Publicznego - Voivodeship Office for Public Security) was
organized into departments overlooking operations of local PUBP (pol.
Powiatowy Urzad Bezpieczenstwa – City Office for Public Security), and
PUBP (pol. Powiatowy Urzad Bezpieczenstwa Publicznego – County Office for
Public Security), and were a part of a local net of security operations in the
Slask/Katowice Voivodeships. During 1945-1950 Bielsko and Biala were two
autonomous cities and were administratively part of Slask and Krakow
Voivodeships. A special group consisting of 4 individuals under command of
Kazimierz Swiderski was delegated to Bielsko Biala on personal order No. 16
issued by then Minister of Public Security, Stanislaw Radkiewicz.
This group was subordinated to the newly forming WUBP in Katowice . The task of organizing UB [pol.
abr. Urzad Bezpieczenstwa] structures was assigned to Wladyslaw Jozwiak who
directed county operational group from Krakow .
These groups entered the city immediately following the Soviet Red Army between
13 and 15 February, 1945 and within one month established PUBP office in
Bielsko and MUBP office in Biala. In 1946 both county and city offices were
combined into a single operational unit. As a result of administrative changes
in 1950 (that is the merger of cities of Biesko and Biala into a single
administrative unit Bielsko-Biala ), a single
combined PUBP office in Bielsko-Biala
was created.
Polish Secret Police in Lublin :
It is difficult to imagine 45-years of communist reign in
the so-called People’s Poland
without its secret police. It was the most essential instrument of that system,
at first, ruthlessly liquidating the post World War II underground insurgency
and then for many years extinguishing any and all forms of social discontent
and political opposition. In an all-encompassing fashion it monitored behavior
and mood of Polish citizens. Under its surveillance were both individuals and
entire social groups, organizations or institutions, that could – in the skewed
imagination of the “bezpieka” men – constitute potential “danger” to the
communist regime. In accordance with a well-tested model, similar to that of
the Soviet secret police services, the security services of the communist Poland were
created already in the summer of 1944. Its creation and then functioning took
place under an ever-watchful supervision of their Soviet “guardians.” Until
1954, the security service functioned under the name of Urzad Bezpieczenstwa
Publicznego [Office of Public Security] whose leading organs during first
months after “liberation” of Poland
established their headquarters in the city of Lublin itself. One of the priorities of the
new communist regime was establishment of an entire network of prisons and
torture houses – often based on the infrastructure left behind by the Nazi
Gestapo that retreated before the advancing Soviet Red Army. During the several
of the darkest years of communism in Poland ,
that is between 1944-1956, the Lublin castle, a former
regional Nazi Gestapo headquarters, gained notoriety as one of the most
infamous communist torture houses. The number of murders and human tragedies
that befell those held and executed in its dungeons awaits a full accounting to
this day.
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Voyoy cheeky, leave us a deadletteredroped..