May 3, 2024
Polish Experience

Beauty and the Beast

Emilia Malessa, code name Marcysia, survived the War yet committed suicide June 5, 1949.  What led her to that dramatic decision?

Marcysia, a Warsaw Uprising participant and the organizer of one of the most important Home Army task groups – international contact group, was arrested in Krakow in 1945 by the communist Security Agency. While imprisoned, she fell into a trap set up by a Communist/Stalinist security officer Jozef Rozanski, his Jewish name Josef Goldberg. Marcysia’s Home Army superior, Jan Rzepecki,  gave her permission to disclose the names of her contacts and collaborators since he himself had received an assurance from Goldberg, who swore on his honor, that nothing bad would happen to them. After two years in prison Marcysia was released, but viewed as a traitor by her community she took her own life by jumping from a window of one of the Warsaw buildings.

Józef Różański (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjuzɛf ruˈʐaɲskʲi]; b. Josek Goldberg;[1] Warsaw, 13 July 1907 – 21 August 1981, Warsaw) was a Officer in the Soviet NKVD Secret Police and later, a Colonel in the Ministry of Public Security and Intelligence of Poland. Born into a Jewish family in Warsaw,[1] Różański became very active in the Communist Party of Poland before World War II. He joined the NKVD following the Soviet invasion of Poland and after the war, adopting the name Różański, served as an Agent with the Polish Communist Security apparatus (Urząd Bezpieczeństwa).

Różański was personally involved in torturing and killing dozens of opponents of the Polish People’s Republic, including anti-communists.[1][2] and “Cursed soldiers“. He gained notoriety as one of the most brutal secret police Officers in Warsaw.[1] Różański personally administered torture to Witold Pilecki, one of the most famous “Cursed soldiers” and the only individual who willingly went to Auschwitz Camp. Pilecki revealed no sensitive information and was executed on May 25, 1948 at Mokotów Prison by Sergeant Smietanski, the “Butcher”.[1][3][4]

Related posts

Poles Were Consistently More Tolerant of Religious Dissent Than Were Most Other Nations

Polonia

Soviet Extermination of the Polish People 1939 (Video)

Polonia

The Communist Soviet Invasion of Poland, September 17, 1939

Polonia

The Dialectics of Pain: The Interrogation Methods of the Communist Secret Police in Poland, 1944-1955

Polonia

Shocking! As early as the 1970s, Germans already falsified history to portray Poles as anti-Semites

Polonia

The Germans burned four Polish families alive just because they had been helping Jews. 33 Poles, including 20 children, were killed. The youngest was 7 months old.

Polonia

Leave a Comment

* By using this form you agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website.