The War Chronicles of Jerzy Dobiecki
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About this ebook
Ian von Hientze
Ian von Heintze was born in England and is the son of Polish parents who fled Poland to Britain either during or immediately after the Second World War. His father, detained in Warsaw by means of the notorious Nazi ‘łapanka’ (random street arrests), was among those Polish political prisoners able to remarkably achieve release from the camp at Auschwitz towards the end of 1940. A language graduate and former Member of the Chartered Institute of Linguists, Ian retired in 2001 following a career in London’s Metropolitan Police, attaining the rank of Inspector attached to Scotland Yard’s Specialist Operations Directorate. He maintains his keen interest in Polish history today and in 2009 published the story about the lives of his Polish family in his book ‘To Remain on File’.
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The War Chronicles of Jerzy Dobiecki - Ian von Hientze
The War Chronicles of Jerzy Dobiecki
By
Ian von Heintze
Front Cover
Painting by B. Slezkin – Poland 1978, oil on canvas:
Mounted officer of the 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers Regiment
Image of regimental cross reproduced by kind permission of Sławomir Ziętarski, (18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers Regimental Volunteer Association, Poland) Photograph: Jerzy Dobiecki, Rotmistrz (Cavalry Captain), 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers Regiment, whilst on attachment to the Ministry of Military Affairs, Poland 1939
(Elsewhere in this book, unless otherwise indicated, photographs and images have been selected from the author’s own collection)
The War Chronicles of Jerzy Dobiecki by Ian von Heintze
Cover painting by B. Slezkin This edition published in 2018
Winged Hussar Publishing is an imprint of Pike and Powder Publishing Group LLC
17 Paddock Drive 1525 Hulse Rd, Unit 1
Lawrence, NJ 08648 Point Pleasant, NJ 08742
Copyright © Ian von Heintze ISBN 978-1-945430-96-1
Bibliographical References and Index
1. History. 2. Poland. 3. World War II
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By the same author: ‘To Remain on File’
For
Jerzy Stanisław DOBIECKI
(My Grandfather)
HELP WITH PRONUNCIATION OF POLISH WORDS1
The Polish Alphabet:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p r s t u w y z ą ć ę ł ń ó ś ż ź
(No ‘q’, ‘v’ or ‘x’ as in English) Sound of the vowels in Polish:
a – as in half or laugh
ą – as in own without quite finishing the n
e – as in ten
ę – as in men
i – as in heat or seat
o – as in November
ó – sounds like ‘oo’ in look hence Kraków becomes ‘Krakoof’
u – as in book
y – as in sit
Sound of consonants in Polish:
c – sounds like ‘ts’ as in fits
ć – sounds like ch in screech
cz – sounds like ‘ch’ in church or choose
chrz – sounds like loch shore
dż – sounds like ‘j’ as in jewel or jungle
g – sounds always like give (not like geometry)
grz – sounds like luxurious
j – sounds like ‘y’in yeast
krz – sounds like took sugar
ł – sounds like ‘w’ in wet
ń – sounds like soft ‘n’ as in Spanish ‘mañana’
prz – sounds like stop shouting
rz – sounds like ‘s’ as in pleasure
sz and ż – sound like ‘s’ in measure or treasure
trz – sounds like much sugar
w – sounds like ‘v’ or ‘f’
b, d, f, h, k, l, m, n, p, r, s, t and z are pronounced more or less as in English
FOREWORD
As I write this note, the Great War has been over for more than one hundred years. The Second World War, a little more recently, ended seventy-three years ago. Arguably one of the greatest generations in history will, in the not too distant future, no longer be able to provide us with its first-hand accounts of what it meant to live through these most devastating of conflicts. Despite facing impossible odds, the men and women who fought for Poland between 1939 and 1945, were forced to take the fight to the enemy as exiles from their own country, becoming the fourth largest combative nationality to represent the Allied forces in the struggle against Naziism. Despite Poland’s officer corps being virtually decimated at Katyn by those who were supposedly on the same side, and notwithstanding the exclusion of Polish troops from the victory parades on the streets of London following the end of the war, Poland has remained a steadfast and loyal ally. Indeed, Poland’s overall contribution to the Second World War has often been downplayed and only over time has a more honest and rounded appraisal of Poland’s impact upon this period begun to emerge.
One of the reasons that this has been possible, has been the gradual shedding of light on the facts, often underpinned by the testimony of individuals who witnessed events first-hand. Today, the continuing acknowledgement of what was achieved by that generation, is one of the ways that we might continue to honour the individual sacrifices made. Ian von Heintze has gone some way to pay tribute to the Poles who lived through the two world wars and to his grandfather in particular, whose eye-witness accounts of events during this period need to be told.
I am sure there are many more reports, like Jerzy’s that still remain to be aired and with each revelation, thankfully, we take a further step nearer to immortalizing the truth.
Vincent Rospond New Jersey November 2018
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Since the end of hostilities of the Great War that had lasted from 1914 to 1918, many of the place-names that were written about by my grandfather in his early chronicles, today unfortunately either no longer exist or have at the very least acquired variations in spelling over time. By way of example, the city of Daugavpils in present-day Latvia, was known as Dyneburg in 1920 (and referred-to as such in Jerzy’s account of his regiment’s engagements there); At different times it has also been called Dűnaburg, Borisoglebsk, Dvinsk and Dźwińsk. Similarly, Horodyszcze in Belarus is today spelt Haradzišča; Iszkołdź (Belarus) is now Iškaldź; Vilnius (Lithuania) and L’viv (today in the Ukraine) when formerly part of Poland, were called Wilno and Lwów respectively. Memel, formerly part of Eastern Prussia, is today Klaipeda in Lithuania. Danzig, Poland’s principle port on the Baltic sea, is now more widely known as Gdańsk. In some instances, particularly since the early nineteenth century, the names of settlements, rural communities, small towns and villages located in the parts of Poland and eastern Europe about which my grandfather wrote whilst deployed with a fledgling Polish army between 1919 and 1921, may have disappeared from maps altogether. As a consequence, there are many locations that were mentioned in Jerzy’s journals that unfortunately do not appear on any of the maps that feature in this book. The names of places that he mentions in his accounts have been shown as he noted them and if contemporarily known by another name or if they are spelled differently today, the present spelling is displayed in brackets.
In order to assist the reader, the convention used throughout this
book is to show Austrian, German/Prussian, Polish, Lithuanian, Latvian, Belorussian, Ukrainian and Russian place names, as well as all Polish, French and Eastern European proper names, in italics. If a place, village, town or city that is mentioned in the text has been identified on any one of the maps included in this book, then the place name has been highlighted in bold in the body of the text.
PREFACE
This story of my grandfather’s life – between 1895 and 1958, is based upon English translations of three pieces of work originally written in Polish. The first work used in this book is a short history about his regiment – the 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers (in Polish, ‘18-ty Pułk Ułanów Pomorskich’). This historical account was written by Jerzy whilst serving in the rank of lieutenant, together with Captain Michał Kłopotowski of the same regiment, and was published in 1929 in Poland as part of a larger body of work about the history of Poland’s cavalry and other military formations. My grandfather’s publication provides a rare eye-witness account of the 18th Pomeranian Lancers’ operations during the 1919-1921 Russo-Polish War1 – a conflict that has since received comparatively little notoriety in English2 despite the significance of the outcome of this war at the time for the rest of Europe. (It was during this campaign that the Polish army played a big part in stalling the momentum behind Russia’s efforts to roll out communist ideology westwards towards the rest of Europe, following the end of the Great War). Although the 18th Pomeranian Lancers were not operationally engaged in the more widely reported battle for Warsaw in August of 1920 – considered perhaps to be one of the pivotal moments of the Russo-Polish War, Jerzy and his regiment were deployed a few weeks later, in September 1920 during the subsequent Polish offensive at the Battle of Niemen (neighboring present-day Belarus) to decisively push back the Russian army.
As an aside, historians have gone as far as to suggest that after Warsaw was prevented from falling to the Russian army in 1920, the subsequent battle between Polish and Russian cavalry near Zamość3 in south-east Poland, could most probably be regarded as the last, notable, cavalry battle in European history.
The second translation upon which this book has been based, is a brief history of the every-day regimental routine of 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers and is a piece written more recently in Polish by Sławomir Ziętarski, for the 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers Regimental Volunteer Association in Poland. This organization today commemorates and continues the traditions of this former Polish cavalry regiment that was dissolved in 1939 and was not later resurrected as part of Poland’s new modern-day army, following the end of the Second World War.
The third work used in this book, is the English translation of my grandfather’s personal log. In 1939, during the first weeks of the Second World War and whilst posted away from his regiment on secondment to Poland’s military high command in Warsaw, Jerzy was once again writing about events in Poland, contemporaneously recording in a diary, details of the Polish military deployments and battles fought across Poland as German troops advanced eastwards during September and the first weeks of October of that year. When Russian forces unexpectedly crossed into Poland from the east on 17 September 1939, this made it impossible for the Poles to defend an onslaught on two fronts. Having already steadily retreated across Poland with the military leadership in the face of the overwhelming German attack, my grandfather received orders to evacuate to neighboring Romania, together with elements of the army’s headquarters staff, many other Polish soldiers and with officials of the Polish government. Later In 1940, Jerzy submitted sections of this diary as part of a formal military deposition,4 in response to orders by one of the several Commissions of Enquiry5 set-up by the, then ex- iled, Polish Government in France; these Commissions had been established to identify the causes of Poland’s rapid capitulation in 19396, during what had become known as the ‘Polish September Campaign’.
The translations of Jerzy’s jointly published chronicle of the 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers’ campaigns during the Russo-Polish War, together with the history of the regiment written more recently by Mr Ziętarski (providing a brief picture of the regiment’s history from 1919 until its dissolution in 1939), have been joined together and form the basis of chapters 4 to 6 of this book and are used as the backdrop to what little is known about my grandfather’s life during this period. Jerzy’s diary of the Second World War appears as a translation into English in chapter 8.
Jerzy Dobiecki lived through an extraordinary period of Poland’s history. In the course of his lifetime he was actively engaged in three wars. As a professional soldier, he found himself wearing, at one time or another, the uniform or insignia of four different armies – that of the Imperial Russian Army from 1915 to 1918, the badges of two different regiments of the Independent Polish Army between 1919 and 1939, later the uniform of the Free Polish Army in exile from 1940 to 1945, and eventually held the rank of Captain as a member of the Polish Resettlement Corps – part of the British Army, between 1946 and 1948.
Jerzy was born in eastern Poland, at a time when that part of the country was under Tsarist Russian control and Poland was recovering from efforts by three neighboring empires to have her removed, one hundred years previously, from the political map of Europe.7 My grandfather would spend twenty of his thirty-two-year military career as a cavalry officer with the 18th Polish Pomeranian Lancers – performing operational, training and administrative roles. In 1914, as Europe was plunged into the fighting of the Great War, Jerzy was nineteen years old; ‘Poland’ as we know it today simply did not exist. All that we now regard as Poland was controlled by three neighboring empires, the Great Powers of Europe – Russia, Austria-Hungary and Prussia (Germany). Jerzy’s life as a soldier began as a volunteer in the Russian Imperial Army in 1915. On return from duty at the Eastern Front of the Great War three years later, he enlisted with the fledgling Polish Army that had just been formed following Poland’s acquisition of independence after the end of hostilities in 1918. Within months