- Call to Action
- Open Search Window
Katyn Essay Competition – $5,000 First Prize
April 20, 2020 | Local News | Admin
To commemorate 80 th anniversary of the Katyn Genocide, the Polonia Institute announces 2020 Historical Essay Scholarship Competition on the international significance of the denial of justice to the victims of Katyn .
To this day, Katyn remains the greatest unpunished crime of World War II. On the 80th anniversary of the mass extermination of Polish nationals by the Soviet Union in Katyn and other locations throughout the USSR and mass deportations of their families, Polonia Institute encourages the study of events leading up to the denial of justice to the victims of Katyn, its causes, consequences, and possible remedies.
In the spring of 1943, the German army advancing east stumbled upon mass death pits containing bodies of Polish officers in the Katyn forest near Smolensk. The Polish government in London had been searching for thousands of officers taken prisoners in 1939. On April 13, 1943, the Germans announced that the Soviet Union murdered in Katyn 4,421 Polish officers held by USSR as prisoners-of-war.
In September 1943, the Soviets recaptured the Katyn mass murder site and immediately implemented the cover-up operation. On January 10, 1944, NKVD led by V. Merkulov and S. Kruglov issued a preliminary report concluding that the Polish officers were murdered by the Germans. Subsequently, the Soviets formed the Extraordinary State Commission for Ascertaining and Investigating Crimes Perpetrated by the German-Fascist Invaders. This commission, headed by Nikolai Burdenko, MD, confirmed NKVD’s findings. The Nuremberg Tribunal considered the Burdenko Report but declined to rule on the Katyn atrocity.
In 1951, the US Congress formed the Select Committee to Conduct an Investigation and Study of the KATYN Forest Massacre. Chaired by Rep. Ray Madden, this committee concluded on December 22, 1952, that the Poles were murdered by the Soviet NKVD in the spring of 1940. The Madden Committee recommended that the United States submit the Katyn case to the General Assembly of the United Nationals and to the International World Court of Justice.
The mastermind of Katyn, Joseph Stalin, died on March 5, 1953, on the day marking the 13th anniversary of signing the Katyn execution order. His death renewed hopes in the United Sates for better relationship with Russia. Consequently, no action was ever taken on the recommendations of the Madden Committee.
No justice was ever served for Katyn in Poland either. After the war, Poland ended up under Soviet control. The Soviet-imposed government covered up the Katyn atrocity. The communists who controlled the Polish media and academia brutally censored any mention of Katyn. The families of the Katyn victims and those asking questions about this atrocity were persecuted. Until 1990, any mentioning of Katyn in Poland resulted in persecution.
On April 13, 1990, the USSR formally admitted that the Soviet secret police was responsible for the Katyn atrocity. In 1992, the special Soviet file with Order dated March 5, 1940 to murder 25,700 Poles was disclosed in part thanks to the efforts of Vladimir Bukovski. Orders for mass deportations of the Polish citizens from conquered lands were also disclosed. However, the Russian investigation into the Katyn Operation was a sham. No one was ever found guilty of the Katyn murders. To the contrary, 125 NKVD murderers received monetary awards for efficiently annihilating the Poles.
More information on Polonia Institute website.
Last modified: September 15, 2024
Comments are closed.
Latest News
- Help us Select our PAC Honorees
- 2024 Dożynki Harvest Festival in Yorba Linda
- Wiadomości z Polski
- Pieśni legionowe w wykonaniu dzieci z sierocińca w Kamerunie
Polish American Congress of Southern California, Inc.
3400 W. Adams Blvd • Los Angeles, CA 90018 Email: [email protected]
- Our Organization
- Purpose and Mission
- Board of Directors
- Volunteer with Us
- Polish News
The Polish American Congress of Southern California, Inc.
- SUBMISSIONS
Competition on the History of Poland
Where is poland, between russia and germany, how would any country survive between russia and germany.
By offering the Competition on the History of Poland to the English-speaking public, we want to encourage you to learn more about the struggle of Poland for survival as a country between Russia and German for the past one thousand years.
Why should you be interested in this Competition? The history of Poland is not only fascinating and important but also very relevant to your life here and now. The knowledge gained through preparations for this Competition provides indispensable insights into current developments in the West, and in the United States in particular. What goes around, comes around. Whatever happens in Poland, it is interconnected with the West, hence impacts your life as well.
As the garland program of the Polonia Institute, the Competition on the History of Poland aims at bringing to the attention of the English speaking world the significance of the Polish experience in the struggle for liberty, sovereignty, and human dignity throughout the centuries. Our Competition is open to English- speaking adults 18 years and older.
We invite you to take part in the Competition on the History of Poland that will sharpen your analytical skills and broaden your horizon!
Custom title 1
2024 competition on the history of poland - the battle for rome and the battle for warsaw 80 years later. compare and contrast..
The Battle for Rome, also known as the Battle of Monte Cassino, was of primary importance to the Allied effort to defeat the Axis Coalition in World War II. The Monte Cassino Monastery, well-fortified by the Germans, stood in the way of the Allied effort to take over Rome.
On May 16, 1944, the Polish Second Corps launched the final assault on the Germans at Monte Cassino. On May 18, 1944, soldiers of the Polish Second Corps raised the Polish flag over the ruins of the Monte Cassino Monastery. As a result of this historic Polish victory, the German Senger Defense Line collapsed.
2023 Competition on the History of Poland - German extermination of ethnic Poles during WWII.
Throughout the Second World War, which lasted 2076 days, Germany murdered, on average, about 3,000 Polish citizens every day, which is more than the total number of all people killed in the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center – every day for 2076 days! During the war, Poland lost from German hand 39% of its doctors, 33% of its teachers, 30% of its academic faculty, including 700 professors, 28% of its priests, and 26% of lawyers. Germans kidnapped over 200,000 young Polish children and shipped them to Germany for Germanization. Material damage and non-material losses caused by Germany to Poland in WWII amounted to 6 trillion 220 billion 609 million Polish zlotys. To this day, Germany has not compensated Poland for these losses and has not educated its people about the crimes committed by Germans against ethnic Poles in WWII.
2022 Competition on the History of Poland - Legacy of Invincible Soldiers.
Poland, the first country to stand up to Nazi Germany, was the most loyal member of the WWII Allied Coalition. Polish armed forces fought the Axis Powers on all fronts of WWII from day one to the very end of the war. Yet, despite being the most unwavering member of the winning coalition, Poland was not among the winners of WWII. After the war, Poland lost one-third of its territory to the Soviet Union, fell under the Soviet occupation, was never compensated for devastating war losses caused by Germany and Russia, and was excluded from the Marshall Plan that helped Germany and other countries in Western Europe to recover from the war. All these actions were taken in the name of not upsetting the Russians.
Read more about Historical Essay Contest
2021 competition on the history of poland - 1981 crackdown on the solidarity movement..
December 13, 2021, marks the 40th anniversary of the imposition of Martial Law in Poland by the communist regime of General Jaruzelski. The role of the Solidarity Movement in defending the liberty for all and sovereignty of Poland is the subject of the 2021 Competition of the Polonia Institute. This competition is offered in honor of the heroes of the Solidarity Movement repressed by the communist and post-communist regimes.
Read more about Historical Essay Competition
2020 historical essay scholarship competition on the international significance of the denial of justice to the victims of katyn., 2019 historical essay scholarship competition on the worldwide significance of the 1939 german-soviet invasion of poland., 2018 historical essay scholarship competition on the struggle of poland for independence 1918-1920., share this:.
- Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More
IMAGES