Iwieniec Uprising: Difference between revisions

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{{unreliable sources|date=July 2018}}

The '''Iwaniec Uprising''' was an attack carried out by units of the Polish anti-Nazi resistance, the [[Home Army]] (''Armia Krajowa'', AK) against a [[Nazi Germany|German]] garrison in the town of Iwaniec (today [[Ivyanets]], [[Belarus]]) on 19 June, 1943. The action was carried out by the ''Polish Partisan Unit AK Stołpce Region''.
The '''Iwaniec Uprising''' was an attack carried out by units of the Polish anti-Nazi resistance, the [[Home Army]] (''Armia Krajowa'', AK) against a [[Nazi Germany|German]] garrison in the town of Iwaniec (today [[Ivyanets]], [[Belarus]]) on 19 June, 1943. The action was carried out by the ''Polish Partisan Unit AK Stołpce Region''.


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==References==
==References==
*[http://www.iwieniec.eu/AK/Tyg%20Powsz_Iwieniec.htm]
*[http://www.iwieniec.eu/AK/Tyg%20Powsz_Iwieniec.htm]

{{uncategorised|date=July 2018}}

Revision as of 12:39, 1 July 2018

The Iwaniec Uprising was an attack carried out by units of the Polish anti-Nazi resistance, the Home Army (Armia Krajowa, AK) against a German garrison in the town of Iwaniec (today Ivyanets, Belarus) on 19 June, 1943. The action was carried out by the Polish Partisan Unit AK Stołpce Region.

The purpose of the attack was to free imprisoned members of the Polish underground, capture weapons and provisions from the Germans, capture and punish Nazi-collaborators, pre-empt a German conscription of local men for forced labor in Nazi Germany, and to demonstrate the significance of the Polish underground in the region.

The Polish units suffered four casualties (two killed, two wounded) while killing approximately 150 German soldiers and policemen. Between 100 and 200 Belorussian auxilliary policemen deserted during the attack, switched side to the Poles and ended up joining the Polish partisans. While the attacks was a success (although some of the collaborators sought by the partisans managed to escape), it invited severe reprisals from the Germans. Around 150 civilians were murdered in reprisals for the uprising and in the summer of 1943 the Germans launched a major "anti-partisan" operation, code named "Hermann" against all the partisan units (Polish as well as Soviet) in the nearby Naliboki Forest.

The attack was one of the major actions carried out by the Home Army in Poland, prior to the Warsaw Uprising.

References