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The Forgotten Army: Poland’s Armia Krajowa

The Forgotten Army: Poland’s Armia Krajowa

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A major army, 400,000 strong, made a major difference in World War 2. Yet it doesn’t get enough attention in the West (nor, unfortunately, on this podcast). It’s the Armia Krajowa, the Polish Home Army. From exposing the Holocaust, to breaking the German Enigma Code, to helping destroy V-2 rockets, the AK bridged the Eastern and Western Fronts of the Second World War.

Map 1: German invasion of Poland, September 1939

Map 2: Soviet invasion of Poland, September 1939

Historic photos

Flag of the Armia Krajowa, Polish Home Army

Gen. Michal Tadeusz Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz second-in-command of the Army of Warsaw

Wladyslaw Sikorski, Prime Minister of Polish Government-in-Exile

Elzbieta Zawacka, “Agent Zo"

Elzbieta Zawacka’s story, Agent Zo by Clare Mulley

Jewish resistance fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, 1943

SS burns the Warsaw Ghetto, 1943

SS transports Jewish survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto to extermination camps

AK fighters

Polish Boy Scouts in AK, 1944

Women members of AK

Enigma, the German coding machine

The three Polish cryptologists who broke the German Enigma code: left to right, Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Rozycki, and Henryk Zygalski

Sources:

Antony Beevor, The Second World War. London, UK: Little, Brown and Co., 2012.

Richard Lukas, The Forgotten Holocaust. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1986, and University of Kentucky Press, 1986.

Home Army Museum/Muzeum Armii Krajowej, https://muzeum-ak.pl/

Wikipedia, various pages.

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