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Political trials (processes) in interwar East Galicia and Poland

Overview

Abstract

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Detailed Description

RG -111.01, Stepan Fedak, Trial, 1921, 1922

RG- 111.02, St. George Trial (Swietojurski Process), 1922

RG - 111.03, Sydir Tverdokhlib, assassination, October  1922

RG-111.04, Trial of Sobinski murder by the UVO members, 1928

RG-111.05, Pieracki, assassination trial, Polish reflections, 1935

RG - 111.06, Ivan Babii, assassination, Lviv (Lwow), 1934



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Political trials (processes) in interwar East Galicia and Poland, 1918-1939 | Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust

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Collection Overview

Title: Political trials (processes) in interwar East Galicia and Poland, 1918-1939Add to your cart.View associated digital content.

Predominant Dates:1921 -- 1935

ID: RG-111/RG-111

Primary Creator: Periodicals published in interwar East Galicia and Poland (1918 -- 1939)

Other Creators: Polish judicial authorities, East Galicia and Poland (interwar period)

Extent: 4.0 Folders

Subjects: Activities and organizational framework of the OUN, Poland and abroad, 1930s, Assassination attempt on Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921, Assassination attempt on Sydir Tverdokhlib by Ukrainian militants of the UVO, October 15, 1922, Assassination of Ukrainian poet Karshkevych (Karaszkiewicz) in Kolomyja, 1922, Biography of Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, a failed assassin of Pilsudski, interwar, wartime, Chronology of September 25, 1921, Pilsudski first day visit in Lwow (Lviv), Kurjer Lwowski, October, Chwila, analysis of the causation induced the assassination attempt, Chwila, September 29, 1921, Commissar Kajdan, investigation of Stepan Fedak, September after 25th, 1921, Fedak Trial, 1922, Congress of KUM (Committee of Ukrainian Youth Movement), program, Lviv (Lwow), 1920, Conspirators drew a choice who was to implement the attempt on Pilsudski, Fedak Trial, 1922, Defendants (conspirators) discussed the attempt in Cafe Republique on September 23, 1921 Fedak Trial, Defiance of Ukrainian young educated generation against Polish authorities in East Galicia interwar, Description of the OUN leadership and structure, 1930s, East Galicia, Dilo, reflections on the beginning of the Fedak and accomplices trial, discourse, October 1922, Documents in Polish language, Documents in Ukrainian language, Dr. Karowiec operated on wounded Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), October 15, 1922 Lviv, hospital, Dr. Stepan Fedak, father of Stepan Fedak, assassin and defendant, Fedak Trial, 1921, 1922, Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region), Fedak, Sztyk (Styk), Paliiv, Kuchabski (Kuczabski), Matczak (Matchak), members of KUM, Fedak Trial, 1922, Defense discourse, reflected in Ukrainian, Jewish and Polish periodicals, Fedak Trial, a question of official language of proceedings, Ukrainian versus Polish, Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochib) in Lviv (Lwow), October 19, 1922, Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, city President, Neuman, October 19, 1922, Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Councel of Presidum, Krechowiecki, 10.19.1922, Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Deputy Governo Zimnyj, October 19, 1922, Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Governor Grabowski, October 19, 1922, Operation in a Lviv (Lwow) hospital on wounded Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), October 15, 1922, evening, Sapezhanka (Lwow, Poland), railroad station, site of assassination attempt on Sydir Tverdokhlib 1922, Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), apologetic of Polish – Ukrainian reconciliation, 1922, Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), visionary of Polish Ukrainian co-existence and reconciliation, 1922, Sydir Tverdokhlib, mortally wounded delivered to a hospital in Lviv (Lwow), October 15, 1922 evening, Sydir Tverdokhlib, Ukrainian literati, poet, assassinated by Ukrainian nationalist on Oct. 15 1922, Sydir Tverdokhlib against Ukrainian boycott and radicalization versus parliamentary elections, 1922, Ukrainian boycott in Eastern Galicia of parliamentary elections in 1922, interwar Poland, Ukrainian poet Karashkevych (Karaszkiewicz), rejection of radical militatnt tactics of the UVO, 1922, Warsaw, 1935, OUN Trial including Bandera implicated in the assassination of Bronislaw Pieracki

Languages: Polish, Ukrainian

Abstract

Political trials in interwar East Galicia as well as in interwar Poland were intrinsic to ethno-national and political narrative of the time. Unsettled issues of national minorities, tensions between the extreme wings of Ukrainian national democratic camp and Polish state, communist activities, indisposition between Polish national democrats and Polish socialists and political center, a precarious social and political insufficiency of Jewish political discourse, all in all cause violent response from multiple political forces. Summary tribunals eventually replaced by jury trials frequented interwar Polish political milieu regrettably often. Some trails caused national and foreign attention the other mattered for regional politics and enthno-national interaction. Political and criminal trials in a sense described by a German term Prozess perhaps served as an outlet of public discourse and a broadcast of conflicting opinions.

The main player on the stage of political assassinations and related crimes were members of Ukrainian nationalistic organizations, members of communist organizations, Polish right wing organization known as Endecja as well as Jews who largely were tried in the capacity of communist affiliation or as a result of political entanglement to what the Steiger Trial is a perfect example.

A multi-faceted source for reflections and even a stenographic reports of this long-lasted trials were contemporaneous periodicals of Ukrainian, Polish and Jewish societal affiliation.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

A collective historic discourse comprising political trials in East Galicia and Poland over the interwar period. On the side of defendant the main players were Ukrainian largely affiliated with the UVO (Ukrainian Military Organization) and later the OUN (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists), occasiaonally the Jews (the Steiger Trial), the Botwin Trial, the Jager and associates Trial and the trial against KPZU members (that is West UKrainian Communists).

The Trial of Stepan (Stefan) Fedak and his associates, referred as Attempt on Assassination of Marshal, Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski. The actual assault on Jozef Pilsudski and Governor of the Lwow Province, K. Grabowski.

Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, member of the Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO) together with co-conspirator executed a failed attempt on the life of Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski and Governor K. Grabowski in Lwow, in front of the City Hall in the late afternoon of September 25th 1921 in Lwow (Lviv).

Actual Trial took place in Lwow (Lviv) in October – November 1922. Stepan Fedak claimed that he did not attempt to assassinate Marshal Jozef Pilsudski. He directed this act of defiance against the Governor K. Grabowski, revenging repressions against nationally-oriented Ukrainians and thus arising international attention to the dilemma of East Galicia in international regards.

His assassination attempt is largely regard a failed one for Pilsudski was not harmed, however, the Governor was wounded. Stepan (Stefan) Fedak was tried in Lviv (Lwow) and sentenced for six years imprisonment. He was released before the end of his term, in 1924 under the condition of emigrating from Poland. Stefan Feak lived in Paris and Berlin. He, nevertheless, clandestinely returned to Poland and began residence in East Galicia, working as a director of a Ukrainian dairy cooperative. He was arrested in East Galician town Zhuravno in 1937.

In the wake of the failed assassination Polish societal opinion reflected in the periodicals make out this a geo-political conspiracy by associate the Habsburg Dynasty as at least instigators and ideological players in the cause of separatism with regard to Ukrainian Galicia. In the course of court trial, October – November 1922, the investigation and the court proceedings came to a rather ordinary conclusion that is defiance and resistance to admit Polish political rights on Eastern Galicia. Stenographic reports and discourses in Ukrainian, Polish and Jewish periodicals would further corroborate often conflicting opinions with regard to Ukrainian national aspirations and Polish officialdom in regard to a prospective autonomy for East Galicia.

There were two narratives and various discourses, the beginning or the actual deed or event and a much longer narrative and obviously almost conflicting discourses once the trials covered, sometime stenographicly in regional and national periodicals.

Sydir Tverdokhlip, Ukrainian poet, literati, humanitarian, was prone to campaign in the November 5th, 1922 Elections from the list of agreeable to the election Galician Ukrainian party of Khliboroby (could be translated as Agriculuturalists or Bread Winners). Position of average Khliboroby hardly could influence Ukrainian political elites and average voters, however, a poet, professor of gymnasium, public figure, Sydir Tverdokhlip, was a challenging for the electoral boycott figugure. After an electoral meeting in Kamenka Strumilova, on the way to cathcing a train to Lviv at Sapezhanka he was followed by three people who killed him at the railroad station Sapezhanka. Sydir Tverdoklhim died on the next day in the Lwow hospital. Ukrainian public figures and political establishment remained overall with no accusative stand, they also ignored the funeral. Although Polish public figures, intelligentsia, authorities demonstrated aversion of the UVO (Ukrainian militants) manisfested their rightful aversive act of barbarism.

Sydir Tverdokhlib (Твердохліб, Сидір; Tverdoxlib]), born 9 May 1886 in Berezhany, Galicia, d 16 October 1922 in Lviv (Lwow). Poet, literati, professor of gymnasium, public figure and humanitarian, also a translator. After studying at the University of Jan Kazimierz in Lwow (Lviv University) and Vienna University he worked as a gymnasium professor in Lviv (Lwow). There he belonged to the modernist group Moloda Muza (Young Muse); his first poems and translations appeared in 1906 in the journal S’vit (the World). A bilingual (Ukrainian-Polish) writer, Tverdokhlib published one small book of poetry, V svichadi plesa (In the Mirror of the River's Surface, 1908), and verses, novellas, and translations in both Ukrainian (Nedilia (1911–1912), Iliustrovana Ukraïna, Dilo) and Polish (Krytyka, Przegląd Krajowy, Widnokręgi) periodicals. Tverdokhlib's translations introduced the Polish reading public to contemporary Ukrainian literature and were favorably received by critics. Published separately were his Polish translations of three books of Mykhailo Yatskiv's novellas (1908, 1910, 1911), an anthology of modern Ukrainian poetry (1911; 2nd end of 1913), and a book of Taras Shevchenko's selected verses (1913). Tverdokhlib also translated Shevchenko's ‘Haidamaky’ into German and Juliusz Słowacki's poems into Ukrainian. From 1920 he and Yatskiv headed the small, uinsignificuntly supported Ukrainian Agrarian party, which favored a compromise with Polish state of possession in East Galicia. The published the government-funded weekly Ridnyi krai (Lviv). During the Ukrainian general boycott of the 1922 elections to the Sejm Tverdokhlib announced his candidacy and began campaigning. Consequently the underground Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO) condemned him as a national traitor and had him assassinated, he was mortally wounded in Sapezhanka railroad station near Kaminka-Strumylova on October 15, 1922. Sydir Tverdokhlib died in the Lviv (Lwow) Hospital on October 16, 1922.

Repression against communist movement of East Galicia, once the East Galician communist took the stand of national communism (Vasylkovtsy) materialized in the course of the St. George Congress Trial in November 1922 -- January 1923.

In the process of accused 39 Communist activists, and eventually sentenced 10, including Mr Stefan Królikowski, a member of the Central Committee of the CPP Kazimierz Cichowski and secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Eastern Galicia Osyp Kriłyk. The defendants were sentenced to prison terms of up to three years in prison. Process name refers to the place of the conference, during which activists were arrested, the basement of the Cathedral and monastery of St. Jura in Lwow (Lviv).

Stanislaw Steiger Trial in September 1924 and in October -  December 1925 reified a broades spectrum of ehtno-national and political controversies and demonsrated multi-vectorial discourses in regard to Polish, Jewish and Ukrainian political spectrum.

Assassination of the Lviv (Lwow) School District Superintendent, Stanislaw Sobinski on October 19, 1926.

Trial of the Sobinski's assassins in treason and conspiracy, January -- March 1928 and January -- February 1929.

Stanislaw Sobiński (born June 12, 1872 in Zloczow (Zolochiv), murdered 19 October 1926 in Lwow (Lviv)) - Polish educator, public figure, Superintendent of the Lwow (Lviv) school district in 1921-1926.

In the years 1909 – 1917, he was director of the Vocational School in Tarnobrzeg, then he received a position at the Ministry of Religious Denominations and Public Education in Warsaw.

On January 24, 1921, Stanislaw Sobinski was appointed Curator (Superintendent) of the Lwow (Lviv) School District, which position he held until his death. In his subordination remained schools in the province of Lwow (Lviv), Tarnopol (Ternopil) and Stanisławów (Ivano-Frankivsk).

As a Superintendent he introduced the provisions of the Grabski’s Act, turning en masse Ukrainian schools in the bilingual (utrakwistyczne). As a result of the 2151 Ukrainian general education schools in 1924, left in 1930 only 684; out of 2,568 Polish – 2186 became bilingual schools and 1793 of them were the former Ukrainian schools.

Establishment of bilingual schools took place largely in the years 1924 - 1926. Sobiński not only executed instructions in terms of converting Ukrainian schools into bilingual ones, but also recommended the introduction of the Polish language for the official use of administration in Ukrainian schools (public and private).

On October 29, 1923 as a district superintendent he banned the use of the designation Ukrainian in regard to the Ukrainian schools, renaming this notion of ethnic identity by the terms Ruthenian or Ruski.

On September 21, 1924 he ordered exclusion the use of the Ukrainian language as official from public and private secondary schools and from vocational schools. His policy elicited extremely hostile reaction among Ukrainians.

Stanislaw Sobinski died as a result of assassination attack on October 19, 1926 on Krolewska Street in Lwow (Lviv) in presence of his wife. The assassins were members of the Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO), Bohdan Pidhajnyi and Roman Shukhevych.

According to Polish researcher and scholar Richard Torzecki the organizer of this attack was the commandant of the regional UVO, Julijan Hołovinskyj.

October 22, 1926 Stanislaw Sobinski was buried at Lychakiv Cemetery in Lwow (Lviv). It is regarded that approximately ten thousand people attended the funeral procession. There were a number of high ranking Polish officials, for example Minister of the Interior Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski attended the funeral of Stanislaw Sobinski.

The trial of the 17 members of the UWO accused of the assassination of Stanislav Sobińskiego was held on January 21 - March 13, 1928 in Lwow (Lviv). They were also accused of treason and espionage. In the result, Vasyl Atamanchuk and Ivan Werbytskii were sentenced to death. On October 19, 1928 the Supreme Court overturned the verdict regarding the charges of murder and remanded the case back to the court of jury in Lwow (Lviv). In the retrial for the murder of Stanislaus Sobiński, which took place from January 28 to February 15, 1929, Werbytskii was sentenced to death, Atamanchuk to ten years of hard labor. On July 27, 1929, the Supreme Court approved the sentence to Vasyl Atamanchuk to ten years in prison. The sentence to Ivan Werbytskii was commuted from the death penalty to 15 years of hard labor. The sentences rendered by the court were the judicial mistakes for both convicts had no connection with the assassination, the names of the real perpetrators were revealed after years.

Tadeusz Holowko,

Polish pubic, political and scientific figure. He played a prominent role in shaping Polish politics in regard to national minorities in the Second Republic. He remained in favor of Ukrainian administrative and cultural autonomy and as a politician and member of Polish Sejm contributed to Polish – Ukrainian dialog and to softening of governmental measures to Ukrainian irredentists.

Tadeusz Holowko was assassinated by the members of the OUN (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists) while on resort cure in Truskawiec (Truskavets) on August 29, 1931. The OUN regional commanders denied being part of conspiracy against pro-Ukrainian Polish politician; they also denied given orders of assassinations.

The trial of 1933, known as the Sambor Trial followed a previous trial over two Ukrainian members of the OUN, who had been found guilty in multiple murders. They were Ivan Bilas Dmytro Danylyshyn.

The Trial in Sambor lasted from September 19 to October 6, 1933. Three members of the OUN, who were part of the conspiracy against Tadeusz Holowko, but did not committed the murder themselves, namely Mykolai Motyka, Aleksander Bunii and Roman Baranowskii were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.

Ukrainian public opinion of largely condemned this murder and Ukrainian centrist periodicals protested against, as they expressed it, blame against Ukrainian nationalist as perpetrators.

Investigation and two trials proved that the perpetrators were closely associated with the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists.

Ukrainian public opinion eventually admitted that the crime was committed by the Ukrainians, members of the OUN, however, they may have presumptively acted on the political orders of non-Ukrainian force.

Two political processes (trials) held in Warsaw in 1935 and Lwow (Lviv) in 1936 against the OUN conspiracies, assassination of Poish Minister of Interior Bronislaw Pieracki, a series of political assassinations, anti-govermentatl activitis, conspiratory militant activity become apotheosis of the Ukrainian public political appeal. These trials from a Polish perspective become a reveleation of anti-state nationalistic Ukrainian activity of the OUN. These were the two last big political trials of the Organizational leadership. Both sides, Ukrainian and Polish viewed them as a public tribune to prove the wrongdoings of the opposite side and propagate the ideology of their own.

Collection Historical Note

Political trials in interwar East Galicia as well as in Poland were a common ethnopolitical discourse of the time. This Record Groups relates to political processes (trials) in a form of jury trials against largely individuals or group of national and political minorities or against the otherness.

The otherness comprises here Ukrainian nationalists and communists. Ukrainian radicals associated with Ukrainian national independence movement largely were tried for political murders. They committed crimes against Ukrainian and Polish officials in the name Ukrainian national idea of independence and rejection of legitimacy of Polish administration over East Galicia. East Galician (West Ukrainian) communists comprise as it was once put "a Jewish and Ukrainian intrigue," Ukrainians, Jews and Poles. East Galician communist movement only partially resembled a bolshevik ideology, overall this political party was longing for a national communism, rather than pure Soviet style authoritarian communist regime.

The following political assassinations perpetrated by the Ukrainian nationalist organized groups are presented here by the means of national and political discourses reflected in Ukrainian, Jewish and Polish periodicals of interwar Poland.

The trial against East Galician communists, known as the St. George Communist Congress Trial was a process against multi-national group of delegates to the Communist Congress held in the residential building of the St. George Cathedral in October 1921. The actual trial took place in November, December of 1922 and ended in January 1923.

Political trials overall lasted for several months and would become a public discourse in regard to national and political confrontation between the Polish state on one side and Ukrainian nationalist organizations, as well as a communist party. Divisiveness of political claims and rejection of compromises characterized the rise of violent acts and tensions and exacerbated a prospective reconciliation between Polish state and moderate centrist Ukrainian parties. Multiple terrorist attacks perpetrated by Ukrainian militants of the OUN, made the situation extremely aversive  and denounced by the majority of population of East Galicia and Poland, notably not only Polish.

Stepan Fedak assassination attempt on the Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski and Governor of the Lwow province K. Grabowski perpetrated in September 1921.The Trial of him and his accomplicies held in October -- November 1922, demonstrated relatively moderate radicalization of Ukrainian nationalist movement composed largely of Ukrainian youth. As a matter of defense Stepan Fedak claimed his attempt had to be directed only against the Governor Grabowski who would be epitozmized oppression of East Galicia by Poland. The trial took its course prior to the official recognition the Council of Ammbassadors on March 14, 1923, East Galicia as a region of Poland. This was the line of defense, the image of the Chief of State, Pilsudsi, was hailing high and ebodied an essense of thorny path to independence and the gained statehood.

Utterance of Stepan Fedak and his fellow defendants or conspirators reified in a national rethoric of the only loyalty to an a building of an independent Ukrainian unified state. The territory of terror, a political landscape reified by the OUN in the late 1920s and 1930s, was so far colored by romatics the code of honor, substantially corresponding to the kernel and cradle of Austrian Amry.

Sydir Tverdokhlib, assassination

Assassination of Ukrainian poet, literati and Professor Sydir Tverdokhlib exemplifies subversive activities of the Ukrainian Military Organization. This Organization actively pursued campaign to boycott Polish Sejm and Senate election of November 1922 in East Galicia. The status of East Galicia at that time was not internationally defined and agreed between the Council of Ambassadors and Poland. The Ukrainian Military Organization acted on behalf of radically minded Ukrainians to perceive an independent status of East Galicia by all means. The Organization targeted all Ukrainian politicians or public figures who would show inclination or will to represent Ukrainian population in the upcoming parliamentary elections. Sydir Tverdokhlib was a Ukrainian intellectual, public figure and he could have become a parliamentarian. He received threats on the part of the UVO (Ukrainian Military Organization). Sydir Tverdokhlib was close to Polish moderate circles those that promoting a peaceful resolution of Ukrainian – Polish military and political confrontation.

To exemplify the reality of radical and uncompromised stand, the UVO took decision to assassinate Sydir Tverdokhlib. Their militant implemented this decision when Mr. Tverdokhlib was on the way home from an electoral gathering near Kamenka Strumilowa.

Polish and Ukrainian democratic circle reacted with great resentment and to the Ukrainian militants who committed the act assassination. Ukrainian and Poles alike expressed a great sorrow and compassion to the victim and his family.

Sydir Tverdokhlib (Твердохліб, Сидір; Tverdoxlib]), born 9 May 1886 in Berezhany, Galicia, d 16 October 1922 in Lviv (Lwow). Poet, literati, professor of gymnasium, public figure and humanitarian, also a translator. After studying at the University of Jan Kazimierz in Lwow (Lviv University) and Vienna University he worked as a gymnasium professor in Lviv (Lwow). There he belonged to the modernist group Moloda Muza (Young Muse); his first poems and translations appeared in 1906 in the journal Svit (the World). A bilingual (Ukrainian-Polish) writer, Tverdokhlib published one small book of poetry, V svichadi plesa (In the Mirror of the River's Surface, 1908), and verses, novellas, and translations in both Ukrainian (Nedilia (1911–1912), Iliustrovana Ukraïna, Dilo) and Polish (Krytyka, Przegląd Krajowy, Widnokręgi) periodicals. Tverdokhlib's translations introduced the Polish reading public to contemporary Ukrainian literature and were favorably received by critics. Published separately were his Polish translations of three books of Mykhailo Yatskiv's novellas (1908, 1910, 1911), an anthology of modern Ukrainian poetry (1911; 2nd end of 1913), and a book of Taras Shevchenko's selected verses (1913). Tverdokhlib also translated Shevchenko's ‘Haidamaky’ into German and Juliusz Słowacki's poems into Ukrainian. From 1920 he and Yatskiv headed the small, insignificantly supported Ukrainian Agrarian party, which favored a compromise with Polish state of possession in East Galicia. The published the government-funded weekly Ridnyi krai (Lviv). During the Ukrainian general boycott of the 1922 elections to the Sejm Tverdokhlib announced his candidacy and began campaigning. Consequently the underground Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO) condemned him as a national traitor and had him assassinated, he was mortally wounded in Sapezhanka railroad station near Kaminka-Strumylova on October 15, 1922. Sydir Tverdokhlib died in the Lviv (Lwow) Hospital on October 16, 1922.

The Warsaw 1935, 1936 Trial of the OUN members (Pieracki assassination trial) and the Lwow, May, June 1936 OUN members trial related to the OUN subversive activities and acts of terror became a manifestation of Stepan Bandera platform of a Ukrainian Revolution. Both  trials also referred as trials of the 17 members of the OUN, including it regional commanders (providnyky).

Biographical Note

This is a collective name for Jewish, Ukrainian and Polish periodicals published in the region and country. There were Jewish periodicals published in Polish language. Ukrainian and  Polish periodicals are published in the respective languages.

Subject/Index Terms

Activities and organizational framework of the OUN, Poland and abroad, 1930s
Assassination attempt on Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921
Assassination attempt on Sydir Tverdokhlib by Ukrainian militants of the UVO, October 15, 1922
Assassination of Ukrainian poet Karshkevych (Karaszkiewicz) in Kolomyja, 1922
Biography of Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, a failed assassin of Pilsudski, interwar, wartime
Chronology of September 25, 1921, Pilsudski first day visit in Lwow (Lviv), Kurjer Lwowski, October
Chwila, analysis of the causation induced the assassination attempt, Chwila, September 29, 1921
Commissar Kajdan, investigation of Stepan Fedak, September after 25th, 1921, Fedak Trial, 1922
Congress of KUM (Committee of Ukrainian Youth Movement), program, Lviv (Lwow), 1920
Conspirators drew a choice who was to implement the attempt on Pilsudski, Fedak Trial, 1922
Defendants (conspirators) discussed the attempt in Cafe Republique on September 23, 1921 Fedak Trial
Defiance of Ukrainian young educated generation against Polish authorities in East Galicia interwar
Description of the OUN leadership and structure, 1930s, East Galicia
Dilo, reflections on the beginning of the Fedak and accomplices trial, discourse, October 1922
Documents in Polish language
Documents in Ukrainian language
Dr. Karowiec operated on wounded Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), October 15, 1922 Lviv, hospital
Dr. Stepan Fedak, father of Stepan Fedak, assassin and defendant, Fedak Trial, 1921, 1922
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Fedak, Sztyk (Styk), Paliiv, Kuchabski (Kuczabski), Matczak (Matchak), members of KUM
Fedak Trial, 1922, Defense discourse, reflected in Ukrainian, Jewish and Polish periodicals
Fedak Trial, a question of official language of proceedings, Ukrainian versus Polish
Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochib) in Lviv (Lwow), October 19, 1922
Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, city President, Neuman, October 19, 1922
Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Councel of Presidum, Krechowiecki, 10.19.1922
Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Deputy Governo Zimnyj, October 19, 1922
Funeral of Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), attendees, Governor Grabowski, October 19, 1922
Operation in a Lviv (Lwow) hospital on wounded Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), October 15, 1922, evening
Sapezhanka (Lwow, Poland), railroad station, site of assassination attempt on Sydir Tverdokhlib 1922
Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), apologetic of Polish – Ukrainian reconciliation, 1922
Sydir Tverdokhlib (Tverdochlib), visionary of Polish Ukrainian co-existence and reconciliation, 1922
Sydir Tverdokhlib, mortally wounded delivered to a hospital in Lviv (Lwow), October 15, 1922 evening
Sydir Tverdokhlib, Ukrainian literati, poet, assassinated by Ukrainian nationalist on Oct. 15 1922
Sydir Tverdokhlib against Ukrainian boycott and radicalization versus parliamentary elections, 1922
Ukrainian boycott in Eastern Galicia of parliamentary elections in 1922, interwar Poland
Ukrainian poet Karashkevych (Karaszkiewicz), rejection of radical militatnt tactics of the UVO, 1922
Warsaw, 1935, OUN Trial including Bandera implicated in the assassination of Bronislaw Pieracki


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[Collection of Folder-Level 1: RG -111.01, Stepan Fedak, Trial, 1921, 1922],
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[Collection of Folder-Level 3: RG - 111.03, Sydir Tverdokhlib, assassination, October  1922],
[Collection of Folder-Level 4: RG-111.04, Trial of Sobinski murder by the UVO members, 1928],
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Collection of Folder-Level 1: RG -111.01, Stepan Fedak, Trial, 1921, 1922Add to your cart.View associated digital content.

The Trial of Stepan (Stefan) Fedak and his associates, referred as Attempt on Assassination of Marshal, Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski. The actual assault on Jozef Pilsudski and Governor of the Lwow Province, K. Grabowski.

Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, member of the Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO) together with co-conspirator executed a failed attempt on the life of Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski and Governor K. Grabowski in Lwow, in front of the City Hall in the late afternoon of September 25th 1921 in Lwow (Lviv).

Subject/Index Terms:
Young generation of Ukrainians as rejectors of Polish control over East Galicia, interwar
Ukrainian unacceptance of Polish statehood, 1918-- 1923
Ukrainian conspirators on trial, Fedak Trial, October, November 1922
Trial of Fedak and associates for the attept on Pilsudski life, October, November 1922, Lviv
The site of assassination attempt on Jozef Pilsudski and K. Grabowski at the Ratusha, City Hall 1921
The course of assassination attempt on President Stanislaw Wojcochowski, September 5, 1924, Lwow
The acts of terror manifest Ukrainian defiance and intolerance to Polish rule in East Galicia, 1920s
Targi Wschodnie (The Oriental Fairs), Lwow (Lviv), interwar Poland
Stepan Fedak drew a card with the name Pilsudksi, hi was to implement the attempt, Fedak Traila 1922
Stepan Fedak, utterance against unjust Polish rule in Ukrainian Galicia, the second day of trial
Stepan Fedak, attempt on life of Pilsudski, Chief of State and Grabowski, Governor, Lwow 09.25.1921
Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, trial and discourse, October, November 1922
Slowo Polskie relates attempt on Pilsudki in Lviv to Wasyl Habsburg and Ukrainians in emigration
Slowo Polskie, Discourse of Ukrainian anti-Polishness and terrorist methods, 20th century
Searches, arrests at and among Ukrainian public figures and activists in Lviv (Lwow), 1920, 1921
Rejection of Polish citizenship as status to deny Polish rights over East Galicia, Fedak Trial
Reflections of the Jewish contemporaneous periodicals on the failed attempt on the life of Pilsudski
Reflections in Ukrainian contemporaneous periodicals on the  failed attempt on the life of Pilsudski
Polish - Ukrainian discourse in the light of Stepan Fedak attempt on Pilsudski and Grabowicz, 1921
Polirsh contemporaneous periodicals in regard to the Ukrainian conspiracy against Pilsudski, 1921
Organizational branch of the UVO (Ukrainian Military Organization) in Liviv (Lwow) in 1921
Organizatinal congress of KUM in Lviv (Lwow), July 1 -3, 1921
Non acceptance of Polish control over East Galicia, Fedak Trial, 1922
Narratives in Ukrainian language
Narratives in Polish language
Lwow (Poland)
Lviv (Ukraine)
List of conspirators, Viktor (Wiktor) Leonard Holubovych (Holubowycz), born 1901, Politechnika Fedak
List of conspirators, Vasyl Kuchabskii (Kuczabski), born 1896, journalist, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Stepan Fedak, born 1900, graduate of gymnasium, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Petro (Piotr) Iaremchuk (Jaremczuk), born 1899, some gymansium education Fedak
List of conspirators, Ostap Koberskii (Kobierski), born 1895, student of philosophy, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Ostap Horobivskii (Horobiowski), born 1903, gymnasium graduate, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Mykola (Mikolaj) Tofan, born 1892, student of philosophy, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Mikhailo (Michal) Matchak (Matczak), born 1895, journalist, law student, Fedak
List of conspirators, Jozef Styk (Sztyk, Shtyk), born 1901, law student, Fedka Trial
List of conspirators, Ivan (Jan) Biletskii (Bielecki), graduate of technical school, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Evhen (Eugeniusz) Zyblikevych (Zyblikiewicz), law student, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Dmytro Paliiv (Palijew), born 1896, law student, Fedak Trial
List of conspirators, Bohdan Hnatevych (Hnatewycz), born 1894, student of medicine, Fedak Trial
KUM, program Ukrainian youth movement stands for unification of all Ukrainian lands
KUM, program, Ukrainian student bodies are to uplift mass Ukrainian movements to gain statehood
KUM, program, the Vienna Goverment of Petrushevych is only a representation and is suboridinated
KUM, program, Independent and United Ukrainian State, Congress of KUM, Lviv (Lwow), 1920
KUM, program, Galician Ukrainian goverment is to mobilize Ukrainian society for active position
KUM, program, Galician Ukrainian Government is for education, finances, judiciary, military
Fedak Trial, court juries, Majer Frish (Frisz), merchant
Fedak Trial, court juries, Ludwig (Ludvig) Braum, bank official
Fedak Trial, court juries, Ivan (Jan) Balukh (Baluch), baker
Fedak Trial, court juries, Dr. Max (Maks) Zalcberg (Zaltsberg), lawyer
Fedak Trial, court juries, David (Dawyd) Hules (Gulies), lawer
Fedak Trial, court juries, Artur Bartosz (Bartosh), merchant
Fedak Trial, court juries, Adolf Chop (Czop), merchant
Fedak Trial, court charges, Vasyl Kuchabskii (Kuczabski), complicity in assassination of Pilsudkski
Fedak Trial, court charges, Ostap Koberskii (Kobierski), complicity in assassinaiton of Pilsudski
Fedak Trial, court charges, Mykhailo Matchak (Michal Matczak), complicity in assassination
Fedak Trial, court charges, Jozef (Iosyp) Styk (Sztyk, Shtyk), complicity in assassination
Fedak Trial, court charges, Fedak, attempt of assassination of Jozef Pilskudski
Fedak Trial, court charges, Dmytro Paliiv (Paliiew), complicity in assassination of Jozef Pilsudski
Fedak Trial, a question of official language of proceedings, Ukrainian versus Polish
Fedak Trial, 1922, Defense discourse, reflected in Ukrainian, Jewish and Polish periodicals
Fedak, Sztyk (Styk), Paliiv, Kuchabski (Kuczabski), Matczak (Matchak), members of KUM
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Dr. Stepan Fedak, father of Stepan Fedak, assassin and defendant, Fedak Trial, 1921, 1922
Documents in Ukrainian language
Discourse of the Fedak and associates trial in Lviv (Lwow), October, November 1922, Lviv (Lwow)
Dilo, reflections on the beginning of the Fedak and accomplices trial, discourse, October 1922
Defiance of Ukrainian young educated generation against Polish authorities in East Galicia interwar
Defendants (conspirators) discussed the attempt in Cafe Republique on September 23, 1921 Fedak Trial
Conspirators drew a choice who was to implement the attempt on Pilsudski, Fedak Trial, 1922
Congress of KUM (Committee of Ukrainian Youth Movement), program, Lviv (Lwow), 1920
Commissar Kajdan, investigation of Stepan Fedak, September after 25th, 1921, Fedak Trial, 1922
Chwila, analysis of the causation induced the assassination attempt, Chwila, September 29, 1921
Chronology of September 25, 1921, Pilsudski first day visit in Lwow (Lviv), Kurjer Lwowski, October
Biography of Stepan (Stefan) Fedak, a failed assassin of Pilsudski, interwar, wartime
Assassination attempt on Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921
KUM (Committee of Ukrainian Youth Movment), program, July 1920, Lviv (Lwow)
Jozef Pilsudski, visit to Lwow (Lviv) for the opening of the Targi Wschodnie, September 25, 1921
Jozef Pilsudski, Polish stateman, Chief of State, the leader of the Second Polish Republic
Investigation of attempt of Pilsudki and Grabowski lives, Lviv, September 1921, Fedak and associates
Indictment of the Stepan Fedak, Fedak Trial, first day, Kurjer Lwowski, October 24, 1922
Governor of the Lwow (Lviv) province, Kazimierz Grabowski, personality, Fedak Trial
Fedak utterance of Mickiewicz, Gwalt niech sie gwaltem odpiera," violence to be met with violence
Fedak utterance, Hanba Rzadu Polskiego, Disgrace of Polish Government, Fedak Trail, Second day
Fedak Trial, Ukrainian as a language of proceedings, Chairman of the court Majer
Fedak trial, proceedings in Polish and Ukrainian, October, November 1922, Lviv (Lwow)
Fedak Trial, court juries, Wladyslaw (Vladyslav) Liepski (Lepskii), official
Fedak Trial, court juries, Ryszard (Ryshard) Wiederwald (Vidervald), engineer
Fedak Trial, court juries, Pylyp (Phylyp) Kokh (Koch), cofe shop owner
Documents in Polish language
Fedak Trial, court juries, Pylyp (Phylyp) Felnel, property owner
Fedak Trial, court juries, Marcin (Martyn) Dudzinski (Dudzinskii), offiical
Creators:
Polish, Jewish and Ukrainian periodicals published in East Galicia and Poland, 1921, 1922 (interwar)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 1: RG-111.01.01, Slowo Polskie, September 25, 1921, No. 428, Otwarcie Targow WschodnichAdd to your cart.
Slowo Polskie, a conservative periodical at the time. This issue reflects on the opening of Targi Wschodnie (The Eastern Fairs) in September 1921
Subject/Index Terms:
Periodicals, Polish
Polish periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Polish periodicals published in Eastern Galicia, inteerwar
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), periodical Polish
Slowo Polskie, conservative pro national democracy publication, Lwow (Lviv), 1918 -- 1926
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fairs), advertisement of establishments, in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Slowo Polskie, reflections on the economic and political significance of Targi Wschodnie, 1921
Antisemitic discourse of international Jewry, publication in Slowo Polskie, September 1921
Targi Wschodnie, an impulse for development, series of articles in Slowo Polskie, September 1921
Ethnonational discourse, reflections in Slowo Polskie, September 1921
Advertisement in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Historical narratives published in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Literary narratives published in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Reportoire of theaters in Lwow (Lviv), Slowo Polskie, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), editorial board and contributors (1918 -- 1939))
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 2: RG-111.01.02, Slowo Polskie, September 26, 1921, No. 429, Targi WschodnieAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
Polish periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Polish political and social periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Slowo Polskie, conservative pro national democracy publication, Lwow (Lviv), 1918 -- 1926
Wilno status, discourse in regard to debates in the Leage of Nations, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Wilno status discourse, reflections on the representation by Szymon Aszkenazi, Polnad, Slowo Polskie
Reflections on Gdansk (Danzig) status in the League of Nations, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fears), opening September 25, 1921, Lwow (Lviv), Slowo Polskie
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fears), 1921, advertisements, Slowo Polskie, 1921
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), editorial board and contributors (1918 -- 1939))
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 3: RG-111.01.03, Slowo Polskie, September 27, 1921, , No. 430, Attempt on the Chief of State, Jozef PilsudskiAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

          

Slowo Polskie, a conservative periodical at the time. This issue reflects on the opening of Targi Wschodnie (The Eastern Fairs) in September 1921

Subject/Index Terms:
Attempt on the life of Jozef Pilsudski, Chief of State, perpetrated by Stepan Fedak, Slowo Polskie
Slowo Polskie on the assassination attempt on Pisudski in Lwow, September 25, 1921, Stepan Fedak
Stepan Fedak, attempt on life of Pilsudski, Chief of State and Grabowski, Governor, Lwow 09.25.1921
Targi Wschodnie, an impulse for development, series of articles in Slowo Polskie, September 1921
Jozef Pilsudski, visit to Lwow (Lviv) for the opening of the Targi Wschodnie, September 25, 1921
Jozef Pisludski attendence of Targi Wschodnie and official institutions, September 25, 1921
Jozef Pilsudski at Ratusza (City Hall), Lwow, unveiling of the White Eagle, September 25, 1921, at 5
Lithuanian discourse as reflected in the debated of the League of Nation, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Inspector Lukomski, assassination attempt on Jozef Pilsudski by Stepan Fedak, September 25, 1921
Polish memoir prose published in Slowo Polskie, interewar
Memoir prose of Polish Ukrainian war of 1918 -- 1919, published in continuity in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fears), 1921, advertisements, Slowo Polskie, 1921
Advertisements in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geo political discourse of Polish internal affairs, interwar
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), editorial board and contributors (1918 -- 1939))
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 4: RG-111.01.04, Chwila. Tuesday 27, September 1921. No. 966, Attempt on Pilsudksi in Lwow, September 25Add to your cart.View associated digital content.
Chwila, Jewish liberal daily in Polish language, published in Lwow (Lviv), typically reflected on geo-political discourse and on regional political and entic discourse. Stepan Fedak's attemp on the life of Jozef Pilsudski, Chief of State, was an extraordinary even in regional course of historic narrative.
Subject/Index Terms:
Assassination attempt on Chief of State, Jozef Pilsudski in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921
Attempt on Pilsudski's life at the Ratusza (City Hall) on September 25, 1921, Lwow (Lviv) by Fedak
Attempt on the Pilsudski's life, discourse in Polish periodicals, 1921, Chwila
Reportage in Chwila in regard to the attempt of Jozef Pilsudski in K. Grabowski, Lwow September 1921
Periodicals Jewish in Polish language published in Lwow (Lviv), Chwila, 1919 -- 1939
Periodicals, Jewish, interwar Poland
Chwila, newspaper, Jewish (Polish)
Jozef Pilsudski, visit to Lwow (Lviv) for the opening of the Targi Wschodnie, September 25, 1921
Jewish literary prose in Polish language, published in Chwila, 1921
Advertisements in Chwila, 1921
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Lwow (Poland)
Lviv (Ukraine)
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Eastern Galicia (Ukraine: Region)
Creators:
Chwila (the Moment), editorial board and contributors (1919 -- 1939)
Chwila Publishing Association, 1920 -- 1939
Chwila, newspaper, Jewish (Polish) (1919 -- 1939)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 5: RG-111.01.05, Chwila. Wednesday 28, September 1921. No. 967, discoures of th e attempt by FedakAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.
Chwila, Jewish liberal national newspaper in Polish language, published in Lwow (Lviv), interwar period. Chwila in September of 1921 and October - November 1922 followed a national and ethnic discourse of the failed attempt by Stepan Fedak on the life of Jozef Pilsudski, Chief of State in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921
Subject/Index Terms:
Attempt on Pilsudski's life at the Ratusza (City Hall) on September 25, 1921, Lwow (Lviv) by Fedak
Attempt on Pilsudski's life by Stepan Fedak, September 25, 1921, reflections and discourse, Chwila
Reflections on Stepan Fedak assassination attempt on Jozef Pilsudski, September 1921, Chwila
The course of assassination plot implemented by Fedak and co-conspirators, reflected in Chwila, 1921
Ukrainian anti-Polish conspiracy and conspirators, Fedak attempt on the life of Jozef Pilsudski 1921
Polish press regarded Pilsudski a supporter of Ukrainian cause, reflections in Chwila September 1921
Short reportages and news, reflected in Chwila, 1919 -- 1939
First General Census of population in Poland, September 1921
First General Census of Population in Poland, September 1921, reflections in Chwila, September 1921
Periodicals, Jewish, interwar Poland
Periodicals Jewish in Polish language published in Lwow (Lviv), Chwila, 1919 -- 1939
Periodicals, Jewish
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fairs), advertised establishments in Chwila, 1921
Lviv (Ukraine)
Lwow (Poland)
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Eastern Galicia (Ukraine: Region)
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Chwila (the Moment), editorial board and contributors (1919 -- 1939)
Chwila Publishing Association, 1920 -- 1939
Chwila, newspaper, Jewish (Polish) (1919 -- 1939)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 6: RG-111.01.06, Slowo Polskie, September 28, 1921, No. 432,  In the aftermath of the Attempt on the Chief of StateAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.
Slowo Polskie, until 1927, a Polish nationalistic publicaiton. It conceptualized ideology of National Democracy and Christian Democracy. Published in Lwow (Lviv), this newspaper closeley reflected on Stepan Fedak's and other Ukrainian conspirators assassination attempt on Chief of State Jozef Pilsudksi and Governor K. Grabowski in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921.
Subject/Index Terms:
Discourse of the Fedak and associates trial in Lviv (Lwow), October, November 1922, Lviv (Lwow)
Attempt on Pilsudski's life at the Ratusza (City Hall) on September 25, 1921, Lwow (Lviv) by Fedak
Attempt on the life of Jozef Pilsudski, Chief of State, perpetrated by Stepan Fedak, Slowo Polskie
Stepan Fedak and Ukrainian conspirators, attempt on Pilsudski, discourse and analysis, Slowo Polskie
Polish memoir prose published in Slowo Polskie, interewar
Polish political and social periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Polish periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geo political discourse of Polish internal affairs, interwar
Slowo Polskie, reflections on the economic and political significance of Targi Wschodnie, 1921
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fears), 1921, advertisements, Slowo Polskie, 1921
Lwow (Poland)
Lviv (Ukraine)
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Eastern Galicia (Ukraine: Region)
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word) (1922)
Slowo Polskie, editorial board and contributors, 1918 -- 1926
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 7: RG-111.01.07, Chwila. Thursday 29, September 1921. No. 968, repudiation to Slowo PolskieAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.
Chwila, Jewish liberal daily in Polish language published in Lwow (Lviv), interwar period, reflected with discourse and reportages on the Fedak's assassination attempt on Jozef Pilsudski and Governor K. Grabowski that took place in front of the Ratusza (City Hall) in Lwow (Lviv) on September 25, 1921
Subject/Index Terms:
Chwila, analytical narratives
Attempt on Pilsudski's life by Stepan Fedak, September 25, 1921, reflections and discourse, Chwila
Reflections and analysis on the Fedak and Ukrainian conspirators attempt on Pilsudski Chwila, 1921
Denunciation on Fedak's attempt on Pilsudski and Grabowski lives in Chwila, September 1925
Periodicals Jewish in Polish language published in Lwow (Lviv), Chwila, 1919 -- 1939
Periodicals, Jewish, interwar Poland
Polish poticial discourse of government, reflected in Chwila, interwar
Polish governments and politics, Antoni Ponikowski elected Prime Minister, September 1921, Chwila
Advertisements in Chwila, 1921
Targi Wschodnie (the Eastern Fairs), advertised establishments in Chwila, 1921
Lwow (Poland)
Lviv (Ukraine)
Eastern Galicia (Poland: Region)
Eastern Galicia (Ukraine: Region)
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Chwila (the Moment), editorial board and contributors (1919 -- 1939)
Chwila Publishing Association, 1920 -- 1939
Chwila, newspaper, Jewish (Polish) (1919 -- 1939)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 8: RG-111.01.08, Slowo Polskie, September 29, 1921, No. 434, In the aftermath of the Attempt on the Chief of StateAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
Narratives in Polish language
Documents in Polish language
Advertisement in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), periodical Polish
slowo Polskie, geo political discourse of Polish international affairs, interwar
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
Slowo Polskie, reflections on the economic and political significance of Targi Wschodnie, 1921
Memoir prose of Polish Ukrainian war of 1918 -- 1919, published in continuity in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Stepan Fedak and Ukrainian conspirators, attempt on Pilsudski, discourse and analysis, Slowo Polskie
Ukrainian irredentism to Poland in interewar Galicia, reflection in Slowo Polskie, September 1921
Ukrainian separatism in regard East Galicia, ethnopolitical discourse, Slowo Polskie, September 1921
International news reported in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Creators:
Slowo Polskie, editorial board and contributors, 1918 -- 1926
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 9: RG-111.01.09, Slowo Polskie, October 1, 1921, No. 436, political discourseAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse, interwar
Slowo Polskie, editorial and analytical articles, interwar
Polish periodicals published in Lwow (Lviv), 1918 --1939
Periodicals, Polish
Periodicals in Polish language
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), periodical Polish
Slowo Polskie, historical prose, interwar
Memoir prose of Polish Ukrainian war of 1918 -- 1919, published in continuity in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse of Polish regional conflicts, October 1921
Slowo Polskie, theatrical review, interwar
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Advertisements in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word) (1922)
Slowo Polskie, editorial board and contributors, 1918 -- 1926
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 10: RG-111.01.10, Slowo Polskie, October 3, 1921, No. 438, political discourseAdd to your cart.View associated digital content.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
Slowo Polskie, editorial and analytical articles, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse, interwar
Polish periodicals published in Eastern Galicia, inteerwar
Polish periodicals published in Lwow (Lviv), 1918 --1939
Advertisements in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Slowo Polskie, Polish parliamentary discourse, reflections by Slowo Polskie, interwar
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
Memorandum of East Galician Zionist in favor of the Central powers, 1915, Slowo Polskie October 1921
Polish political prose published in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Memoir prose of Polish Ukrainian war of 1918 -- 1919, published in continuity in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Slowo Polskie in regard to Ukrainian ethnopolitical discourse, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse of Polish regional conflicts, October 1921
Reports of financial institutions published in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Upper Silesia, political discourse, reflected in Slowo Polskie, 1921
International discourse with regard to Upper Silesia, claimed by Poland and Germany, Slowo Polskie
Creators:
Slowo Polskie, editorial board and contributors, 1918 -- 1926
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 11: RG-111.01.11, Slowo Polskie, October 6, 1921, No. 440, East Galician political discourseAdd to your cart.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), periodical Polish
Slowo Polskie, conservative pro national democracy publication, Lwow (Lviv), 1918 -- 1926
Slowo Polskie, editorial and analytical articles, interwar
slowo Polskie, geo political discourse of Polish international affairs, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse of the new Republic, 1921
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse, interwar
Upper Silesia, political discourse, reflected in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Polish periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Polish periodicals published in Lwow (Lviv), 1918 --1939
International news reported in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Ethnonational scholarly articles with regard to East Galicia, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Memoir prose of Polish Ukrainian war of 1918 -- 1919, published in continuity in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Polish Ukrainian campaign for East Galicia, Polish prose, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Polish Lithuanian political discourse reflected in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Polish literary prose published in Slowo Polskie,  interwar
Parliamentary affairs, reflected in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Advertisement in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie (The Polish Word), editorial board and contributors (1918 -- 1939))
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)
Document/Artifact of Item-Level 12: RG-111.01.12, Slowo Polskie, October 8, 1921, No. 442, East Galician political discourseAdd to your cart.

Slowo Polskie (the Polish Word), first a conservative, then a pro-governmental liberal periodical published in Lwow (Lviv) from 1895 to 1946.

Editors, in 1921, Waclaw Mejbaum, in 1923, Stanislaw Grabski, before May 1926, Roman Kordsys and publisher Wladyslaw Kucharski. After Pilsudski cam came to power, Slowo Polskie joined the pro-governmental camp and maintained a liberal trend. Then Wilhelm and Antoni Skrzyczynski became editors of the Slowo.

Subject/Index Terms:
International discourse with regard to Upper Silesia, claimed by Poland and Germany, Slowo Polskie
Slowo Polskie, editorial and analytical articles, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse, interwar
Slowo Polskie, geopolitical discourse of the new Republic, 1921
Slowo Polskie, local news, reportages, interwar
International news reported in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Polish periodicals, 1918 -- 1939
Polish periodicals published in Lwow (Lviv), 1918 --1939
The Question of Upper Silesia, discourse in the Leaague of Nations, 1921, Slowo Polskie
Jan Czekanowski, Ethnonational articles on East Galicia, published in Slowo Polskie, 1921
Polish memoir prose published in Slowo Polskie, interewar
Polish Ukrainian campaign for East Galicia, Polish prose, Slowo Polskie, interwar
Polish historic discourse with regard to advance and retreat, Soviet Ukraine, 1920, Slowo Polskie
Advertisements in Slowo Polskie, interwar
Documents in Polish language
Narratives in Polish language
Creators:
Slowo Polskie, editorial board and contributors, 1918 -- 1926
Waclaw Mejbaum, editor of Slowo Polskie (1921)


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