Lecture 16 the Second Polish Republic Week 5, Spring Term
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Nation and Memory in Russia, Poland and Ukraine Lecture 16 The Second Polish Republic Week 5, Spring Term Outline 1.Geostrategical position 2.Domestic policy 3.Poland – a nation state? 4.Ukrainians in Poland 6. Conclusion Second Polish Republic 398,000 sqkm 27 Million people Without 40% of territory and 16 Million people of 1772 With 35,000 sqkm and 3 Million people which had not been part of Poland in 1772 Dmowski in Paris: borders in West – ethnographical arguments borders in East – historical arguments Borders in West: result of Peace Treaties, Uprisings (Upper Silesia and Posen) and plebiscites (East Prussia, Upper Silesia) Borders in East: Military power and peace Treaty with Soviet Russia in 1921, later confirmed by Western Allies Putzger, Historischer Weltatlas, p. 122 f Foreign Policy • Borders confirmed by Allies (until 1924) and Treaty of Riga, 18 March 1921 with Soviet Russia • Status quo power and member of the League of Nations • Poland has to sign first Minority Treaty in June 1919 • Territorial disputes with Germany (Posen, West Prussia, Upper Silesia), Soviet Union (Western Ukraine and Western Belarus), Czechoslovakia (Teschen), Lithuania (Wilna/Vilnius) • Between two revisionist powers: Germany and Soviet Union • Allies are France (and Britain) • 1925 Treaty of Locarno – Germany recognises western, but not eastern borders • 1925-1932 Polish-German Trade War • 1933 Hitler comes to power, Pilsudski thinks about preventive war • 1934 Polish German non-aggression Treaty • 2 October 1938 Polish Occupation of Teschen • 1 September 1939 German attack • 17 September 1939 Soviet attack Poland in the 20th century (source: Putzger) Outline 1.Geostrategical position 2.Domestic policy 3.Poland – a nation state? 4.Ukrainians in Poland 6. Conclusion Domestic Policy • Destruction in First World War, Polish-Soviet War and Polish-Ukrainian War • Three different judicial and administrative systems • Infrastructure and communication had to serve imperial interests (for example railway system: Railway Lwów – Vienna, Posen – Berlin, Warsaw-Moscow, but not Posen-Lwów-Warsaw • Different mentalities after 123 years partition • Uneven development: Poland A (West) and Poland B (East) • Hyperinflation 1922/23 until zloty was introduced • Political divisions: 1921 – 1926 Poland parliamentary democracy but no party has majority. First elected president Narutowicz murdered by a national democrat • Bloc of Minorities in Sejm (Parliament): Integration of minorities and growing anti-Semitism • Widespread dissatisfaction with new Polish state • 1926 Coup of Pilsudski: Sanacja regime, authoritarian • After 1930 dictatorship: 1935-1939(after Pilsudski’s death: regime of the colonels) • Economic crisis 1930 ff Józef Piłsudski Roman Dmowski Piłsudski with officers 1934 Outline 1.Geostrategical position 2.Domestic policy 3.Poland – a nation state? 4.Ukrainians in Poland 6. Conclusion Census in Poland 1931 Poles 21,993,000 68.9% Ukrainians 4,442,000 13.9% Jews 2,733,000 8.6% Belorussians 990,000 3.1% Germans 741,000 2.3% Tutejszi 707,000 2.2% Other 271,000 1.0% National minorities in interwar Poland Outline 1.Geostrategical position 2.Domestic policy 3.Poland – a nation state? 4.Ukrainians in Poland 6. Conclusion Polish Nationality Policy in 1920s l Towards Ruthenians (Ukrainians): assimilation l Towards Jews: exclusion (National Democrats) or assimilation (Pilsudski, Socialists) l Strengthening of the Polish element in the kresy (Eastern borderlands) – Polish settlers l Preferential treatment of ethnic Poles l Closing of Ukrainian schools or transformation into bilingual schools l Polonisation of universities and public space l In Volhynia more flexible than in East Galicia Henryk Józewski (1892 - 1981) Ukrainian reaction Radical nationalists Moderates l Boycott of elections in Poland l Participation in elections l Secret military organisations l Political cooperation with other l Terrorist attacks and national minorities assassination attempts l ‘Organic work’: cooperative l Foundation of the Organisation movement of Ukrainian Nationalists l Limited cooperation with Polish (1929) authorities Founding congress of the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists, 1929 in Vienna Evhen Konovalets (b. 14.6.1891, d. 23.5.1938) — Colonel, Commander-in-Chief of the "Sichovi Stritsi" corps of the Ukrainian Army; founder and head of the Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO) and of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN); murdered by an NKVD agent Policy of the Polish government in the 1930s l ‘Carrot and stick’ l ‘Pacification’ of Ukrainian villages in reaction to terrorist attacks 1930/31, 1938/39 l Polish military settlers in kresy l Efforts to win over moderate Ukrainians l Suppression of any resistance l Growing anti-Semitism Pacifications 1930 Tadeusz Holówko (1889-1931) Outline 1.Geostrategical position 2.Domestic policy 3.Poland – a nation state? 4.Ukrainians in Poland 6. Conclusion Poles in Poland: Nation building in their own nation state. Problem: who belongs to the nation and how to deal with ethnic minorities? Ukrainians in Poland: Organic work or armed resistance, fight against assimilationist tendencies. Political goals: autonomy in Poland or independent Ukrainian state?.