Misplaced Pages

Mass murder on Dzika Street

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Mass murder on Dzika street)
Plaque at the courtyard of the tenement house at 17 Dzika Street, commemorating victims of the massacre

The mass murder on Dzika street was a war crime committed by German troops against Polish civilians during World War II, amidst the Warsaw Uprising on August 21, 1944. The execution took place in the yard of a housing block on Dzika 17 street. Around 200 civilians were killed. While nowhere near as large as the wholesale massacre in Wola, it was one of the largest mass murder carried out by the Nazis during the battle of Warsaw Old Town.

Background

Main article: Warsaw Uprising

On August 20, the Polish insurgents repulsed a German attack on the Muranów neighborhood. The insurgents took heavy casualties, were looking at the increasingly indefensible positions, and were pressured by some civilians to stop the hostilities. On the morning of August 21, 1944, soldiers of the Polish Home Army, under command of Franciszek Rataj, left the neighborhood. This area was immediately seized by the advancing German troops.

Crime

Civilians who did not escape along with the soldiers of Home Army were captured. First, German soldiers separated the men from women and children. Then around 500 men were flocked to a warehouse on Stawki street. In the warehouse soldiers conducted a "selection" from the crowd all men who possessed elements of a military uniform (shoes, pants, caps, etc.), as well as items that may have come from German military warehouses (e.g. canned goods). They also brought elderly people from a nearby retirement home at Przebieg street as well as several women. Afterward, a group of around 200 "selected" men were taken to the yard of a housing block on Dzika 17 street and shot. Their corpses were burned. It was only until after the war that their fate (and their mass grave) were discovered.

References

  1. ^ Szymon Datner, Kazimierz Leszczyński: Zbrodnie okupanta w czasie powstania warszawskiego w 1944 roku (w dokumentach) ("Crimes of the occupants during the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 (in documents)"), wydawnictwo MON, Warszawa 1962, p. 194–96
  2. ^ Antoni Przygoński: Powstanie warszawskie w sierpniu 1944 r. tom II ("Warsaw Uprising in August 1944, vol. II "), PWN, Warszawa 1980, pg 497

52°15′13″N 20°59′01″E / 52.2535°N 20.9835°E / 52.2535; 20.9835

Categories: