We had a lot of land in around Czortkow/Biala and quite a extensive property portfolio in Kopyczynce, all that went up in "smoke" when the Soviets arrived they "gave my ggran a house of sorts, it can be seen on Paul At 04:01 10/04/2001 +1000, you wrote: Thanks to Ewa, I have referenced again the recent article on compensation for Kresy residents who lost their property (not to mention years of - if not all of - their lives) to the Soviets as a result of the War.
I should note that "citizens" would include all those deported or displaced during the war who never returned to Poland.
I would welcome your feedback on this, especially from Janusz Giedrojc and others dealing with compensation issue. I wonder if it is not "too late" to register a claim, especially as this seems to be heading into a class-action of some kind.
Would anybody know how to get in touch with Andrzej Korzeniowski, president of the Polish Society of the Kresy Residents-State Treasury Creditors (Ogólnopolskie Stowarzyszenie Kresowian Wierzycieli Skarbu Panstwa)?
Thanks Stefan
Here is the article:
Warsaw Voice April 1, 2001 No. 13 (649) ------------------------------------------------------------------------
KEEPING PROMISES
The Legacy of Relocation
Paradoxically, Poland moved westward immediately following World War II, when from a geopolitical point of view Poland entered the sphere of influence of its former eastern neighbor, the Soviet Union.
By virtue of a decision made by the time's great national powers, confirmed by pacts in Yalta and Potsdam, the borders of the Polish state were radically changed. Postwar Poland lost its eastern territories, which were incorporated into the Soviet republics of Belarus, Lithuania and Ukraine. In turn, the country gained land which until 1939 had belonged to Germany. The decision made by the "big four" resulted not only in changes of state borders, but also in a huge wave of migration, changing the ethnic make-up and national status in the Kresy, as Poland's former eastern territories are called.
The repercussions of those migrations continue to this day. There are many unsettled matters stemming from those times, including the question of indemnities for Polish citizens whose property remained beyond the eastern border.
The communist government of postwar Poland, initially formed on the territory of the Soviet Union, aimed to make Poland an ethnically uniform country. The same was true of the objectives of Soviet governments, which sought to rid themselves of the Polish element in Belarus, Lithuania and Ukraine. In order to achieve these ends, in 1944 both parties began organizing great population shifts.
During these dislocations, Belarussians and Ukrainians were shipped East within the areas defined by the decisions from Yalta. The East, in turn, saw the displacement of Polish citizens who had lived in the territories which were incorporated into the Soviet state.
The agreements with Ukraine and Belarus stated that between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15, 1944, there would be a registration of people willing to resettle, and the process of resettlement would take place between Oct. 15, 1944, and Feb. 1, 1945. The agreement with Lithuania assumed slightly different dates: the registration would be carried out between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, 1944, and the relocation was supposed to start Dec. 1, 1944 and continue through April 1, 1945.
The authorities of the Soviet republics were responsible for the transportation of people, while the costs of transportation were to be divided between the Soviet Union and Poland. The agreements also stated that for Polish citizens dislocated from the Kresy, the indemnity for property left in the East, called zabuz?an?skie (located beyond the Bug River) property, would be paid by the Polish State Treasury .
Thus the communist government of Poland relieved the authorities of the Soviet Union from the duty to pay any indemnity to Polish citizens. This was confirmed in protocols supplementing the agreements of 1944, signed in 1947 on behalf of the government of the Republic of Poland. According to the contents of the agreements, this was not supposed to be indemnity as such, but an equivalent payment for property left in the East. This is important, since the word "equivalent" as interpreted by dislocated populations meant the exact equivalent of real estate left behind the eastern border of postwar Poland.
The resettlement action from the East took much longer than had been stated in the agreements, and involved 1.7 million Polish citizens. These people were mainly resettled in the western territories of Poland according to its postwar borders. As the "equivalent" that the Polish-Soviet agreements had promised, the people dislocated from the East received former German households in western Poland and urban real estate belonging to the State Treasury.
Theoretically, the households and real estate distributed among the newcomers was supposed to be comparable in size to the properties left behind the eastern border. In practice, however, this was difficult or even impossible to implement, especially since the agriculture policy of the communist government stood in the way. The government tried various ways to establish collective farming in the Polish countryside instead of private farming. The distribution of big farms among individual farmers thus contradicted the agriculture policy of the communist authorities.
Similar constraints awaited resettled city dwellers, who received urban real estate, but only smaller than 220 sq m, a step down for all those who had left large farms and more valuable real estate beyond the Bug River.
The distribution of equivalent property and compensation was coupled with a whole range of executive regulations, hindering the State Treasury's fulfillment of its liabilities to displaced individuals. It's enough to say that indemnity procedures did not concern the simple allocation of specified sums, real estate or land, but incorporated the value of the zabuz?an?skie property, as estimated in the insurance valuation, into the fee for purchasing buildings and land from the State Treasury, as specified by the authorities.
In practice, displaced citizens became State Treasury suppliants, and it depended on the decision of bureaucrats whether the value of the zabuz?an?skie property was included in the fee for real estate given as compensation for property lost behind the eastern border. Due to bureaucratic obstacles, unclear interpretations of executive acts and the difficulties in obtaining confirmation from Soviet authorities concerning lost property, the question of indemnities for zabuz?an?skie property was never finalized by the authorities of communist Poland. Even now, a large group of citizens has not received any compensation.
The changes brought about in Poland by the events of 1989 revived hopes of solving the lingering problem among displaced people and their descendants. According to estimates by both the government and organizations associating zabuz?an?skie creditors of the Polish State Treasury, there are still around 90,000 petitions for equivalents of property left in the East waiting to be analyzed and processed.
"This is more or less the number of petitioners who have not yet been given the chance to satisfy their claims," said Andrzej Korzeniowski, president of the Polish Society of the Kresy Residents-State Treasury Creditors.
The State Treasury creditors had hoped that the reprivatization law would solve their problems. The law, however, is a dead issue, leaving the question of indemnity for property left in the East a matter regulated by the previous legislation, which stems from the agreements made in 1944 and 1947.
This state of affairs by no means satisfies those dislocated from the East. When vetoing the poorly constructed reprivatization bill, President Aleksander Kwas?niewski advised residents of the Kresy to seek justice in court by bringing an class-action suit against the State Treasury. Displaced people and their descendants say they will follow this advice.
"Since the continuity of Polish statehood is valid, and communist Poland was an element of the continuity, it is the duty of today's Third Republic of Poland to fulfill [communist Poland's] liabilities," said Korzeniowski.
Krzysztof Renik
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